Skip to main content

Search from vocabulary

Content language

Concept information

Preferred term

Pareto efficiency  

Definition

  • One of the hardiest and most widely cited results in all of economics, Pareto efficiency, was developed by Vilfredo Pareto in “The Maximum of Utility Given by Free Competition,” an article published in Giornale degli Economisti in 1894, and his Manuale d'economia politica, first published in 1906 and revised and translated into French in 1909. Pareto proposed that an allocation or distribution of goods was efficient or optimal if, once attained, any move away from it could not make anyone better off without at the same time making at least one other person worse off. [Source: Encyclopedia of Business Ethics and Society; Pareto Efficiency]

Broader concept

Belongs to group

URI

https://concepts.sagepub.com/social-science/concept/Pareto_efficiency

Download this concept: