100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Samenvatting Economics of Taxation

Rating
4.0
(6)
Sold
28
Pages
24
Uploaded on
10-12-2017
Written in
2017/2018

Uitgebreide samenvatting van het vak Economics of Taxation

Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
December 10, 2017
File latest updated on
November 25, 2018
Number of pages
24
Written in
2017/2018
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Hoorcollege
1

‘Market
equilibrium
and
efficiency’

o   Key
assumptions
behind
the
models:


1.   Perfect
competition:
consumers
and
firms
take
prices
as
given

2.   Symmetric
information:
everybody
had
the
same
information


3.   No
externalities:
transactions
only
affect
the
transacting
parties

4.   Well-­‐defined
property
rights:
negligible
(=
te
verwaarlozen)
transaction,
legal
and
contract
costs.


5.   Perfect
rationality:
consumers
maximize
their
utility
and
firms
their
profits.




o   The
exchange
economy

∗   The
model:


-­‐   2
households
and
2
goods:
all
results
generalize
to
settings
with
more
of
both.


-­‐   Only
exchange:
the
total
stocks
of
the
2
goods
are
fixed.


ℎ ℎ
-­‐   Household
h’s
endowment
of
goods
1
and
2:
𝜔
and
𝜔

1 2

ℎ ℎ
-­‐   Prices
for
goods
1
and
2:
ρ1
and
ρ2,
so
household
h
could
effectively
spend:
𝜌1𝜔 +
𝜌2𝜔

1 2
ℎ ℎ
-­‐
Consumption
on
the
two
good:
𝑥
and
𝑥 ,
so
budget
constraint:




1 2
-­‐   Utility
depends
on
the
consumption
of
two
goods:


∗   Equilibrium
behaviour


-­‐   Utility
maximization:


-­‐   There
are
two
ways
of
solving
maximization
problems:
use
Langrange
or
BC.

-­‐   Maximization
yields
following
expression
for
equilibrium
behaviour:






-­‐   LHS:
the
marginal
rate
of
substitution
of
good
2
for
good
1
=
how
many
units
of
good
1
am
I

willing
to
give
up
to
get
one
more
unit
of
2?



Increasing
in
the
MU
(marginal
utility)
of
good
2
and
decreasing
in
the
MU
of
good
1


-­‐   RHS:
the
relative
price
of
good
2
vs
good
1
=
how
many
units
of
good
1
do
I
need
to
give
up
to

get
one
more
unit
of
good
2?



Increasing
in
the
price
of
good
2
and
decreasing
in
the
price
of
good
1


-­‐   We
can
illustrate
equilibrium
behaviour
in
an
Edgeworth
box.


















∗   Equilibrium
prices


-­‐   Market-­‐clearing
prices:
prices
are
in
equilibrium
when
demand
equals
supply
for
both
goods.


-­‐   Disequilibrium:














, -­‐
Je
ziet
dus
dat
de
budget
line
(slope:
-­‐
ρ1/ρ2)
veranderd.
Market
mechanism
ensures
that

ρ1/ρ2
declines
(=dalen)
as
long
as
there
is
excess
supply
of
good
1
relative
to
good
2.
All
that

matters
for
equilibrium
are
relative
prices
ρ1/ρ2,
so
the
general
price
level
is
irrelevant

(doubling
all
prices
does
not
affect
market
equilibrium).


∗   Equilibrium
and
efficiency


-­‐   Ensures
market
equilibrium
a
Pareto
efficient
allocation?



Pareto
efficiency:
an
allocation
is
Pareto
efficient
if
no
person
can
be
made
better
off,

without
making
someone
else
worse
off.
It
requires
that
utility
of
household
1
is
maximized
for

any
given
utility
of
household
2.
So
Pareto
efficiency
requires
that
the
allocation
satisfies:





Solving
the
above
maximization
problem
yields
the
following
condition
for
Pareto
efficiency:



LHS:
household
1’s
marginal
rate
of
substitution
of
good
2
for
good
1
=
how
many
units
of

good
1
is
hh1
willing
to
give
up
to
get
one
more
unit
of
good
2.



RHS:
household
2’s
marginal
rate
of
substitution
of
good
2
for
good
1

-­‐   Recall
that
in
market
equilibrium,
every
household
equalizes
its
MRS
with
relative
price:



First
fundamental
theorem
of
welfare
economics:
the
allocation
of
commodities
at
a

competitive
equilibrium
is
Pareto
efficient.






















o   The
production
and
exchange
economy



How
do
results
carry
over
to
an
economy
with
production
sector?


∗   The
model


-­‐   Economic
agents:
treat
as
if
there
is
only
one
consumer
and
one
firm.

-­‐   There
are
two
goods:


1.   Good
1:
x1<0,
is
defined
as
a
negative
and
represents
the
inputs
that
the
household
provides

to
the
firm
(the
more
negative
x1,
the
more
inputs
provided).


2.   Good
2:
x2>0,
represents
the
firm’s
output
that
is
to
be
consumed
by
the
household.


-­‐   Endowments:
ω1
=
ω2
=
0


∗   The
representative
firm


-­‐   Production:
the
firm
transforms
inputs
into
outputs
according
to
the
production
function,
x2
=

f(-­‐x1)

-­‐   Inputs
are
sold
at
price
ρ1
and
outputs
are
sold
at
price
ρ2.


-­‐   The
firm’s
profits
are
given
by:
π
=
ρ2
f(-­‐x1)
+
ρ1x1

(or
π
=
ρ2
f
(L)

wL)


Equilibrium
firm
behaviour:
f’(-­‐x1)
=
ρ1/ρ2


, LHS:
the
marginal
rate
of
transformation
of
inputs
(good
1)
into
outputs
(good
2)
=
how
many

units
of
output
can
I
produce
with
one
more
unit
of
input?
(decreasing
in
the
amount
of

inputs
already
employed
–x1)

RHS:
the
relative
price
of
inputs
vs
outputs
=
how
many
units
of
output
do
I
need
to
produce

to
be
able
to
afford
one
more
unit
of
input?
(increasing
in
the
price
of
inputs
ρ1
and

decreasing
in
the
price
of
outputs
ρ2)

-­‐   Door
te
kijken
naar
de
production
en
de
profit
kom
je
tot
de
iso-­‐profit
line:


∗   Equilibrium
production


















∗   The
representative
household

-­‐   Utility:
U
=
u
(x1,
x2)

-­‐   Households
owns
the
firm
and
earns
its
profits
as
dividends,
so
budget
constraint:


(budget
constraint
=
iso-­‐profit
line).
Maximization
of
utility
w.r.t.
x1
and
x2:
u1/u2
=
ρ1/ρ2


∗   Equilibrium
prices


-­‐   Market-­‐clearing
prices:
prices
are
in
equilibrium
when
demand

equals
supply
for
both
inputs
and
outputs.


-­‐   In
the
next
figure
there
is
an
example
of
disequilibrium,
with

excess
demand
for
the
output
and
excess
supply
for
the
input.



Market
mechanism
ensures
that
ρ1/ρ2
declines
as
long
as

there
is
excess
demand
for
output
(good
2)
relative
to
input

(good
1).



Adjustments
lead
to
a
market-­‐clearing
equilibrium.










∗   Equilibrium
and
efficiency


Does
market
equilibrium
in
a
model
with
production
yield
a
Pareto
efficient
allocation?


-­‐   Efficiency:
that
the
combination
of
household
and
firm
decisions
lead
to
the
highest
possible

utility
for
the
representative
household.



Solving
for
the
efficient
allocation
yields:



LHS:
the
household’s
marginal
rate
of
substitution



RHs:
the
firm’s
marginal
rate
of
transformation


If
MRS>MRT,
utility
could
be
increased
by
producing
less.


If
MRS<MRT,
utility
could
be
increased
by
producing
more.


-­‐   Market
equilibrium
must
satisfy
efficiency:



This
confirms
the
First
fundamental
theorem
of
welfare
economics
in
a
production
model
of

the
economy.
$7.71
Get access to the full document:
Purchased by 28 students

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all 6 reviews
4 year ago

5 year ago

6 year ago

7 year ago

7 year ago

7 year ago

4.0

6 reviews

5
3
4
0
3
3
2
0
1
0
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
adeboer Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
87
Member since
8 year
Number of followers
59
Documents
9
Last sold
2 months ago

3.3

15 reviews

5
4
4
1
3
7
2
1
1
2

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions