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MT3 Applied Welfare, Externalities and Public Goods

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These notes were prepared based on the lectures and supplemented by information from textbooks and tutorials where parts of the lecture were unclear. Graphs, equations, and bullet-point explanations included. Prepared by a first class Economics and Management student for the FHS Microeconomics pape...

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  • 27. juni 2024
  • 31
  • 2022/2023
  • Notizen
  • Simon cowan
  • Applied welfare, externalities and public goods
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MT3 Applied Welfare, Externalities and Public Goods
Outline
 Measurement and recoverability of welfare
 Special case: quasilinear utility
 Elements of Cost-Benefit Analysis
 Externalities and public goods
 Welfare analysis and correction for market failure

Lecture 6: Applied Welfare
Measuring individual welfare
 We want to evaluate the effects of changes in the consumer’s environment (change in prices,
income, taxes, etc.) on her well-being (utility).
 Cardinal approach: we want to be able to say how much so ordinal framework of preference
relations won’t be enough.
 In the background: we assume a rational consumer with well-behaved preferences, so we get a
well-behaved demand.

Measuring aggregate welfare
 Normative individualism: normative statements about society based on statements about
individual welfare.
 Who is to be included in the set of individuals 𝑖 = 1, … , 𝑛?
o All citizens of a country? All human beings? Animals?
o Future generations: how should you conduct time discounting?
 How should their well-being be aggregated?
o What social welfare function should we use?
o How much weight should we put in the SWF on the various subgroups?
 Welfare analysis is very hard with heterogeneous agents
o Often, we will work with a representative agent

Lecture outline
 How to measure the welfare effect of a price change?
o Money-metric measures of welfare
 What is the best way to tax?
o Welfare in a quasilinear environment
o The deadweight loss of commodity taxes
 Introduction to Cost-Benefit Analysis

How should we measure changes in (indirect) utility or welfare when prices (and incomes) change?
Consumer welfare if utility is observed
 Objective: measure the effect of a price change from 𝒑𝟎 to 𝒑𝟏 on consumer’s welfare.
 Consumer has fixed income 𝑚 > 0, unaffected by prices.
 Suppose we know the consumer’s preferences. We can compute changes in indirect utility:

o

, o Indirect utility function (𝑣) is obtained by substituting the demand function into the
utility function
 Cobb-Douglas example




o
o If 𝜆 < 1 (if price decreases), 𝑣(𝒑𝟏, 𝑚) − 𝑣(𝒑𝟎, 𝑚) > 0 (indirect utility increases)

Money-metric measures of welfare
 Problem: we don’t observe utility, utility is usually an ordinal concept, but we need a cardinal
measure.
 So, we use money-metric measures of welfare constructed using the expenditure function.
 Duality: uses 1-1 mapping between two problems.
o Duality is the principle that optimization problems may be viewed from either of two
perspectives, the primal problem or the dual problem.
o If the primal is a minimization problem, then the dual is a maximization problem (and
vice versa).
 Primal problem: utility maximization
o Keep budget line (red) fixed and find the indifference curve (blue) furthest from the
origin with maximum utility
o Intermediate step: solve for the Marshallian demand function 𝒙*( 𝒑, 𝑚)
o Final step: obtain the indirect utility function 𝑣( 𝒑, 𝑚) by substituting Marshallian
demand function into the utility function.
o Result is maximised utility 𝑢 ̅


o
 Dual problem: expenditure minimization
o Keep the indifference curve (blue) fixed and find the budget line (red) closes to the
origin to minimize expenditure
o Intermediate step: solve for the Hicksian demand function 𝒙* = ℎ( 𝒑, 𝑢 ̅)
o Final step: obtain the expenditure function 𝑒( 𝒑, 𝑢 ̅) by multiplying the Hicksian demand
function by price
o Result is minimised expenditure 𝑚


o

, 
o Substituting expenditure function into Marshallian demand (LHS) gives the Hicksian
demand function (RHS)
 Suppose there was a price change from 𝒑𝟎 to 𝒑𝟏 so the consumer’s indirect utility moves
from 𝑣(𝒑𝟎,𝑚) = 𝑢0 to 𝑣(𝒑𝟏,𝑚) = 𝑢1. How do we go from indirect utility to expenditure level?
 For any arbitrary price vector 𝒑′, we measure:
o e(𝒑′,𝑢1) = expenditure needed to obtain utility level 𝑢1 when prices are 𝒑′
o e(𝒑′,𝑢0)
 e(𝒑′,𝑢) is the money-metric utility function that is increasing in 𝑢
 Measure of welfare change in money corresponding to price change:
o e(𝒑′,𝑢1)− e(𝒑′,𝑢0)

CV and EV
 There are 2 natural reference points for 𝒑′ (𝒑𝟎 and 𝒑𝟏) leading to 2 measures of welfare
change
o Compensating Variation = addition to income required at new prices to maintain old
utility



o Equivalent Variation = addition to income required at old prices to reach new utility








o Change in demand (dark blue point) as price p 1 changes (gradient of black line changes)
o EV: at old prices (steeper gradient), additional income to reach the new utility (light blue
line tangent to the new indifference curve).
o CV: at new prices (gentler gradient), additional income needed to maintain the old
utility (red line tangent to the old indifference curve).
o EV and CV are the distance between the actual and hypothetical budget lines
o EV, CV aren’t directly observable, but are recoverable.

,  Interpretation of EV and CV
o Interpretation of CV/EV depends on whether policy change is positive or negative (i.e.,
whether 𝑢1 > 𝑢0 or 𝑢1 < 𝑢0)




o
o Recall: normal goods have positive effect of income on demand
Example
 Oxford pedestrian-only roads
o CV: How much would the city have to pay local businesses to keep them as well off as
they were before the road closure? (measure implemented)
o EV: What is the most that local businesses would be willing to pay to avoid the road
closure? (measure not implemented)
 How much do you value the Internet?
o CV type: How much money would you require to stop using the Internet? ( 𝑊𝑇𝐴 for
negative change to be implemented)
o EV type: Giving up what good/activity would hurt you as much as losing the internet?
(𝑊𝑇𝑃 for negative change not to be implemented)

EV, CV and Hicksian demands
 There is another graphical way of thinking about EV and CV
 Take two normal goods 𝑥1, 𝑥2 and consider price change from 𝒑𝟎 to 𝒑𝟏 where the price of 𝑥1
decreases:
 Recall: the expenditure function is equivalent to price multiplied by the Hicksian demand.
o
 By the Envelope Theorem, only direct effects matter so:

o




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