Christopher Makler
Stanford University Department of Economics
Econ 50: Lecture 15
Today:
General Equilibrium
Monday:
Autarky
Given resource constraints, production functions, and utility functions, solve for the bundle the market would "choose" to produce in competitive equilibrium.
(endogenize all prices, income, wages)
Given resource constraints, production functions, and utility functions, solve for the bundle a single agent would choose to produce and consume.
Today:
General Equilibrium
Given resource constraints, production functions, and utility functions, solve for the bundle the market would "choose" to produce in competitive equilibrium.
(endogenize all prices, income, wages)
Part I: Investigate relationships between markets
Part II: The circular flow and general equilibrium
Supply Effects and the PPF
How consumer’s utility functions
(treating goods as complements or substitutes) determine how a shift
in the supply of one good
affects other markets
Demand Effects
How profit-maximizing firms choose
the point along the PPF that maximizes GDP
How firms’ demands for resources
determine how a shift
in the demand for one good
affects other markets
Suppose peanut butter and grape jelly
are complements.
What happens in both markets
if there is a supply shift
in the market for one of the goods?
For example: suppose much of the grape crop is destroyed in a fire.
Grape Jelly
Peanut Butter
Before we get to markets: WWCD?
Market for Good 2
Market for Good 1
Market for Good 2
Market for Good 1
Consider two goods (“guns” and “butter”) which are unrelated
but which both use the same resource (e.g. labor) in production.
What happens in both markets
if there is a demand shift
in the market for one of the goods?
Why did the wage rate go up?
\(Y_1\) = total amount of good 1 produced by all firms in an economy
\(Y_2\) = total amount of good 2 produced by all firms in an economy
\(GDP(Y_1,Y_2) = p_1Y_1 + p_2Y_2\)
= market value of all final goods and services produced in an economy
Narrow question:
How many productive resources should we devote to a single good?
Broader question:
How should we allocate productive resources across goods?
Firms will choose the quantity at which \(p = MC\)
Firms will choose the point along the PPF at which \({p_1 \over p_2} = MRT\)
GDP maximizing point!!
Firms will choose the point along the PPF at which \({p_1 \over p_2} = MRT\)
How will they do this?
In this lecture, we'll show:
PROFIT MAX FOR GOOD 1
PROFIT MAX FOR GOOD 2
Input prices signal resource constraints, keep production on PPF.
Case 1: Labor is the only input
Case 2: More than one input
Let's write the market value of all resources in the economy as \(\overline C\).
Can therefore write the PPF as the set of all possible combinations of output, \((Y_1,Y_2)\), such that
By the implicit function theorem,
For a given set of prices \((p_1,p_2)\), what combination of outputs \((Y_1,Y_2)\) on our PDF would maximize GDP?
\(GDP(Y_1,Y_2) = p_1Y_1 + p_2Y_2\)
(Assume labor is the only input.)
What is the slope of an iso-GDP line?
TANGENCY CONDITION
CONSTRAINT CONDITION
Firms in industry 1 set \(p_1 = MC_1\)
Firms in industry 2 set \(p_2 = MC_2\)
How does competition achieve this?
Wages adjust until the
labor market clears
Another expression for the MRT
is the ratio of marginal costs:
Given prices \(p_1\) and \(p_2\), GDP is maximized at the point on the PPF where
Profit-maximizing firms,
acting in their own self-interest,
respond to prices by producing the
GDP-maximizing combination of outputs.
Markets are interrelated,
both because consumers buy multiple goods
and multiple firms compete for the same resources (e.g. labor).
Profit-maximizing firms,
acting in their own self-interest (not coordinating!),
respond to prices by "choosing" the point along the PPF where MRT = price ratio.
Changes in the price ratio cause firms to shift along the PPF,
toward the good whose relative price has increased
and away from the good whose relative price has decreased.
In our consumer theory, we've treated income as exogenous.
In our producer theory, we've treated wages as exogenous.
We've also assumed firms are maximizing profits, but haven't said where those profits go.
Crazy thought: what if the money firms pay for labor becomes the income of workers?
...and their profits become the income of the owners/shareholders of the firm?
Consumers
Good 1 Firms
Market for Good 1
Market for Good 2
Market for Labor
Good 2 Firms
Money flows clockwise
Goods, labor flow counter-clockwise
General Equilibrium: Everyone optimizes, all markets clear simultaneously.
Review: Autarky (Chuck on a desert island)
We sometimes call the autarky model the "centralized" model: if there were a single agent making a decision, what would they do?
Similarly, we call competitive equilibrium a "decentralized" model, because lots and lots of individuals are making small decisions that add up to what "society chooses"
1. Given prices \(p_1,p_2\), firms will choose the point \((Y_1^*,Y_2^*)\) along the PPF where \(MRT = \frac{p_1}{p_2}\)
2. All money received by firms \((p_1Y_1^* + p_2Y_2^*)\) will become income \(M\) for consumers.
3. Given prices \(p_1,p_2\) and income \(M\), the consumer will choose the point \((X_1^*,X_2^*)\) along the budget line where \(MRS = \frac{p_1}{p_2}\)
4. At equilibrium prices, markets clear (\(X_1^* = Y_1^*\) and \(X_2^* = Y_2^*\)) so \(MRS = MRT\).
5. In disequilibrium, there is a shortage in one market and a surplus in the other, pulling the system toward equilibrium.
1. Given prices \(p_1,p_2\), firms will choose the point \((Y_1^*,Y_2^*)\) along the PPF where \(MRT = \frac{p_1}{p_2}\)
2. All money received by firms \((p_1Y_1^* + p_2Y_2^*)\) will become income \(M\) for consumers.
3. Given prices \(p_1,p_2\) and income \(M\), consumers will choose the point \((X_1^*,X_2^*)\) along the budget line where \(MRS = \frac{p_1}{p_2}\)
If consumers and firms all face the same price, and if they choose the same quantity in response to that price, then MRS = MRT.
In general equilibrium, everything having to do with money has been endogenized.
We are left with the same things Chuck had on his desert island:
resources, production technologies, and preferences.
As an individual in autarky, Chuck solved his maximization problem by setting
the marginal benefit of any activity he undertook equal to its opportunity cost.
Markets solve the problem of how to resolve scarcity in the same way:
by having everyone equate their own MB or MC to a common price,
which represents the opportunity cost of using resources in some other way.