Multiple Choice

A policy analyst is evaluating potential changes to a city's public services. The analyst's first step is to identify a set of possible outcomes where it is impossible to make any single resident better off without making at least one other resident worse off. Why is identifying this set of outcomes a valuable step in the policy-making process, even if the final decision between these outcomes must be based on additional criteria like fairness?

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Updated 2025-10-06

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