A Boundedly Rational Analysis of Global Distributive Justice

Authors

  • Alexandru Volacu National School of Political and Administrative Studies
  • Iris-Patricia Golopenta National School of Political and Administrative Studies

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22151/politikon.20.9

Keywords:

bounded rationality, distributive agency, distributive pattern, Dorsey, global distributive justice, non-ideal theory, Pogge

Abstract

In the present paper we analyze two prominent global distributive justice theories, i.e. Pogge’s Global Resource Dividend theory (1994) and Dorsey’s maxificing welfarism (2005) under an assumption of bounded rationality. We consider that the agencies responsible for distributing resources are informationally constrained in regard to the assessment of economic positions in society and cognitively constrained in regard to the decision making process within the agency. We argue that under these conditions the distributive patterns prescribed by both theories can be severely distorted. Further, in Dorsey’s case bounded rationality can even lead to a complete failure of the theory, since not only are the resulting distributions sub-optimal if we introduce the possibility for a single mistake in the identification process, but they can also be completely redundant by prescribing distributions which are not capable of lifting a single citizen to the minimum level required for the fulfillment of basic needs. We further show that for both theories the identification problem becomes more severe and that the agencies are more susceptible to make mistakes in circumstances of extreme poverty, i.e. the circumstances primarily targeted by the theories. Aside from this main result, we also obtain three secondary results: 1. we extend the ongoing debates in political philosophy between ideal and non-ideal theories and in particular between fact-insensitivity and fact-sensitivity, 2. we provide a preliminary defense of a proportional distributive principle for global justice and 3. we provide a new starting point for the construction of arguments regarding the nature of the agency (e.g. global government, national governments, UN institutions, international NGOs) entitled to distribute resources in global justice theories.

Author Biographies

Alexandru Volacu, National School of Political and Administrative Studies

Alexandru Volacu is a 2nd Year MA student in Political Theory and Analysis at the Faculty of Political Science, National School of Political and Administrative Studies, Bucharest, Romania. He is a member of IAPSS since 2009. He has previously published scientific articles on political philosophy and political science in the Romanian Journal of European Affairs, the Romanian Journal of Society and Politics, Revista de Stiinte Politice. Revue des Sciences Politiques, Perspectives in Politics and the Sphere of Politics. His main research interests include: Political Philosophy, the Philosophy of Science, Public Choice Theory, Game Theory, Spatial Analysis and Political Ethics.

Iris-Patricia Golopenta, National School of Political and Administrative Studies

Iris-Patricia Golopenta is a 2nd Year MA student in Political Theory and Analysis at the Faculty of Political Science, National School of Political and Administrative Studies, Bucharest, Romania. She is currently an intern at Romanian Academic Society. Her research interests include: Normative Theory, Political Philosophy, Ethics, Institutional Approaches of Political Science and Gender Studies.

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Published

2013-06-29

How to Cite

Volacu, Alexandru, and Iris-Patricia Golopenta. 2013. “A Boundedly Rational Analysis of Global Distributive Justice”. Politikon: The IAPSS Journal of Political Science 20 (June). Online:99-123. https://doi.org/10.22151/politikon.20.9.

Issue

Section

Research articles