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Part Iia: Paper 1 General Equilibrium and Welfare Economics: DR Sönje Reiche

(1) The document defines excess demand functions and shows the requirements for competitive equilibrium using these functions. (2) It discusses properties of excess demand functions, including being homogeneous of degree zero and satisfying Walras's Law. (3) Using excess demand functions, the document considers the existence of competitive equilibrium and problems that could arise from non-concave production functions or non-convex indifference curves.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views

Part Iia: Paper 1 General Equilibrium and Welfare Economics: DR Sönje Reiche

(1) The document defines excess demand functions and shows the requirements for competitive equilibrium using these functions. (2) It discusses properties of excess demand functions, including being homogeneous of degree zero and satisfying Walras's Law. (3) Using excess demand functions, the document considers the existence of competitive equilibrium and problems that could arise from non-concave production functions or non-convex indifference curves.

Uploaded by

hustla7
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Part IIa: Paper 1

General Equilibrium and Welfare


Economics

Dr Sönje Reiche
Outline
• Summarising competitive equilibrium
– Cowell 6.4
– Varian 32.9-32.13
• Questions remaining
• Excess demand functions and defining
equilibrium
• Properties of excess demand functions
– Cowell 7.4-7.4.2
Competitive Equilibrium in a
p Closed Economy
 x

py

y px
MRS   MRT
py

yd  ys
Agg I.C.

Contract
PPF Curve
xd  xs x
Competitive Equilibrium in an
p
Open Economy
 x
py px
MRT 
y py
px
MRS 
py
ys
Export

yd

xs Import xd x
Points to Note
• Spending power determined by position of PPF

• Well-behaved functions:
• concave production function
• indifference curves are convex

only one point of tangency


Questions to Address
• Existence: Under what circumstances can we be
sure that an equilibrium exists?

• Uniqueness:Will an economy have only one


equilibrium?

• Stability: Will the economy somehow “tend to” or


“revert to” this equilibrium?

• Price Determination: And will this determine the


price system for us?
Excess Demand Function

Ex  p   x d
 p   x  p   Rx
s

Aggregate Aggregate Economy’s


demand for x supply for x natural
given prices given prices resource of x

This function Ex  p  gives excess demand for good x as a


function of the price vector p.
Aggregation of Consumer Demand

Partial equilibrium approach

x d
 p    x  p, mi 
d
i
i

General equilibrium approach

x d  p    xid  p 
i
px Individual 1 px Individual 2

Conveniently
downward x x
sloping! px
Market Demand

x
Aggregation of Supply
x s  p    x sf  p 
f
px Firm 1 Firm 2
px

x x
px Market Supply

Conveniently
upward sloping!

x
Resource Stock

px

Rx
Putting these three elements together ...

Ex  p   x d
 p   x  p   Rx
s

px

Excess demand
Excess supply

Ex  p 
Ex  p   0
Competitive Equilibrium
Equilibrium given by price vector p* which
satisfies 3 conditions

No excess demand
E  p *  0
Prices non-negative p*  0 for each good
So, if strongly
E  p *  p*  monotone
0 preferences,

p*  0 and
If excess supply,
equilibrium given by
price must be zero E  p *  0
Properties of Excess Demand
Functions
(these properties hold in and out of equilibrium)

(1) Homogenous of degree zero

Ex  t  p   Ex  p  t 0

so, we can normalise prices aribitrarily:


E.g. divide by plabour

or, divide by p
h
h so that prices sum to 1.
Individuals spend all their income because of non satiation.
Income is determined by resources and profits.
(2) Walras’s Law (local non-satiation)

 p E  p  0
h
h h

Once we know excess demand in H-1 markets, we


know excess demand in the Hth market

Diagram for two goods and normalised prices


1
px

Excess demand
Excess supply

Ex  p 
Existence
Is there a set of prices such that Ex  p   0 ?

Well-behaved economy

1
p x

Excess demand
Excess supply

Ex  p 
Problems
• Discontinuous excess demand

1
px

Excess demand
Excess supply

Ex  p 
Existence requires each excess demand
function to be continuous
• production function concave
• indifference curves continuous and strictly convex
Problem of non-concavity of production
w xs
p
One firm BUT:
if increasing returns to
scale, then only a
labour
small number of
… more generally, non-concave if
increasing returns to scale
firms, so non-
x concavity remains
s
Many firms

labour
Non-Convexity of indifference curves
y

x
px
Discontinuous demand function

x
Summary
• Defined excess demand functions and showed
requirements for competitive equilibrium using these
functions

• Properties of excess demand functions


• Homogenous of degree 0
• Walras’s Law

• Using excess demand functions to consider


existence

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