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MICROECONOMICS II.

"B"

Sponsored by a Grant TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/2/A/KMR-2009-0041 Course Material Developed by Department of Economics,

Faculty of Social Sciences, Eötvös Loránd University Budapest (ELTE) Department of Economics, Eötvös Loránd University Budapest

Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Balassi Kiadó, Budapest

Authors: Gergely K®hegyi, Dániel Horn, Gábor Kocsis, Klára Major Supervised by Gergely K®hegyi

February 2011

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ELTE Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Economics

MICROECONOMICS II.

"B"

week 3

General equilibrium theory, part 2

Gergely K®hegyi, Dániel Horn, Gábor Kocsis, Klára Major

Prepared by: Gergely K®hegyi, Dániel Horn and Klára Major, using Jack Hirshleifer, Amihai Gla- zer és David Hirshleifer (2009) Mikroökonómia. Budapest: Osiris Kiadó, ELTECON-könyvek (hence- forth: HGH), and Kertesi Gábor (ed.) (2004) Mikroökonómia el®adásvázlatok. http://econ.core.hu/ ker- tesi/kertesimikro/ (henceforth: KG).

Equilibrium with production

One participant, two goods, one factor of production

First example

Robinson consumes sh and coconut, which he produces with labor.

• xK: Robinson's coconut consumption

• xH: Robinson sh consumption

• h: factor of production (working hours): ¯h= 10

• Prod. functions (constant return to scale):

xH= 10hH

xK= 20hK

• Resource constraint: hH+hK= 10 xH

10 +xK

20 = 10 xK = 200−2xH

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Production-possibility set:

xK+ 2xH≤200 xK, xH≥0 Production-possibility frontier:

xK+ 2xH= 200 Marginal rate of transformation:

M RT = dxk

dxH =−2

Second example

Robinson consumes sh and coconut, which he produces with labor.

• xK: Robinson's coconut consumption

• xH: Robinson sh consumption

• h: factor of production (working hours): ¯h= 10

• Prod. functions (decreasing return to scale):

xH=√ hH

xK=√ hK

• Resource constraint: hH+hK= 25

x2H+x2K= 25

Production-possibility set:

x2K+x2H≤25 xK, xH≥0 Production-possibility frontier (PPF):

x2K+x2H= 25 Transformation curve (implicit form of the PPF curve):

T(xH, xK) = 0

T(xH, xK) =x2K+x2H−25

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Deriving the marginal rate of transformation from the transformation curve T(xH, xK) = 0

• Total dierential:

dT(xH, xK) = ∂T

∂xH

dxH+ ∂T

∂xK

dxK

• Along the curve dT(xH, xK) = 0

M RT =dxK

dxH

=−∂T /∂xH

∂T /∂xK

• E.g.:

M RT =−2xH

2xK

=−xH

xK

Relation of the marginal rate of transformation and the marginal product xH=fH(hH) xK=fK(hK)

hH=fH−1(xH) hK =fK−1(xK) hH+hK= ¯h

T(xH, xK) =fH−1(xH) +fK−1(xK)−h¯

M RT =−∂T /∂xH

∂T /∂xK

=−dfH−1/dxH

dfK−1/dxK

Since dhdx = dh/dx1 (can be proven mathematically precisely), then dfdx−1 = mp1 . Thus M RT =−1/mpH

1/mpK

=−mpK mpH

Role of the social planner

• Maximize: U(x1, x2)→maxx1,x2

• Subject to: T(x1, x2) = 0

• Solution:

M RS=M RT

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Decentralized decisions

• Robinson as producer (produces two goods with one factor):

Fix cost of production : F, price of production factor (labor) Maximize: Π =p1y1+p2y2−F →maxy1,y2

Subject to: T(y1, y2) = 0 Solution:

M RT =−p1 p2

• Robinson as consumer (income: income from labor (F)+ capital income (Π)):

Maximize: U(x1, x2)→maxx1,x2

Subject to: p1x1+p2x2=F+ Π Solution:

M RS=−p1

p2 M RS=M RT Equilibrium conditions:

y1(p1, p2) =x1(p1, p2);y2(p1, p2) =x2(p1, p2)

Two participants, two goods, one factor of production

Notation

• xRK: Robinson's consumption of coconut

• xRH: Robinson's consumption of sh

• hR: factor of production (¯hR= 10)

• Production functions:

xRH= 10hRH xRK= 20hRK

• Resource constraint: hRH+hRK= 10

• Production-possibility set:

xPH+ 2xPK ≤200

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xPH, xPK ≥0

• xPK: Friday's coconut consumption

• xPH: Friday's sh consumption

• hP: factor of production (h¯P = 10)

• Production functions:

xPH= 20hPH xPK= 10hPK

• Resource constraint: hPH+hPK= 10

• Production-possibility set:

2xRH+xRK ≤200 xRH, xRK ≥0

Production-possibility frontier

xRH 10 +xRK

20 = 10 xRK = 200−2xRH

M RTR=−2

xPH

20 +xPK

10 = 10 xPK= 200−0,5xPH

M RTP =−0,5

Robinson has comparative advantage in coconut production, and Friday in sh production.

Utility of exchange

The utility of exchange comes from the division of labor.

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Role of the social planner

Searching for Pareto-ecient allocations:

• Maximize: UA(xA1, xA2)→maxxA

1,xA2,xB1,xB2

• Subject to:

UB(xB1, xB2) = ¯UB T(x1, x2) = 0 x1=xA1 +xB1 x2=xA2 +xB2 Solution:

M RSA=M RT M RSB=M RT M RSA=M RSB=M RT

Two consumers, two producers, two goods, one factor of production

Decentralized decisions

The two companies (1 and 2) produces the two goods with one factor of production (labor). The two consumers (A and B) decide how much to consume besides their endowments, and how much labor to supply depending on their income, the prices of goods and the price of the factor of production.

Consumers income stem from their labor (working for the companies) and as owners, from the prot of the companies.

• Product prices: p1, p2, price of factor of production: w.

• Produced quantities of products: y1, y2.

• Used quantities of factors of production: L1, L2

• Consumers' endowments: ωA1, ω2A, ω1B, ω2B

• Consumed quantities: xA1, xA2, xB1, xB2

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• Oered labor: hA, hB

• The share of consumer Afrom the prot of rm 1 is: θA1

• Total prot of the companies are distributed among the consumers: θA1B1= 1, θA2B2= 1 Competitive mechanism I. (Optimal decision of companies):

• Maximize:

π1=p1y1−wL1→max

y1,L1

• Subject to: y1=f1(L1)

• First order condition: p1mpL1 =w

• Solution:

Labor demand function:L1(p1, w) Supply function: y1(p1, w) Prot function: π1(p1, w)

• Maximize:

π2=p2y1−wL2→max

y2,L2

• Subject to: y2=f2(L2)

• First order condition: p2mpL2 =w

• Solution:

Labor demand function:L2(p2, w) Supply function: y2(p2, w) Prot function: π2(p2, w)

Competitive mechanism II. (optimal decision of consumer): Aconsumer

• Maximize: UA(xA1, xA2, hA)→maxxA 1,xA2,hA

• Subject to: p1xA1 +p2xA2 =p1ω1A+p2ω2A+whAA1π1A2π2

• First order condition: M RS12A =−pp1

2, M RS1hA =−pw1,(M RS2hA =−pw2)

• Solution:

Labor supply function.: hA(p1, p2, w) Demand function: xA1(p1, p2, w), xA2(p1, p2, w)

Competitive mechanism II. (optimal decision of consumer): B consumer

• Maximize: UB(xB1, xB2, hB)→maxxB 1,xB2,hB

• Subject to: p1xB1 +p2xB2 =p1ωB1 +p2ωB2 +whBB1π1B2π2

• First order condition: M RS12B =−pp1

2, M RS1hB =−pw1,(M RS2hB =−pw2)

• Solution:

Labor demand function:hB(p1, p2, w) Demand function: xB1(p1, p2, w), xB2(p1, p2, w)

Competitive mechanism III. (market equilibrium conditions):

• Product markets:

xA1(p1, p2, w) +xB1(p1, p2, w) =y1(p1, w) +ω1A1B xA2(p1, p2, w) +xB2(p1, p2, w) =y2(p2, w) +ω2A2B

• Factor market (labor market):

L1(p1, w) +L2(p2, w) =hA(p1, p2, w) +hB(p1, p2, w)

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• Parameters: p1, p2, w

1. Consequence. Number of parameters and equations are equal.

1. Note. Since (product and factor) demand functions are zero order homogeneous (NO MONEY ILLU- SION), one of the products or factors can be used as numeraire. Letw=1˙ . Thus the system of equations seems to be over determined (more equations than parameters).

1. Statement. Walras-law (exchange economy with production): The total value of demanded and supp- lied goods equals, that is the aggregate market over demand is zero (with any price system):

p1z1(p1, p2, w) +p2z2(p1, p2, w) +wzh(p1, p2, w)≡0,

wherez1(p1, p2, w) =xA1(p1, p2, w)−ω1A+xB1(p1, p2, w)−ω1B−y1(p1, p2, w),z2(p1, p2, w) =xA2(p1, p2, w)−ωA2 + xB2(p1, p2, w)−ωB2 −y2(p1, p2, w)andzh(p1, p2, w) =L1(p1, p2, w) +L2(p1, p2, w)−hA(p1, p2, w)−hB(p1, p2, w). 2. Consequence. Due to the Walras-law the equilibrium conditions will not be independent (three equi- librium equations, two price parameters). So one of the equations can be dropped, and the system will not be over determined.

Algorithm for search for equilibrium with production

1. Algorithm. • Writing up individual (producer and consumer) optimum equations

• Solving the producer optimum (supply, factor demand and prot functions)

• Solving the consumer optimum (demand and factor supply)

• Writing the market equilibrium equations (demand=supply on each market)

• Choosing the numeraire good (rewriting the demand and supply functions so that they depend on the price ratio)

• Dening equilibrium price (one of the equilibrium equations can be dropped)

• Finding the individual consumption and supply of goods.

2. Note. The above algorithm can be generalized to anN product, M consumer, R rm andK factor of production system.

Példa:

• Technology of two companies: y1=√

L1, y2=√ L2

• Utility functions of two consumers:

UA= xA1xA2 hA

, UB= xB1xB2 hB

• Endowments of two consumers: ωA1 = 100, ω2A= 200, ωB1 = 300, ωB2 = 400, hA= 16, hB = 16(both consumers work maximum 16 hours a day)

• θA1 = 0,2;θA2 = 0,8;θA1 = 0,6;θA2 = 0,4 (TheA consumer receives 20% of consumers 1st rm prot,... etc.)

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N goods, M consumers, R producers and K factors of production

General equilibrium of an N product, M consumer, R rm and K production factor eco- nomy

• Parameters:

M ∗N (N pc. consumption good,M pc. consumers) R∗K (K pc. factor of production,R pc. rm) N pc. consumption price

K pc. factor of production price

Number of parameters: M ∗N+N+R∗K+K

• Equations:

M ∗N pc. individual optimum constraint (rst order constraints and budget constraints for the Lagrange-variables)

R∗K pc. individual producer optimum constraint (rst order constraints+production func- tions+ rst order conditions for the Lagrange-variables)

N pc. equilibrium condition on the product markets: aggregate demand = aggregate supply K pc. equilibrium condition on the factor markets: aggregate demand = aggregate supply Number of equations: M∗N+N+R∗K+K

• So the number of equations and parameters are equal.

• BUT since only relative prices matter (demand and supply functions are zero order homogeneous) a numeraire can be choosen. (−1parameter).

• So the system seems over determined. (More equations than parameters.)

• BUT due to the Walras-law, equilibrium equations are not independent!

• So the system is not over determined. Dropping one equilibrium equation, the equilibrium can be found according to the algorithm.

3. Note. Counting equations might lead to wrong conclusion however. Negative prices can turn out, since budget constraints and equilibrium conditions are inequalities and not equalities!→Problem of the existence of equilibrium (see below).

Fundamental theorems of the welfare state with production

2. Statement. The two fundamental theorems of the welfare state hold even with production included in the system.

Main questions

Four main questions of the general equilibrium theory

• Existence: Is there an equilibrium?

• Eciency: Is the equilibrium ecient?

• Uniqueness: Is the equilibrium unique, or more price systems are possible?

• Stability: If the economy moves from the equilibrium (e.g. demand or technological shock), can it return?

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Market tests

• 'Tests' of the competitive market model.

• Sellers and buyers are randomly chosen

• Information: 'You have 100 tokens, which you can use to buy a maximum of 3 pieces from a good, with a price of 6. You can sell the rst piece to the test leader, for 16 tokens, the second for 11 tokens, and the third for 3 tokens. When you repay the 100 tokens to the test leader the remaining tokens is your prot, which you can exchange to dollars.'

Imperfect markets

Imperfect markets

• Transaction costs: contracting, that is the cost of exchange.

• Reasons:

Information asymmetry Property rights problems

Spatial distance bw. seller and buyer.

Etc.

Imperfect markets

Proportional transaction costs: We have to pay Gfee after each pieces of goods X.

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Due to the proportionate transaction costs selling any buying price will depart. The larger the distance, the more likely individuals will opt for self-supply, and the smaller the total volume of the exchange.

Lump-sum transaction costs: Lump-sum transaction costs do not create disparities between selling and buying price. But they make consumers to exchange only in discrete periods of time. So both buyers and sellers are forced to keep endowments. Higher transaction costs and costs of keeping endowment will raise the probability of self-supply and thus decrease the volume of total exchange. In extreme cases the market exchange nill.

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Role of money

• Money as the instrument of exchange

• Money as tool for keeping value (transitionally)

Money decreases the costs of exchange. (It does not decrease the costs of physically exchanging goods.

These exists in every economy with division of labor.) If only one good serves as the numeraire, less two way transaction is necessary. Moreover such a numeraire enables a three-, or more-way exchange, which is nearly impossible with barter. For exchange endowment of goods might be needed. Costs of exchange is the lowest of there is a consensus about the numeraire, used as money, and which can also serve as tool for keeping value.

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4. Note. To analyze money, we need to include time in our analysis.

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