Fundamental theorems of welfare economicsFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from First welfare theorem)
There are two fundamental theorems of welfare economics. The first states that any competitive equilibrium or Walrasian equilibrium leads to an efficient allocation of resources. The second states the converse, that any efficient allocation can be sustainable by a competitive equilibrium. Despite the apparent symmetry of the two theorems, in fact the first theorem is much more general than the second, requiring far weaker assumptions. The first theorem is often taken to be an analytical confirmation of Adam Smith's "invisible hand" hypothesis, namely that competitive markets tend toward the efficient allocation of resources. The theorem supports a case for non-intervention in ideal conditions: let the markets do the work and the outcome will be desirable. These ideal conditions, however, collectively known as Perfect Competition, do not exist in the real world. The Greenwald-Stiglitz Theorem, for example, states that in the presence of either imperfect information, or incomplete markets, markets are not Pareto efficient. Thus, in most real world economies, the degree of these variations from ideal conditions must factor into policy choices. [1] The second theorem states that out of the infinity of all possible Pareto efficient outcomes one can achieve any particular one by enacting a lump-sum wealth redistribution and then letting the market take over. This appears to make the case that intervention has a legitimate place in policy -- redistributions can allow us to select from among all efficient outcomes for one that has other desired features, such as distributional equity. However, it is unclear how any real-world government might enact such redistributions. Lump-sum transfers are difficult to enforce and virtually never used, and proportional taxes may have large distortionary effects on the economy since taxes change the relative remunerations of the factors of production, distorting the structure of production. Additionally, the government would need to have perfect knowledge of consumers' preferences and firms' production functions (which are in fact unknowable[2]) in order to choose the transfers correctly. In addition, this remedy cannot be expected to work if large numbers of people do not understand the economy, and how to make effective use of any transfers they receive.
Proof of the first fundamental theoremThe first fundamental theorem of welfare economics states that any Walrasian equilibrium is Pareto-efficient. This was first demonstrated graphically by economist Abba Lerner and mathematically by economists Harold Hotelling, Oskar Lange, Maurice Allais, Kenneth Arrow and Gerard Debreu, although the restrictive assumptions necessary for the proof mean that the result may not necessarily reflect the workings of real economies. The only assumption needed (in addition to complete markets and price-taking behavior) is the relatively weak assumption of local nonsatiation of preferences. In particular, no convexity assumptions are needed. More formally, the statement of the theorem is as follows: If preferences are locally nonsatiated, and if (x*, y*, p) is a price equilibrium with transfers, then the allocation (x*, y*) is Pareto optimal. An equilibrium in this sense either relates to an exchange economy only or presupposes that firms are allocatively and productively efficient, which can be shown to follow from perfectly competitive factor and production markets. Suppose that consumer i has wealth wi such that Preference maximization (from the definition of price equilibrium with transfers) implies:
In other words, if a bundle of goods is strictly preferred to
To see why, imagine that Now consider an allocation (x,y) that Pareto dominates (x * ,y * ). This means that Because yj is profit maximizing we know Proof of the second fundamental theoremThe second fundamental theorem of welfare economics states that, under the assumptions that every production set Yj is convex and every preference relation Let us define a price quasi-equilibrium with transfers as an allocation (x * ,y * ), a price vector p, and a vector of wealth levels w (achieved by lump-sum transfers) with
The only difference between this definition and the standard definition of a price equilibrium with transfers is in statement (ii). The inequality is weak here ( Define Vi to be the set of all consumption bundles strictly preferred to These two convex, non-intersecting sets allow us to apply the separating hyperplane theorem. This theorem states that there exists a price vector Next we argue that if Using this relation we see that for Because
which implies
which implies We now turn to conditions under which a price quasi-equilibrium is also a price equilibrium, in other words, conditions under which the statement "if To see why, assume to the contrary Hence, for price quasi-equilibria to be price equilibria it is sufficient that the consumption set be convex, the preference relation to be continuous, and for there always to exist a "cheaper" consumption bundle x'i. One way to ensure the existence of such a bundle is to require wealth levels wi to be strictly positive for all consumers i. See alsoReferences
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