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General Equilibrium (Social Efficiency)
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Review Model of choice of individual We know preferences and
we find demands With many such agents: Q1: How prices are formed? Q2: Are markets efficient?
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Big ideas: Today: Edgeworth box Pareto efficiency Next lecture
Competitive equilibrium First welfare theorem
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“Economy” with apples and oranges
Two consumers, A and B. Total resources available Feasible allocation and
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Geometric representation
4 numbers and geometric representation? Insane? No: Edgeworth box Collection of all feasible allocations
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Edgeworth Box OB OA
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Socially Desirable Allocation Pareto Efficiency
When allocation is “socially” efficient? - Maximizing sum of utilities? NO! - Weaker notion: Pareto efficiency! Allocation x Pareto efficient, if there does not exist allocation y that is A) at least as good as x for all B) is strictly better for at least one
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Quiz Consider a two agent economy with
Q: Is allocation Pareto efficient Yes No Depends
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Pareto Efficiency Assume Cobb Douglass preferences
Necessity of tangency OB OA
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Pareto Efficiency Sufficiency of tangency OB OA
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Equivalent Characterization
Assume Interior Allocations Allocation is Pareto efficient if and only if indifference curves are tangent (equal MRS) Are initial endowments efficient?
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Example: OB OA
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Quiz Let Is allocation Pareto efficient Yes No Depends
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Contract Curve Contract curve is the set of all Pareto-optimal allocations. OB OA
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Cobb-Douglass example
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Contract Curve Cobb Douglass OB OA
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Contract Curve Perfect substitutes OB OA
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Contract Curve Other preferences A) General Perfect substitutes
B) Perfect Complements C) Quasilinear
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