Hm, I think that’s more of a supply independence thing, what economists would call “non-excludable”. If the government funds a police force, it’s not as if they protect some citizens but not others. But that’s not a violation of the demand independence assumption because I care about living in a country with a strong police force regardless of whether you want that or not.
Goods with demand independence, from Ferraris to Facebook, generally do get provided by markets in real life, they just don’t have stable prices. It breaks some of the equilibrium models because it can cause divergences or circularity in your demand function, and then there’s no fixed point in positive price/demand space.
Luxury is a good example of this that happens in real life. Here’s an intuition-prompting setup:
Suppose I’m rich and I buy a Gucci bag
You’re poor, but you want to look rich so you also buy a Gucci handbag
Now I don’t think the bag is as exclusive, so I don’t want mine any more
Now that the rich guy isn’t wearing it anymore, you don’t want yours either
But now no one has it, so it seems exclusive again, so now I want it
Repeat
This doesn’t mean markets won’t provide Gucci bags (obviously, they do), but there isn’t a price equilibrium, it will fluctuate forever. In terms of the original point, the Gucci bag allocation problem isn’t isomorphic to a market equilibrium, because there is no such equilibrium.
Sure, I think social media is probably the best example of this. Suppose there are two platforms, A and B, and social media sites are worth more when more people are on it. Our “resource allocation” problem is to maximize utility, so we want to get everyone on the same site. There are two equilibria here; we can either set the price for A much higher than B and everyone will move to B, or vice versa.
If the demand functions weren’t interdependent and every agent just got some amount of utility from A and some amount of utility from B, there would be exactly one equilibrium price.
And this is why some goods, like public safety can’t be provided by markets, because the assumption of demand independence is violated.
Hm, I think that’s more of a supply independence thing, what economists would call “non-excludable”. If the government funds a police force, it’s not as if they protect some citizens but not others. But that’s not a violation of the demand independence assumption because I care about living in a country with a strong police force regardless of whether you want that or not.
Goods with demand independence, from Ferraris to Facebook, generally do get provided by markets in real life, they just don’t have stable prices. It breaks some of the equilibrium models because it can cause divergences or circularity in your demand function, and then there’s no fixed point in positive price/demand space.
Luxury is a good example of this that happens in real life. Here’s an intuition-prompting setup:
Suppose I’m rich and I buy a Gucci bag
You’re poor, but you want to look rich so you also buy a Gucci handbag
Now I don’t think the bag is as exclusive, so I don’t want mine any more
Now that the rich guy isn’t wearing it anymore, you don’t want yours either
But now no one has it, so it seems exclusive again, so now I want it
Repeat
This doesn’t mean markets won’t provide Gucci bags (obviously, they do), but there isn’t a price equilibrium, it will fluctuate forever. In terms of the original point, the Gucci bag allocation problem isn’t isomorphic to a market equilibrium, because there is no such equilibrium.
Any examples of where the starting resource allocation has more than 1 solution/equilibrium, assuming demand independence is violated?
Sure, I think social media is probably the best example of this. Suppose there are two platforms, A and B, and social media sites are worth more when more people are on it. Our “resource allocation” problem is to maximize utility, so we want to get everyone on the same site. There are two equilibria here; we can either set the price for A much higher than B and everyone will move to B, or vice versa.
If the demand functions weren’t interdependent and every agent just got some amount of utility from A and some amount of utility from B, there would be exactly one equilibrium price.