170 likes | 458 Views
General Equilibrium and Efficiency. General Equilibrium Analysis is the study of the simultaneous determination of prices and quantities in all relevant markets. General Equilibrium (GE) occurs when: There is no excess demand or excess supply in any output or input markets
E N D
General Equilibrium Analysisis the study of the simultaneous determination of prices and quantities in all relevant markets.
General Equilibrium (GE)occurs when: • There is no excess demand or excess supply in any output or input markets • Consumers are maximizing utility subject to budget constraints • Producers are maximizing profit subject to the production function • Input suppliers are optimizing
Economic Efficiency • An efficient (or Pareto efficient) allocation of goods is an allocation in which no one can be made better off without making someone else worse off.
Conditions of Economic Efficiency • Efficiency in exchange • Efficiency in production • Efficiency in the output market
Efficiency in Exchange • Efficiency in exchange occurs when • MRSA = MRSB • where • MRSi = marginal rate of substitution of good y for good x for consumer i, i = A, B • = amount of good y that consumer iis willing to give up for one more unit of good x
Example: 2 consumers Ann & Bob; 2 goods X & Y • Ann is willing to trade 4Y for 1X (MRSA = 4) • Bob is willing to trade 2Y for 1X (MRSB = 2) • Ann and Bob can benefit from trading, e.g., • If Ann trades 3Y for 1X she is better off since she is willing to pay 4Y. • If Bob receives 3Y for 1X he is better off since he would accept 2Y for 1X. • When MRSA > MRSB there are gains from trade. • Only when MRSA = MRSB can no one be made better off without making someone else worse off, and the Pareto efficient allocation occurs.
Efficiency in Production • An allocation of inputs is technically efficient if the output of 1 good cannot be increased without decreasing the output of another good. • Efficiency in production (or efficiency in the use of inputs in production) occurs when • MRTSx = MRTSy • MRTSj= marginal rate of technical substitution of labor (L) for capital (K) for good j , j = x, y • = amount by which K can be reduced when 1 more unit of L is used, so that output remains constant.
Example: SupposeMRTSx > MRTSy • e.g., MRTSx =4 and MRTSy=3 • For good x, producers can give up 4 units of K for 1 more unit of L, without changing output. • For good y, producers can give up 3 units of K for 1 more unit of L, without changing output. • Efficiency can be improved by using more K to produce good y and more L to produce good x. • When MRTSx = MRTSy, production efficiency cannot be improved by changing the input mix.
Efficiency in the Output Market • Efficiency in the output market occurs when • MRT = MRSA = MRSB • where • MRT = marginal rate of transformation of good y for good x • = amount of good y that must be given up to produce one additional unit of good x
Example: 2 individuals Ann & Bob; 2 inputs L & K; and 2 goods X & Y • MRSA = MRSB = 3, i.e., Ann and Bob are willing to trade 3Y for 1X. • MRT = 2, i.e., the economy can give up 2 units of Y to produce 1 more unit of X. • It benefits society to produce more Y and less X until • MRT = MRSA = MRSB
MRT = MCx/MCy • where • MCj = marginal cost of good j • = additional cost of producing 1 more unit of j • Example: MCx=$1, MCy= $2, MCx/MCy= ½ • The economy can produce 1 more unit of X for $1 or 1 more unit of Y for $2. • For $1, economy can produce 1 unit of X or ½ unit of Y. • The amount of Y that must be given up to produce 1 more unit of X is ½. (i.e., MRT = ½ ) • MRT = MCx/MCy
Economic Efficiency Summary • Conditions of Economic Efficiency • Efficiency in exchange: MRSA = MRSB • Efficiency in production: MRTS1 = MRTS2 • Efficiency in the output market: MRT = MRSA = MRSB • Note: For the entire economy, MRS must be equal for all consumers, MRTS must be equal for all firms, and MRT must be equal to MRS for all consumers .
First Welfare Theorem • The First Welfare Theorem (the Invisible Hand Theorem) • A competitive equilibrium is efficient.
A competitive equilibrium satisfies the 3 conditions for efficiency. • Efficiency in exchange: MRSA = MRSB • holds because constrained utility maximization requires • MRSA = Px/Py for Ann • MRSB = Px/Py for Bob and thus, • MRSA = Px/Py = MRSB • where Px is the price of good x and Pyis the price of good y.
Efficiency in production: MRTSx = MRTSy • holds in perfect competition because cost minimization requires: • MRTSx = w/r for good x • MRTSy = w/r for good y , and thus • MRTSx = w/r = MRTSy • where w = wage, r = rental rate on capital
Efficiency in the output market: MRT = MRSA = MRSB • holds because of the following. • MRT = MCx/MCy • Px = MCxfor profit maximization of firm 1 which produces good x • Py = MCyfor profit maximization of firm 2 which produces good y • These imply that: • MRT = Px/Py • For utility maximization: • MRSA = Px/Py = MRSB • Thus: • MRT = MRSA = MRSB