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Lecture 18 Towards general equilibrium

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1 Lecture 18 Towards general equilibrium
Microeconomics 1000 Lecture 18 Towards general equilibrium

2 General equilibrium Partial equilibrium analysis focuses on a single market It is based on the ceteris paribus (i.e. all else equal) assumption But changes in one market may also affect several other markets A change in the price of a product affects the demand for complements and substitutes A change in the price of a factor of production affects the income of the owners of that factor, and hence their demand for goods Hence the need for general equilibrium analysis 6

3 Main problems Can a general equilibrium (i.e. a state where all markets are simultaneously in equilibrium) be reached? Is the general equilibrium efficient?

4 Figure 1 The Circular Flow
Firms sell Households buy MARKETS FOR GOODS AND SERVICES Revenue Spending Goods and services sold Goods and services bought FIRMS Produce and sell goods and services Hire and use factors of production Buy and consume goods and services Own and sell factors of production HOUSEHOLDS Households sell Firms buy MARKETS FOR FACTORS OF PRODUCTION Factors of production Labor, land, and capital Wages, rent, and profit Income = Flow of inputs and outputs = Flow of dollars Copyright © South-Western

5 The Circular-Flow Diagram: agents
Firms Produce and sell goods and services Hire and use factors of production Households Buy and consume goods and services Own and sell factors of production 7

6 The Circular-Flow Diagram: markets
Markets for Goods and Services Firms sell Households buy Markets for Factors of Production (inputs, such as land, labor and capital, used to produce goods and services) Households sell Firms buy 7

7 Our First Model: One Good, One Input, One (Representative) Household
Suppose there is only one good (corn) and only one input (labour) Hence, two markets Many identical households Many identical firms Perfect competition in both markets 7

8 Figure 2 The Production Function
Quantity of Corn 3000 1000 Quantity of Labour Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

9 Firm’s equilibrium We know that a perfectly competitive firm maximises its profit at a point where p = MC, or, equivalently, w = VMPL We can depict the profit-maximising choice of a point on the production function using iso-profit lines, i.e., lines where profit is constant

10 Iso-profit lines Dividing by p and re-arranging we get
The slope of the iso-profit line is the real wage rate, i.e., the wage rate measured in units of corn

11 Figure 3 Equilibrium of the (representative) firm
Quantity of Corn 3000 Supply of corn E Demand for labour 1000 Quantity of Labour Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

12 Firm’s equilibrium The firm maximises its profit when it reaches the highest iso-profit line, given the production function. The slopes of the production function and the iso-profit line are equal at the optimum, i.e. This is the standard condition p = MC or w = VMPL

13 Household’s equilibrlium
We have already analysed the household’s optimal choice of labour supply

14 Figure 4 Equilibrium of the (representative) household
Quantity of Corn Demand for corn E Non-labour income Labour supply leisure 1000 Quantity of Leisure Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

15 Important properties: relative prices
Only relative prices matter (the real wage rate, i.e. the wage rate measured in units of corn) The real wage rate determines both the slope of the iso-profit lines (and hence the firm equilibrium) and the slope of the budget constraint (and hence the household equilibrium) Thus, with two goods we have in fact only one price to determine

16 The Production Possibilities Frontier
The production possibilities frontier is a graph that shows the combinations of output that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production and the available production technology. 14

17 Figure 5 The Production Possibilities Frontier
Quantity of Corn 3,000 D C 2,200 600 A 700 2,000 Production possibilities frontier 1,000 300 B 1,000 Quantity of Leisure Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

18 Important properties: Walras’ law
The two markets are interdependent When one market is in equilibrium, the other is necessarily in equilibrium Hence, with two goods we have in fact only one independent equilibrium condition And, indeed, we have only one (relative) price to determine

19 Figure 6 Disequilibrium: excess supply of labour
Quantity of Corn H 3,000 Excess demand for corn K Excess supply of labour 1,000 Quantity of Leisure Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

20 Figure 7 Disequilibrium: excess demand for labour
Quantity of Corn 3,000 K Excess supply of corn H Excess demand for labour 1,000 Quantity of Leisure Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

21 Figure 8 The General equilibrium
Quantity of Corn 3,000 E 2,200 600 1,000 Quantity of Leisure Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

22 Important properties: efficiency
The general equilibrium of a perfectly competitive economy is efficient With homogeneous agents, efficiency is equivalent to the maximisation of the welfare (utility) of the representative agent

23 Figure 9 Efficiency of the General equilibrium
Quantity of Corn 3,000 E 2,200 600 1,000 Quantity of Leisure Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

24 Feedback Answers to Exercises are posted on the course web page
Answers to Questions Sheets and mock exams will be posted TAs should mark the essays you hand in

25 Our Second Model: Two Goods, One Input, Constant Returns
Suppose there are two goods (corn and bicycles) and again only one input (labour) Now, however, the marginal productivity of labour is constant Suppose that the supply of labour is fixed at 100 workers, and the productivity of labour is 10 bicycles or 20 tons of corn per worker 7

26 Constant marginal cost
When marginal products and marginal costs are constant, prices are determined only by the supply side of the market Market demand affects only equilibrium quantities This simplified framework was used by classical economists (Adam Smith, David Ricardo)

27 Adam Smith ( )

28 David Ricardo ( )

29 Figure 10 The Ricardian Model
Price of Corn Equilibrium price 450 1,000 Quantity of Corn Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

30 Figure 11 The Production Possibilities Frontier in the Ricardian Model
Quantity of Corn 2,000 C B Production possibilities frontier A 1,000 Quantity of Bicycles Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

31 Equilibrium prices In terms of (tons of) corn, the wage rate is 20 and the price of a bicycle is 2 In terms of bicycles, the wage rate is 10 and the price of a ton of corn is ½

32 Figure 12 Equilibrium quantities
Quantity of Corn 2,000 E 1,000 Quantity of Bicycles Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning


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