Microeconomics I
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Cartes-fiches | 336 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Economie politique |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 28.05.2019 / 02.03.2025 |
Lien de web |
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Using Walras’ Law we can show that
if demand equals supply in one market, the same must be true in the other market.
FTWE
any competitive equilibrium is Pareto efficient
Implicit assumptions of the FTWE: Each consumer knows only
his own tastes, endowment and the market prices
The FTWE tells us that
the resulting equilibrium from these independent, self-interested and decentralised actions is efficient
This is the nature of the “Invisible Hand” of Adam Smith
FTWE focuses on efficiency, not fairness
Allocation where one person owns everything is Pareto efficient
FTWE does not hold in
the presence of externalities
STWE: Can a Pareto efficient allocation be achieved as a competitive equilibrium?
Yes, if preferences are convex
Questions about how appartments rents are determined
- Who will rent close appartments?
- At what price?
- Will the allocation of appartments be desirables at any sense?
Two basic postulates
Rational choice and equilibrium
Rational choice
Each person tries to choose de best alternative available to him or her
Equilibrium
Market price adjust untill quantity demanded equals quantity supplied
Market demande curve
The quantity demanded vs price graph
Supply for appartments
Quantity fixed
Low rental price
quantity demanded of close apartments exceeds quantity available ) price will rise
High rental price
quantity demanded less than quantity available ) price will fall
Competitive equilibrium
Quantity demanded = quantity available ) price will neither rise nor fall
Competitive market allocation
by willingness to pay
Endogenous in the model of appartments
I price of close apartments
I exchanged quantity of close apartments
Exogenous in the model of appartments
I price of distant apartments
I quantity of close apartments
I incomes of potential renters
Suppose de price of distant appartments rises
Demand for close apartments increases (rightward shift), causing
a higher price for close apartments
Comparative statics: more close appartments
Supply is greater, so the price for close apartments falls
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