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4. The Problem of Exchange. We consider now the development of competitive markets starting from 2-person barter exchange (direct exchange of goods) 4.1 Harvesting and Gathering: The Need for Trade property rights are respected, goods exchanged only by voluntary trade two goods A and R
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4. The Problem of Exchange We consider now the development of competitive markets starting from 2-person barter exchange (direct exchange of goods) 4.1 Harvesting and Gathering: The Need for Trade • property rights are respected, goods exchanged only by voluntary trade • two goods A and R • two agents G and E • G harvest aG=8 and rG=2, E aE=2 and rE=6 • total economy consists of a=10 and r=8
4.2 Constructing the Edgeworth Box and Finding Feasible Trades Edgeworth box allows us to depict feasible allocations, possible trades and: equilibrium: outcome of trading process so that agents have no further incentive to trade horizontal dimension represents total amount of good R, vertical dimension of good A allocation to G measured from origin, allocation to E measured from top right hence each point represents one feasible allocation, i.e. possible outcome of trading process no-trade allocation: agents consume what they originally possess (Fig 4.1)
4.3 Finding Equilibrium Trades • is there a feasible allocation that both agents prefer to no-trade allocation? If not, they will remain at NTA • if yes, they will trade to an equilibrium allocation where there is no further incentive to trade • if equilibrium allocation is not unique, outcome has to be determined by bargaining • if indiff. curves cross at NTA, trade can make both agents better off (all allocations inside lens bordered by IC’s are better for both) (Fig 4.2) • an agent will block all trades that are not individually rational, i.e. that make her worse off than NTA • final allocation must be efficient or Pareto-optimal: there is no other allocation where at least one agent is better off and none worse off • If one agent owns everything and the other nothing, is that Pareto-optimal? Yes, because to make the second better off, the first hast to be made worse off
whenever indiff. curves of the agents cross, there are allocations that are better for both • hence in Pareto-optimal allocation IC’s have to be tangent, i.e. the MRS have to be identical • otherwise G would be willing to trade at different ratio (e.g. 2:1) than E (e.g. 4:1) and hence they could find beneficial trade (e.g. trading at a ratio 3:1) • contract curve links all points where IC’s are tangent, hence all efficient trades (Fig 4.3) • core: set of Pareto-optimal allocations that cannot be improved upon by any individual or group of individuals together • core is the part of contract curve between no-trade IC’s, represents all equilibrium allocations • still leaves many possible outcomes, hence bargaining process matters
Pareto Optima and the Contract Curve (Appendix B) • finding Pareto optimum amounts to maximizing one agent’s utility holding the other’s constant • in Pareto optimum thus MRSE = MRSG • example: let the total amount of good X be wxand the total quantity of good Y be wy uE(xE,yE) = xEyE and uG(xG,yG) = xGyG then MRSE = yE / xE = yG / xG = MRSG using the constraints xE + xG = wxand yE + yG = wy we obtain yE / xE = (wy - yE )/(wx - xE ) and thus yE = xE wy / wx
4.4 A Growing Population and the Core • Assume population grows through replication, identical copies of the agents appear • already with 2*2 agents trade where all gains go to one type (say E)is not possible any more (Fig 4.4) • the 2 G could suggest to trade with only 1 E • the G’s would then be better off due to convexity of preferences • hence coalition of 2 G and 1 E would block trade • core is smaller with 4 than with 2 agents • core shrinks further as population grows • for infinite population core consists of only one point (the competitive equilibrium allocation) where IC’s are tangent to line to NTA (Fig 4.6) • all other allocations can be blocked by a sufficiently large coalition
Competitive Behavior • in large economy agents don’t bargain individually but act as price takers • competitive behavior: deciding upon supply and demand taken prices as given • in large economy barter trade is inefficient, use good called money • agent’s budget line goes through NTA with slope = price ratio, straight because individual agent is small so does not influence prices • given NTA and prices, optimal bundle is the one where the budget line is tangent to IC • if at given prices G’s want to supply more of A (and buy more of R) than E’s are willing to buy (sell) there is an excess supply of A and excess demand of R
competitive equilibrium consists of competitive prices such that supply and demand match when each agent maximizes utility • resulting allocation is competitive equilibrium allocation • in competitive equilibrium for all agents MRS = price ratio competitive equilibrium is the outcome both of bargaining of infinite population and price-taking behavior, hence we can assume that a market for each good exists