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Social Efficiency

Social Efficiency. 2 . 3. Social efficiency: When there is no ``free lunch’’. Someone has to pay. Autarky, trade, and free lunch. A PARETO-efficient state is where the is no more free lunch.

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Social Efficiency

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  1. Social Efficiency 2 . 3 • Social efficiency: When there is no ``free lunch’’. Someone has to pay. • Autarky, trade, and free lunch. • A PARETO-efficient state is where the is no more free lunch. • A Pareto-efficient state is when on cannot make someone better off without making somebody else worse off. • Having a free lunch is referred to as a Pareto improvement or making a Pareto improving move. • Pareto improvement: Making someone better off without making anybody else worse off (as in free trade).

  2. Social Efficiency and Competitive Markets 2 . 3 • A competitive market tends to realize all free lunches. • A competitive market is Pareto efficient. • This is called: The First Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics.

  3. “Every individual necessarily labours to render the annual revenue of the society as great as he can. He generally indeed neither intends to promote the public interest, nor knows how much he is promoting it… . He intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote as end which was no part of his intention.” Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, Book IV 2 . 3

  4. Equilibrium and Social Welfare 2 . 3 Equilibrium

  5. 2 . 3 Social Efficiency Social efficiency represents the net gains to society from all trades that are made in a particular market, and it consists of two components: consumer and producer surplus. consumer surplus The benefit that consumers derive from consuming a good, above and beyond the price they paid for the good.

  6. 2 . 3 Social Efficiency

  7. 2 . 3 Producer Surplus producer surplus The benefit that producers derive from selling a good, above and beyond the cost of producing that good.

  8. 2 . 3 Producer Surplus

  9. 2 . 3 Social Surplus total social surplus(social efficiency) The sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus.

  10. 2 . 3 Social Surplus

  11. 2 . 3 It is sometimes confusing to know how to draw deadweight loss triangles. The key to doing so is to remember that deadweight loss triangles point to the social optimum, and grow outward from there. Competitive Equilibrium Maximizes Social Efficiency First Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics The competitive equilibrium, where supply equals demand, maximizes social efficiency. deadweight loss The reduction in social efficiency from denying trades for which benefits exceed costs.

  12. 2 . 3 From Social Efficiency to Social Welfare: The Role of Equity social welfare The level of well-being in society. Governments have certain redistributive programs because their citizens care not only about efficiency but also about equity, the fair distribution of resources in society. The competitive equilibrium, while being the social efficiency-maximizing point, may not be the social welfare-maximizing point.

  13. 2 . 3 equity–efficiency trade-off The choice society must make between the total size of the economic pie and its distribution among individuals.

  14. 2 . 3 From Social Efficiency to Social Welfare: The Role of Equity social welfare function (SWF) A function that combines the utility functions of all individuals into an overall social utility function.

  15. 2 . 3 The Social Welfare Function: W=W(.) • The basis idea of the SWF is to make the society’s notion of “fairness” explicit. • Introduced by Samuelson and Bergson some fifty years ago. • Often people talk about being “fair” without specifying what they mean: • John Edwards often talks about “two Americas’’. • Is it only “two”? What does “one America’’ look like? • Bill Clinton, in his ’92 presidential campaign, talked about an “America in which the wealthiest, those making over 200,000 dollars a year, are asked to pay their fair share.”

  16. 2 . 3 The Social Welfare Function: W=W(.) • But one can interpret this as : • Higher income people should pay more taxes. If we accept this interpretation we are still left with the question of “How much?” • Higher income people pay more in terms of average taxes. But again “How much?” • Higher income people pay more in terms of marginal taxes. But again “How much?” • William Safire, a previous columnist for New York Times, defines “tax fairness” as “the poor should pay nothing, the middlers something, and the rich the highest percentage.” So his is in terms of averages. But the question of how much still remains.

  17. 2 . 3 Some Specific Examples Utilitarian SWF With a utilitarian social welfare function, society’s goal is to maximize the sum of individual utilities: SWF = U1 + U2 + . . . + UN The utilities of all individuals are given equal weight, and summed to get total social welfare.

  18. 2 . 3 Linear Iso-Welfare Curves U2 U1 • Same MRS everywhere: perfect substitute • Jeremy Bentham: Utilitarianism

  19. 2 . 3 Rawlsian Social Welfare Function • John Rawls suggested that society’s goal should be to maximize the well- being of its worst-off member. The Rawlsian SWF has the form: • SW = min (U1, U2, . . ., UN) • Since social welfare is determined by the minimum utility in society, social welfare is maximized by maximizing the well-being of the worst-off person in society. • Deciding under the “veil of ignorance.”

  20. 2 . 3 L-shaped Iso-Welfare Curves 45° U2 U1 Perfect complements

  21. John Rawls

  22. 2 . 3 • Atkinson social welfare function *ε is the Inequality Aversion Parameter. *We have -As to a Utilitarian SWF -As to a Rawlsian SWF

  23. Anthony Atkinson

  24. U2 2 . 3 ε2 ε1 U1 ε2>ε1

  25. NOZIK: Equality of opportunity not outcomes: The principle that society should ensure that all individuals have equal opportunities for success, but not focus on the outcomes of choices made. The island example The measurement problem Ex-ante versus Ex-post 2 . 3

  26. Robert Nozick

  27. 2 . 3 Another idea Commodity Egalitarianism The principle that society should ensure that individuals meet a set of basic needs, but that beyond that point income distribution is irrelevant.

  28. Conclusion 2 . 5 • The notion of Pareto efficiency. • The relationship between competitive markets and efficiency. • Market failures. • Efficiency gain and loss calculations. • Equity and efficiency tradeoff. • The notion of a social welfare function. • Different types of SWF.

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