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Pareto

[ US /ˌpɑˈɹɛtoʊ/ ]
NOUN
  1. Italian sociologist and economist whose theories influenced the development of fascism in Italy (1848-1923)

How To Use Pareto In A Sentence

  • Pareto suggested that the 30 recipients will jointly have a strong incentive to lobby, influence, and even corruptly “buy” the votes of the politicians able to pass this redistributive legislation.
  • Pareto is in no doubt that the two types of utility, for and of a community, do not necessarily coincide.
  • Since no Pareto gain is possible, every point such as C lying on the frontier must be Pareto-efficient.
  • We have now discovered that a competitive equilibrium in all markets would generate one particular Pareto-efficient allocation.
  • All points on the frontier are Pareto-efficient.
  • He used Pareto analysis to identify the principal cause as a loose loading arm.
  • Pareto was more convinced that authority is simply a matter of fraud rather than self-justification by the elite.
  • Pareto optimality," a term named after the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto (1848 – 1923), is defined as an allocation of economic resources that produces the greatest good. A Government Failure, Not a Market Failure
  • This can be seen in the following quotation, in which Pareto connects interests with the economic sphere.
  • Both eminent scientists also have in common that the image of their inheritance professed to the common university trained economic scholars ( 'cutes') is a highly restricted caricature of the fullnes of their essential insights and contributions, and students of sociology or politicology may even finish their academic studies without ever having heard the name of Pareto. AvaxHome RSS:
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