Jules Dupuit / Paris street: Wikimedia Commons / Public domain
Transport Policy, 2018, vol. 70, issue C, pp. 14-21
Antti Talvitie (aptalvitie(at)gmail.com)
The paper reviews the enduring contributions of Jules Dupuit (1804-1866), Chief Engineer for the City of Paris and later Inspector-general of the Corps des Pont et Chaussees, on benefit-cost analysis, and his development of aggregate demand function for the identification of benefit, and consumer and producer surpluses as measures of utility.
The paper first describes briefly what
Jules Dupuit saw, the transport sector in Europe in the mid-1800s. It then
presents and discusses what he said On
the Measurement of the Utility of Public Works, and On Tolls and Transport Charges, his seminal works published in
1844 and 1894. Dupuit covers a wide
array of topics: Identification of benefits; Consumer surplus (termed “relative
utility”); Price discrimination; Product quality and Method of manufacture; Efficiency
and distribution of benefits; and Role of the State in the railways.
Dupuit’s guiding words for these
complicated issues is concise: “The only utility is that which people are
willing to pay for”. This is illustrated with a graphical and numerical example
how Dupuit’s benefit-cost analysis might be applied today.
The paper concludes with enumeration of
Jules Dupuit’s lasting contributions to the economic analysis in the transport
sector.
FULL PAPER, Pdf, 637 KB, 8 pages.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.