Applied general equilibrium models: Theoretical part M.A. Keyzer and C.F.A. van Wesenbeeck.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture 3: Taxes, Tariffs and Quota (Chapter 5) Relation to work horses Government and taxation Taxes and quotas in general equilibrium Welfare implications.
Advertisements

OPIM 952 – Market Equilibrium Ralph Ahn. Todays Lecture A general introduction to market equilibria Walras-Cassel Model The Wald corrections The Arrow-Debreu.
6.853: Topics in Algorithmic Game Theory Fall 2011 Constantinos Daskalakis Lecture 16.
Chapter Twenty-Nine Exchange. u Two consumers, A and B. u Their endowments of goods 1 and 2 are u E.g. u The total quantities available and units of good.
Frank Cowell: Microeconomics Market Power and Misrepresentation MICROECONOMICS Principles and Analysis Frank Cowell September 2006.
Lecture 5: Externalities (chapter 9) Relation to lectures 1-4 Negative externalities Positive externalities: public goods and empathy Efficiency wage relation.
Lecture 2: Applied general equilibrium (Chapter 3) Introduction of formats Comparing the formats Model implementation –Classification –The Social Accounting.
6.896: Topics in Algorithmic Game Theory Lecture 14 Constantinos Daskalakis.
Chapter Thirty Production. Exchange Economies (revisited) u No production, only endowments, so no description of how resources are converted to consumables.
1 Chapter 3 – Tools of Normative Analysis Public Finance McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Towards a spatially and socially explicit Chinese agricultural policy model: A welfare approach M.A. Keyzer Lecture 3 Presentation available:
General Equilibrium Theory
General Equilibrium and Efficiency. General Equilibrium Analysis is the study of the simultaneous determination of prices and quantities in all relevant.
6.896: Topics in Algorithmic Game Theory Lecture 15 Constantinos Daskalakis.
Lecture 1 A Simple Representative Model: Two Period
Microeconomics General equilibrium Institute of Economic Theories - University of Miskolc Mónika Kis-Orloczki Assistant lecturer.
6.853: Topics in Algorithmic Game Theory
Chapter 5 A Closed- Economy One-Period Macro- economic Model Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
Chapter 5 A Closed- Economy One-Period Macroeconomic Model Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education Canada.
L11: Risk Sharing and Asset Pricing 1 Lecture 11: Risk Sharing and Asset Pricing The following topics will be covered: Pareto Efficient Risk Allocation.
Solutions Manual Figures and Tables. Chapter 1 Equilibrium and Efficiency Figures and Tables.
1 General Equilibrium APEC 3001 Summer 2006 Readings: Chapter 16.
L9: Consumption, Saving, and Investments 1 Lecture 9: Consumption, Saving, and Investments The following topics will be covered: –Consumption and Saving.
L4: Consumption and Saving1 Lecture 4: Consumption and Saving The following topics will be covered: –Consumption and Saving under Certainty Aversion to.
A Closed- Economy One-Period Macro-economic Model
Robinson Crusoe model 1 consumer & 1 producer & 2 goods & 1 factor: –two price-taking economic agents –two goods: the labor (or leisure x 1 ) of the consumer.
Environmental Economics1 ECON 4910 Spring 2007 Environmental Economics Lecture 2 Chapter 6 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
CHAPTER 30 EXCHANGE.
1 Exchange Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 – Spring 2009.
General Equilibrium and Market Efficiency
11 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair General Equilibrium.
Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 11 Redistributive Taxation Ricardian Equivalence.
Consumer Behavior & Public Policy Lecture #3 Microeconomics.
Chapter Thirty-Two Production. Exchange Economies (revisited)  No production, only endowments, so no description of how resources are converted to consumables.
Introduction to Matching Theory E. Maskin Jerusalem Summer School in Economic Theory June 2014.
6.896: Topics in Algorithmic Game Theory Lecture 13b Constantinos Daskalakis.
11 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair General Equilibrium.
Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 3 Basic Intertemporal Model.
LECTURER: JACK WU The Theory of Property Tax. Outline Topic I: What Are Property Taxes? Topic II: Property Tax Incidence Topic III: Property Tax Capitalization.
Faculty of Economics Optimization Lecture 3 Marco Haan February 28, 2005.
CHAPTER 31 PRODUCTION. The Robinson Crusoe Economy One consumer and one firm; The consumer owns the firm; Preference: over leisure and coconuts; Technology:
ECON 4910 seminar 21 ECON 4910 Spring 2007 Second seminar Lecturer Finn R. Førsund.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 A Closed- Economy One-Period Macroeconomic Model.
General competitive equilibrium. General equilibrium: How does an idealized private ownership competitive economy works ?  l goods (indexed by j ) 
Marek Kapicka Lecture 2 Basic Intertemporal Model
Security Markets III MSV Teorie finančních trhů. Definice ekonomiky economic goods consumers firms Let be the consumption set for consumer i Consumption.
Frank Cowell: Market Power & Misrepresentation MARKET POWER AND MISREPRESENTATION MICROECONOMICS Principles and Analysis Frank Cowell July Note:
© 2010 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 32 Production.
Chapter 32 Production. Exchange Economies (revisited) No production, only endowments, so no description of how resources are converted to consumables.
1 Production. 2 Exchange Economies (revisited) No production, only endowments, so no description of how resources are converted to consumables. General.
L27 Review. Exam u On 12 th of May, 17:05 19:05 p.m. room: B10, 19 Ingraham Hall u Cumulative (I know it is a lot of work!) u 2 hours (120 min)
Econ 102 SY Lecture 9 General equilibrium and economic efficiency October 2, 2008.
Chapter 5 A Closed-Economy One-Period Macroeconomic Model.
Efficiency and Equity in a Competitive Market
Eco 3311 Lecture 12 One Period Closed Economy Model - Equilibrium
Theory of Capital Markets
Chapter 32 Exchange.
Chapter 3 - Tools of Normative Analysis
Chapter Twenty-Nine Exchange.
Lecture 18 Towards general equilibrium
General Equilibrium (Social Efficiency)
RL3 Review.
Chapter 33 Production.
General Equilibrium (Social Efficiency)
General Equilibrium (Social Efficiency)
General Equilibrium (Social Efficiency)
L12 General Equilibrium.
L12 General Equilibrium.
L13 General Equilibrium.
Problem Set 4: Externalities
Presentation transcript:

Applied general equilibrium models: Theoretical part M.A. Keyzer and C.F.A. van Wesenbeeck

Overview of course 1.Introduction (Chapter 1,2, (3)) 2.Applied general equilibrium: formats: (Chapter 3) 3.Taxes, tariffs and quota: (Chapter 5) 4.Dynamics: (Chapter 8) 5.Externalities: (Chapter 9)

Study load and prerequisites The workload of this course is 2 credits (80 hrs) –10 hrs attending lectures –35 hrs preparing for lectures –35 hrs preparing for the exam Prerequisites –Knowledge of microeconomics at the level of the core course "microeconomics" is assumed.

Lecture 1: Introduction Competitive equilibrium Negishi theorem Production Reforms Represent migration Mathematical “work horses” Literature: chapters: 1, 2 and first part of 3 Sheets available at

Aim of lecture 1 Highlighting the normative relevance of the competitive equilibrium model Showing the relation between competitive equilibrium and welfare optimality

Competitive equilibrium for an exchange economy Competitive equilibrium for an exchange economy: consumers are indexed commodities are indexed consumers have utility functions (utility functions are concave increasing) where is consumption vector with elements for given commodity endowments determine the market clearing prices

Competitive equilibrium (continued) Formally, solves consumer problem: for given income The market clearing condition is: and solves for equilibrium prices.

Negishi theorem This competitive equilibrium can be represented (in Negishi format) as a welfare program with welfare weights adjusted to meet individual budgets. Both representations are equivalent!

Negishi theorem (continued) Competitive equilibrium in Negishi format: (a) Welfare program where is Lagrange multiplier. (b) Adjust welfare weights so as to satisfy budgets for every i.

Negishi theorem (continued) Check equivalence between both representations: Welfare program: first-order condition with respect to demand for commodity : with equality if, which, for such that gives f.o.c. of consumer problems

Relation to First Welfare Theorem “A competitive equilibrium is Pareto efficient”. Here: Competitive equilibrium is welfare optimum. Welfare optimum is Pareto efficient.

Requirements for proof First Welfare Theorem Production set has to be compact and nonempty –Note that convexity is not required Utility function has to be continuous and non-satiated –Note that concavity is not required –Note that function does not have to be increasing in all commodities

Relation to Second Welfare Theorem: “Every Pareto efficient allocation is implementable as a competitive equilibrium with transfers”. Here: for fixed weights,welfare program gives a competitive equilibrium with transfers equal to budget deficits: Requirements for proof of Second Welfare Theorem are stronger than that for First Welfare Theorem

Production where is Lagrange multiplier, and with such that budgets hold for every i.

Production (continued) The production set is compact, convex, and has possibility of inaction Producers maximize profits under technology constraint:

Welfare gains from reforms Example: the elimination of a consumer subsidy Consumer subsidy Consumer price Consumer problem for income Market clearing

Welfare gains from reforms (continued) Generally: subsidies, tariffs, monopoly premiums and wage subsidies can be represented by separate terms in objective with a weight factor Consumer welfare rises as factor is reduced

Welfare gains from reforms (continued)

Consumer subsidy in welfare program Negishi program: Check equivalence with excess demand format Gain from reform: rises as is reduced

Welfare program with fixed assignment of population: people in class : With, i.e. per capita consumption Adjust welfare weights so as to satisfy budgets for every group i. Representing migration

Representing migration (continued) Flexible allocation of people over classes i: where N is the given number of people in total

Representing migration (continued) This shows welfare gain from perfectly free migration Note that is the probability of individual ending up in state Full specialization in best state Representation is too simple: e.g. labor endowments are produced with commodities. This topic is taken up in lecture 5.

Mathematical “work horses” Key propositions –1.4 existence of a general competitive equilibrium –1.5: first welfare theorem –1.8: representing Pareto-efficient allocation by welfare optimum –1.10: second welfare theorem –2.14: properties of the welfare optimum –3.1: Negishi theorem

Mathematical “work horses”(continued) Existence of an optimum –Convex optimizations Concavity of objective Non-emptiness and convexity of constraint set Slater’s constraint qualification for existence of shadow prices Characterization of the optimum (dependence of the optimum on parameters) –Maximum theorem, perturbation theorem, envelope theorem Fixed point: Theorems Kakutani and Brouwer

Mapping from theorems to “work horses” 1.4 Existence comp.eq. 1.8 P.E by W.O2.14 Properties W.O3.1 Negishi Theorem Concavity objective Assumptions on u(x) SlaterConstraint set of consumer optimization Constraint set of welfare program KakutaniFixed point in prices Fixed point in welfare weights and prices Maximum Theorem Continuity of consumer demand function Continuity of consumer demand in welfare weights and endowments Continuity of consumer demand in welfare weights and endowments; upper semicontinuity of price correspondence in welfare weights; compactness of set of prices Envelope Theorem Utility is partial derivative of value function w.r.t welfare weight Perturbation theorem Convexity and non- decreasingness of the value function in welfare weights, concavity in endowments