论文标题
结合分配道德和因果推断,以在紧缩和人口健康之间进行权衡
Combining distributive ethics and causal Inference to make trade-offs between austerity and population health
论文作者
论文摘要
国际货币基金组织(IMF)为其在经济动荡中的会员竞争提供了财政援助,但同时要求这些国家改革其公共政策。在某些情况下,这些改革与人口健康不符。尽管研究人员已经经验分析了这些改革对健康的后果,但在确定对人口健康和经济成果的后果之间的公平权衡方面尚无分析。我们的文章分析并确定了管理这些权衡的原则。首先,本文回顾了现有的政策评估研究,这些研究表明,总的来说,国际货币基金组织政策经常对儿童健康和材料标准产生不利影响,以追求宏观调查。其次,本文讨论了四种分配道德理论(最大化,平等主义,优先主义和足够的主义),以确定哪种理论与IMF的核心使命最兼容,即改善宏观经济学(一致性),同时平衡对健康的影响。我们认为,使用IMF政策的分配伦理学分析,我们认为足够的主义是最兼容的理论。第三,本文提供了对协议条款的定性重新分析,并以因果推论的语言形式化了足够的主义原则。我们还提供了一个框架,以从观察数据(IMF)政策在人口健康和经济成果之间进行公平贸易的程度,从经验上衡量。我们以对未来研究的政策建议和建议得出结论。
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) provides financial assistance to its member-countries in economic turmoil, but requires at the same time that these countries reform their public policies. In several contexts, these reforms are at odds with population health. While researchers have empirically analyzed the consequences of these reforms on health, no analysis exist on identifying fair tradeoffs between consequences on population health and economic outcomes. Our article analyzes and identifies the principles governing these tradeoffs. First, this article reviews existing policy-evaluation studies, which show, on balance, that IMF policies frequently cause adverse effects on child health and material standards in the pursuit of macroeconmic improvement. Second, this article discusses four theories in distributive ethics (maximization, egalitarianianism, prioritarianiasm, and sufficientarianism) to identify which is the most compatible with the core mission of the IMF, that is, improved macroeconomics (Articles of Agreement) while at the same time balancing consequences on health. Using a distributive-ethics analyses of IMF polices, we argue that sufficientarianism is the most compatible theory. Third, this article offer a qualitative rearticulation of the Articles of Agreement, and formalize sufficientarian principles in the language of causal inference. We also offer a framework on how to empirically measure, from observational data, the extent that IMF policies trade off fairly between population health and economic outcomes. We conclude with policy recommendations and suggestions for future research.