Activity (Process)

Achieving a Pareto Improvement from an Inefficient Allocation via a Constrained Choice Problem

A constrained choice problem can be used to find a Pareto-efficient allocation that is better for at least one party, starting from an inefficient point, such as the plantation owner's profit-maximizing output. By solving the problem to maximize the fisherman's payoff while keeping the owner's payoff constant at its initial level, an outcome is reached where output is reduced to the efficient level (Qโˆ—Q^*). In this outcome, the fishermen provide a compensatory payment to the owner that is exactly equal to the owner's lost profit, resulting in a Pareto improvement that is also Pareto-efficient.

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Updated 2025-10-07

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