'A long professional and personal association with Francesco Forte accustoms one to the extraordinary breadth of his knowledge, understanding and original thinking not only on economic but also legal and political questions. Principles of Public Economics displays all these estimable qualities to the full, adding for good measure a style and content that must attract both student and savant alike.'
- Sir Alan Peacock, Heriot-Watt University, UK'Francesco Forte has taught public economics and political economy for more than fifty years. He has served as Minister of Finance in Italy as well as a member of the Italian parliament. Forte has lived through and contributed to the development of public finance in a way that few of us can equal. In this text, in which the history of ideas is given a prominent role, Forte offers a thoughtful and at times critical exposition of the field of public economics as a whole.'
- Stanley Winer, Carleton University, Canada
'Bringing his life-long teaching and research experience in this field to the task, the author offers a comprehensive treatise of public economics that is distinctive in its thoroughgoing public choice approach and its emphasis on real decision-making processes in modern democracy.'
- Viktor J. Vanberg, Walter Eucken Institut, Germany
'Francesco Forte has taught public economics and political economy for more than fifty years. He has served as Minister of Finance in Italy as well as a member of the Italian parliament. Forte has lived through and contributed to the development of public finance in a way that few of us can equal. In this text, in which the history of ideas is given a prominent role, Forte offers a thoughtful and at times critical exposition of the field of public economics as a whole.'
-Stanley Winer, Carleton University, Canada
In response to the idea that alternative theories, ideologies and institutions of public economics are unsatisfactory, this important and path-breaking book deals with the principles of economics using a more realistic 'tempered public choice approach'.
Opening with an introduction on the development of the economic theory of public finance, Francesco Forte develops a discourse based on a theoretical framework of welfare economics. Here, the assumption of 'homo oeconomicus' is replaced by that of an average man with imperfect rationality and imperfect ethical constraints, and social welfare functions are replaced by equilibrium solutions in 'games' played by contracting parties at constitutional and post-constitutional stages. The positive and normative theory of public goods becomes much more complex, and merit wants are evaluated from an individualistic perspective. Theories of public expenditure, public revenues and the interrelation between various levels of government are also analyzed.
The public choice approach combined with theoretical welfare economics and institutions will prove a stimulating and engaging read for those with a special interest in public sector economics, public choice and Austrian economics.
Contents: Introduction: Background: Some Aspects of the History of Thought; 1. Decision-making Processes and the Structures of Public Finance; 2. Individual and Collective Welfare; 3. Public Wants and Public Goods; 4. Equilibrium and Disequilibrium between Demand and Supply of Public Goods; 5. Bureaucracy and Interest Groups; 6. The Fiscal Constitution and the Rules Governing the Budget; 7. Public Expenditure; 8. Public Revenue and the Tax Burden; 9. Income Effects and Allocation Effects of Taxes; 10. Optimal Taxation in a Public Economy Conforming to the Market Economy; 11. Tax Shifting; 12. Public Prices; 13. Public Debt and Fiscal Policy; 14. Supranational, Regional and Local Public Finance; Appendix; Bibliography; Index