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Contribution Details

Type Working Paper
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Stabilizing the economy: Market design and general equilibrium
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Jacob Goeree
  • Luke Lindsay
Language
  • English
Institution University of Zurich
Series Name Working paper series / Department of Economics
Number 92
ISSN 1664-7041
Number of Pages 36
Date 2012
Abstract Text We employ laboratory methods to study stability of competitive equilibrium in Scarf's economy (International Economic Review, 1960). Tatonnement theory predicts that prices are globally unstable for this economy, i.e. unless prices start at the competitive equilibrium they oscillate without converging. Anderson et al. (Journal of Economic Theory, 2004) report that in laboratory double auction markets, prices in the Scarf economy do indeed oscillate with no clear sign of convergence. We replicate their experiments and confirm that tatonnement theory predicts the direction of price changes remarkably well. Prices are globally unstable with adverse effects for the economy's efficiency and the equitable distribution of the gains from trade. We also introduce a novel market mechanism where participants submit demand schedules and prices are computed using Smale's global Newtonian dynamic (American Economic Review, 1976). We show that for the Scarf economy, submitting a competitive schedule, i.e. a set of quantities that maximize utility taking prices as given, is a weakly dominant strategy. The resulting outcome corresponds to the unique competitive equilibrium of the Scarf economy. In experiments that employ the schedule market, prices do not oscillate but instead converge quickly to the competitive equilibrium. Besides stabilizing prices, the schedule market is more efficient and results in highly egalitarian outcomes.
Official URL http://www.econ.uzh.ch/static/wp/econwp092.pdf
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Keywords Scarf economy, tatonnement, global Newtonian dynamic, instability, general equilibrium, market design, vollkommene Konkurrenz, allgemeines Gleichgewicht, Mechanismus-Design-Theorie, Preisbildung