000 01699nab a2200277 c 4500
999 _c147360
_d147360
003 ES-MaIEF
005 20230426172006.0
007 ta
008 230426t2023 us ||||| |||| 00| 0|eng d
040 _aES-MaIEF
_bspa
_cES-MaIEF
100 _910995
_aCongleton, Roger Douglas
245 0 _aFederalism and pandemic policies
_bvariety as the spice of life
_c Roger D. Congleton
500 _aResumen.
504 _aBibliografía.
520 _aIn the ordinary course of life, choices vary with age and other factors because one’s opportunities vary with one’s circumstances. Thus, investments in and expenditures on healthcare (and most other things) vary with age and a variety of other factors, including whether one lives in a rural area, suburb, or central city, health risks, risk aversion, and beliefs about the nature of a good life. Because assessment of the effects of illnesses vary with the same factors, the conclusions reached about best private and governmental health policies also tend to vary. This implies that conformity to “ideal” pandemic policies is more likely to be generated by a federal or polycentric system of policy making than a unitary system, especially ones that are constrained by a generality principle.
650 4 _942967
_aECONOMIA DE LA SALUD
650 4 _948340
_aSALUD PUBLICA
650 4 _948069
_aPOLITICA SANITARIA
650 4 _aPANDEMIAS
_967998
650 4 _aCORONAVIRUS
_967999
650 4 _aGESTION
_944798
650 4 _aFEDERALISMO
_944154
650 4 _aDESCENTRALIZACION ADMINISTRATIVA
_942578
773 0 _9169159
_oOP 1443/2023/195/1/2
_tPublic Choice
_w(IEF)124378
_x 0048-5829
_g v. 195, n. 1-2, April 2023, p. 73-100
942 _cART