General equilibrium foundation of partial equilibrium analysis
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
General equilibrium foundation of partial equilibrium analysis
Palgrave Macmillan, c2017
- : softcover
Available at 1 libraries
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  Iwate
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Note
"Sof[t]cover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 2017"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references (p. 181) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book addresses the gaps in undergraduate teaching of partial equilibrium analysis, providing a general equilibrium viewpoint to illustrate the assumptions underlying partial equilibrium welfare analysis. It remains unexplained, at least at the level of general economics teaching, in what sense partial equilibrium analysis is indeed a part of general equilibrium analysis. Partial equilibrium welfare analysis isolates a market for a single commodity from the rest of the economy, presuming that other things remain equal, and measures gains and losses by means of consumer surplus. This is a money metric that is supposed to be summable across individuals, recommending policy that maximizes the social surplus. But what justifies such apparently uni-dimensional practise? Within a general equilibrium framework, the assumption of no income effect is presented as the key condition, and substantive general equilibrium situations in which the condition emerges are presented. The analysis is extended to the case of uncertainty, in which the practice adopts aggregate expected consumer surplus, and scrutinizes when such practice is justified. Finally, the book illustrates partial equilibrium as an institutional artifact, meaning that institutional constraint induces individuals to behave as if they are in partial equilibrium. This volume forms an important contribution to the literature by researching why this disparity persists and the implications for economics education.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction.
Chapter 2: General Equilibrium Theory.
Chapter 3: Income Evaluation of Welfare Change: Equivalent Variation, Compensating Variation and Consumer Surplus.
Chapter 4: The Assumption of No Income Effect and Quasi-linear Preferences.
Chapter 5: Is the approximation error large or small?.
Chapter 6: Small Income Effects.
Chapter 7: Partial Equilibrium Welfare Analysis under Uncertainty.
Chapter 8: Mechanism Design in Partial Equilibrium.
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