A Case for In-Kind Transfers
Steven Kelman
Economics and Philosophy, 1986, vol. 2, issue 1, 55-73
Abstract:
One of the most common policy-related messages that economists present to non-economists is the superiority of cash over in-kind transfers as a policy tool. A good deal of government policy on behalf of the poor consists, of course, of various forms of in-kind assistance, such as medical care or food stamps. However, if we wish to help the poor, the argument goes, in-kind transfers are an inferior way to do so.
Date: 1986
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