Curriculum Vitaes
Profile Information
- Affiliation
- Professor, Faculty of Economics, Department of Economics, Sophia University(Concurrent)Chairperson of the Master's(Doctoral) Program in Economics
- Degree
- B.A. in Economics(Mar, 2004, Waseda University)M.A. in Economics(Mar, 2006, Waseda University)Doctor of Economics(Feb, 2011, Waseda University)
- Contact information
- kohei.kamaga
sophia.ac.jp - Researcher number
- 00453978
- ORCID ID
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8281-7193- J-GLOBAL ID
- 200901071307177601
- researchmap Member ID
- 6000006084
- External link
Research Interests
3Research Areas
1Research History
10-
Apr, 2022 - Present
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Jul, 2023 - Jun, 2024
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Apr, 2015 - Mar, 2022
Education
3-
Apr, 2006 - Feb, 2011
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Apr, 2004 - Jun, 2006
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Apr, 2000 - Mar, 2004
Awards
2Major Papers
26-
Theoretical Economics, 20(4) 1367-1410, Nov, 2025 Peer-reviewedAlthough sufficientarianism has been gaining interest as a theory of distributive justice in recent years, it has not been examined in the presence of risk. We propose an ex post approach to sufficientarianism that has a strong link to ex post prioritarianism. Both ex post criteria are based on an axiom that we refer to as prospect independence of the unconcerned, a natural extension of the independence axiom known from the literature that focuses on situations with no risk. We characterize a class of ex post prioritarian orderings as well as the corresponding class of ex post sufficientarian orderings. In addition, we point out some important differences between these two ex post criteria, and we examine how they fare when assessed in terms of specific ex ante Paretian axioms.
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Economic Theory, 80(1) 39-85, Aug, 2025 Peer-reviewed
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Journal of Mathematical Economics, 102983-102983, Apr, 2024 Peer-reviewed
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Social Choice and Welfare, 61(4) 835-852, Nov, 2023 Peer-reviewedAbstract We examine the impact of Suzumura’s (Economica 43:381–390, 1976) consistency property when applied in the context of collective choice rules that are independent of irrelevant alternatives, neutral, and monotonic. An earlier contribution by Blau and Deb (Econometrica 45:871–879, 1977) establishes the existence of a vetoer if the collective relation is required to be complete and acyclical. The purpose of this paper is to explore the possibilities that result if completeness and acyclicity are dropped and Suzumura consistency is imposed instead. A conceptually similar but logically independent version of the combined axiom that requires the collective decision mechanism to be independent, neutral, and monotonic is employed. In the case of a finite population, we obtain an alternative impossibility theorem if a collective choice rule is assumed to be non-degenerate and a modified no veto requirement is imposed instead of Blau and Deb’s (1977) condition. If the population is countably infinite, the impossibility can be avoided but it resurfaces if our new no veto property is extended to a coalitional variant.
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Economics and Philosophy, 39(3) 468-484, Nov, 2023 Peer-reviewed
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Economic Theory, 75(4) 1099-1139, May, 2023 Peer-reviewedAbstract This paper provides an axiomatic analysis of sufficientarian social evaluation. Sufficientarianism has emerged as an increasingly important notion of distributive justice. We propose a class of principles that we label generalized critical-level sufficientarian orderings. The distinguishing feature of our new class is that its members exhibit constant critical levels of well-being that are allowed to differ from the threshold of sufficiency. Our basic axiom assigns priority to those below the threshold, a property that is shared by numerous other sufficientarian approaches. When combined with the well-known strong Pareto principle and the assumption that there be a constant critical level, the axiom implies that the critical level cannot be below the threshold. The main results of the paper are characterizations of our new class and an important subclass. As a final observation, we identify the generalized critical-level sufficientarian orderings that permit us to avoid the repugnant conclusion and the sadistic conclusion, which are known as two fundamental challenges in population ethics.
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Journal of Mathematical Economics, 103 Article 102768-102768, Dec, 2022 Peer-reviewed
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Journal of Political Philosophy, 30(4) 434-461, Dec, 2022 Peer-reviewed
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Social Indicators Research, 164(1) 189-215, Nov, 2022 Peer-reviewedAbstract This paper provides a characterization of a new class of ordinal poverty measures that are defined by means of the aggregate generalized poverty gap. To be precise, we propose to use the sum of the differences between the transformed fixed poverty line and the transformed level of income of each person below the line as our measure. If the transformation is strictly concave, the resulting measure is strictly inequality averse with respect to the incomes of the poor. In analogy to some existing results on inequality measurement, we show that the only relative (scale-invariant) members of our class are based on strictly concave power functions or the natural logarithm. Moreover, we show that our measures allow for a useful decomposition that is akin to those examined in some earlier contributions. In an empirical analysis, we compare the logarithmic variant of our index to two well-established alternative orderings. Unlike numerous indices that appear in the earlier literature, ours do not explicitly depend on the number of poor or on the total population size, thereby ruling out any direct influence of the head-count ratio on poverty comparisons.
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Review of Income and Wealth, 67(3) 564-590, Sep 14, 2021 Peer-reviewed
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Economic Theory, 69(2) 451-473, Mar, 2020 Peer-reviewed
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Mathematical Social Sciences, 94 41-48, Jul, 2018 Peer-reviewed
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Social Choice and Welfare, 47(1) 207-232, Jun, 2016 Peer-reviewed
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Mathematical Social Sciences, 72 24-32, Nov, 2014 Peer-reviewed
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Social Choice and Welfare, 35(3) 377-392, Sep, 2010 Peer-reviewed
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Social Choice and Welfare, 33(3) 405-413, Sep, 2009 Peer-reviewed
Misc.
1-
Social Science Japan Journal, 23(1) 117-120, Mar 7, 2020 Invited
Books and Other Publications
6-
Mitsubishi Economic Research Institute, Dec 19, 2024
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University of Tokyo Press, Jul 20, 2017 (ISBN: 9784130430388)
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University of Tokyo Press, May 21, 2015 (ISBN: 9784130302067)
Major Presentations
36-
24th Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory (SAET), Jul 5, 2025
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The 5th East Asia Game Theory Conference, Aug 27, 2024
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17th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare, Jul 5, 2024
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22nd Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory (SAET), Jul 17, 2023
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16th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare, Jun 25, 2022
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20th Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory (SAET), Jun 17, 2021
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Virtual Conference on Social Choice Theory and Applications, Feb 6, 2021
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20th Annual Meeting of the Society for Public Economic Theory (APET), Jul 11, 2019
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Central European Program in Economic Theory (CEPET) Workshop 2018, Jun 28, 2018
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14th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare (SSCW), Jun 15, 2018
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18th Annual Meeting of the Society for Public Economic Theory (APET), Jul 11, 2017
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Central European Program in Economic Theory (CEPET) Workshop 2017, Jun 23, 2017
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13th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare (SSCW), Jul 1, 2016
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14th Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory (SAET), Aug 21, 2014
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12th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare (SSCW), Jun 18, 2014, Society for Social Choice and Welfare
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11th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare (SSCW), Aug 20, 2012, Society for Social Choice and Welfare
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11th Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory (SAET), Jun 27, 2011, Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory
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10th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare (SSCW), Jul 21, 2010, Society for Social Choice and Welfare
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Logic, Game Theory, and Social Choice 6 (LGS6), Aug 3, 2009
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5th Spain-Italy-Netherlands Meeting on Game Theory (SING5), Jul 5, 2009
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2009 Japanese Economic Association Spring Meeting, Jun 6, 2009
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9th Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare (SSCW), Jun 18, 2008, Society for Social Choice and Welfare
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2008 Japanese Economic Association Spring Meeting, May 31, 2008
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2006 Japanese Economic Association Autumn Meeting, Oct 22, 2006
Teaching Experience
11-
Welfare Economics (Graduate School of Economics, Sophia University)
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Intermediate Microeconomics (Graduate School of Economics, Sophia University)
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Seminar (Faculty of Economics, Sophia University)
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Public Policy (Faculty of Economics, Sophia University)
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Introduction to Economics (Faculty of Economics, Sophia University)
Professional Memberships
3Research Projects
10-
Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2025 - Mar, 2028
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2024 - Mar, 2028
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Zengin Foundation for Studies on Economics and Finance, Feb, 2025 - Mar, 2027
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2023 - Mar, 2027
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2023 - Mar, 2026
Other
19-
Dec, 2024ゼミ学生グループが日本政策学生会議(ISFJ)で社会保障分科会賞を受賞(論文「被保護世帯の自立促進に向けた就労支援の課題:ケースワーカーの役割と制度の最適化」に対して)
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Dec, 2023ゼミ学生グループが日本政策学生会議(ISFJ)で優秀賞を受賞(論文「住民の体感治安に影響を与える要因に基づいた防犯政策の立案」に対して)
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Dec, 2023ゼミ学生グループが日本政策学生会議(ISFJ)で優秀賞を受賞(論文「公平な子どもの受診機会に向けた医療アクセシビリティの格差是正」に対して)
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Dec, 2022ゼミ学生グループが日本政策学生会議(ISFJ)で社会保障分科会賞を受賞(論文「ジェンダー規範に注目した自殺防止」に対して)