Title: Chapter Thirty-One
1Chapter Thirty-One
2Social Choice
- Different economic states will be preferred by
different individuals. - How can individual preferences be aggregated
into a social preference over all possible
economic states?
3Aggregating Preferences
- x, y, z denote different economic states.
- 3 agents Bill, Bertha and Bob.
- Use simple majority voting to decide a state?
4Aggregating Preferences
More preferred
Less preferred
5Aggregating Preferences
Majority Vote Results
x beats y
6Aggregating Preferences
Majority Vote Results
x beats y y beats z
7Aggregating Preferences
Majority Vote Results
x beats y y beats z z beats x
8Aggregating Preferences
Majority Vote Results
No socially best alternative!
x beats y y beats z z beats x
9Aggregating Preferences
Majority Vote Results
No socially best alternative!
x beats y y beats z z beats x
Majority voting does not always
aggregate transitive individual preferences into
a transitive social preference.
10Aggregating Preferences
11Aggregating Preferences
Rank-order vote results (low score wins).
12Aggregating Preferences
Rank-order vote results (low score wins).
x-score 6
13Aggregating Preferences
Rank-order vote results (low score wins).
x-score 6 y-score 6
14Aggregating Preferences
Rank-order vote results (low score wins).
x-score 6 y-score 6 z-score 6
15Aggregating Preferences
Rank-order vote results (low score wins).
No state is selected!
x-score 6 y-score 6 z-score 6
16Aggregating Preferences
Rank-order vote results (low score wins).
No state is selected!
x-score 6 y-score 6 z-score 6
Rank-order voting is indecisive in this case.
17Manipulating Preferences
- As well, most voting schemes are manipulable.
- I.e. one individual can cast an untruthful vote
to improve the social outcome for himself. - Again consider rank-order voting.
18Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences.
19Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences. Bob introduces
a new alternative
20Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences. Bob introduces
a new alternative
21Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences. Bob introduces
a new alternative and then lies.
22Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences. Bob introduces
a new alternative and then lies.
Rank-order vote results.
x-score 8
23Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences. Bob introduces
a new alternative and then lies.
Rank-order vote results.
x-score 8 y-score 7
24Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences. Bob introduces
a new alternative and then lies.
Rank-order vote results.
x-score 8 y-score 7 z-score 6
25Manipulating Preferences
These are truthful preferences. Bob introduces
a new alternative and then lies.
Rank-order vote results.
x-score 8 y-score 7 z-score 6 ?-score 9
z wins!!
26Desirable Voting Rule Properties
- 1. If all individuals preferences are complete,
reflexive and transitive, then so should be the
social preference created by the voting rule. - 2. If all individuals rank x before y then so
should the voting rule. - 3. Social preference between x and y should
depend on individuals preferences between x and
y only.
27Desirable Voting Rule Properties
- Kenneth Arrows Impossibility Theorem The only
voting rule with all of properties 1, 2 and 3 is
dictatorial.
28Desirable Voting Rule Properties
- Kenneth Arrows Impossibility Theorem The only
voting rule with all of properties 1, 2 and 3 is
dictatorial. - Implication is that a nondictatorial voting rule
requires giving up at least one of properties 1,
2 or 3.
29Social Welfare Functions
- 1. If all individuals preferences are complete,
reflexive and transitive, then so should be the
social preference created by the voting rule. - 2. If all individuals rank x before y then so
should the voting rule. - 3. Social preference between x and y should
depend on individuals preferences between x and
y only.
30Social Welfare Functions
- 1. If all individuals preferences are complete,
reflexive and transitive, then so should be the
social preference created by the voting rule. - 2. If all individuals rank x before y then so
should the voting rule. - 3. Social preference between x and y should
depend on individuals preferences between x and
y only.
Give up which one of these?
31Social Welfare Functions
- 1. If all individuals preferences are complete,
reflexive and transitive, then so should be the
social preference created by the voting rule. - 2. If all individuals rank x before y then so
should the voting rule. - 3. Social preference between x and y should
depend on individuals preferences between x and
y only.
Give up which one of these?
32Social Welfare Functions
- 1. If all individuals preferences are complete,
reflexive and transitive, then so should be the
social preference created by the voting rule. - 2. If all individuals rank x before y then so
should the voting rule.
There is a variety of voting procedures with both
properties 1 and 2.
33Social Welfare Functions
- ui(x) is individual is utility from overall
allocation x.
34Social Welfare Functions
- ui(x) is individual is utility from overall
allocation x. - Utilitarian
35Social Welfare Functions
- ui(x) is individual is utility from overall
allocation x. - Utilitarian
- Weighted-sum
36Social Welfare Functions
- ui(x) is individual is utility from overall
allocation x. - Utilitarian
- Weighted-sum
- Minimax
37Social Welfare Functions
- Suppose social welfare depends only on
individuals own allocations, instead of overall
allocations. - I.e. individual utility is ui(xi), rather than
ui(x). - Then social welfare iswhere is an
increasing function.
38Social Optima Efficiency
- Any social optimal allocation must be Pareto
optimal. - Why?
39Social Optima Efficiency
- Any social optimal allocation must be Pareto
optimal. - Why?
- If not, then somebodys utility can be increased
without reducing anyone elses utility i.e.
social suboptimality ? inefficiency.
40Utility Possibilities
OB
0
0
OA
41Utility Possibilities
OB
0
0
OA
42Utility Possibilities
OB
0
0
OA
43Utility Possibilities
OB
0
0
OA
44Utility Possibilities
OB
0
0
OA
45Utility Possibilities
OB
0
0
OA
46Utility Possibilities
Utility possibility frontier (upf)
OB
0
0
OA
47Utility Possibilities
Utility possibility frontier (upf)
OB
0
0
Utility possibility set
OA
48Social Optima Efficiency
Upf is the set of efficient
utility pairs.
49Social Optima Efficiency
Upf is the set of efficient
utility pairs.
Social indifference curves
50Social Optima Efficiency
Upf is the set of efficient
utility pairs.
Higher social welfare
Social indifference curves
51Social Optima Efficiency
Upf is the set of efficient
utility pairs.
Higher social welfare
Social indifference curves
52Social Optima Efficiency
Upf is the set of efficient
utility pairs.
Social optimum
Social indifference curves
53Social Optima Efficiency
Upf is the set of efficient
utility pairs.
Social optimum is efficient.
Social indifference curves
54Fair Allocations
- Some Pareto efficient allocations are unfair.
- E.g. one consumer eats everything is efficient,
but unfair. - Can competitive markets guarantee that a fair
allocation can be achieved?
55Fair Allocations
- If agent A prefers agent Bs allocation to his
own, then agent A envies agent B. - An allocation is fair if it is
- Pareto efficient
- envy free (equitable).
56Fair Allocations
- Must equal endowments create fair allocations?
57Fair Allocations
- Must equal endowments create fair allocations?
- No. Why not?
58Fair Allocations
- 3 agents, same endowments.
- Agents A and B have the same preferences. Agent
C does not. - Agents B and C trade ? agent B achieves a more
preferred bundle. - Therefore agent A must envy agent B ? unfair
allocation.
59Fair Allocations
- 2 agents, same endowments.
- Now trade is conducted in competitive markets.
- Must the post-trade allocation be fair?
60Fair Allocations
- 2 agents, same endowments.
- Now trade is conducted in competitive markets.
- Must the post-trade allocation be fair?
- Yes. Why?
61Fair Allocations
- Endowment of each is
- Post-trade bundles are
and
62Fair Allocations
- Endowment of each is
- Post-trade bundles are
and - Thenand
63Fair Allocations
- Suppose agent A envies agent B.
- I.e.
64Fair Allocations
- Suppose agent A envies agent B.
- I.e.
- Then, for agent A,
65Fair Allocations
- Suppose agent A envies agent B.
- I.e.
- Then, for agent A,
- Contradiction. is not affordable
for agent A.
66Fair Allocations
- This proves If every agents endowment is
identical, then trading in competitive markets
results in a fair allocation.
67Fair Allocations
OB
OA
Equal endowments.
68Fair Allocations
OB
Given prices p1 and p2.
Slope -p1/p2
OA
69Fair Allocations
OB
Given prices p1 and p2.
Slope -p1/p2
OA
70Fair Allocations
OB
Given prices p1 and p2.
Slope -p1/p2
OA
71Fair Allocations
OB
Post-trade allocation -- is it fair?
OA
72Fair Allocations
OB
Swap As and Bs post-trade allocations
Post-trade allocation -- is it fair?
OA
73Fair Allocations
OB
Swap As and Bs post-trade allocations
Post-trade allocation -- is it fair?
OA
A does not envy Bs post-trade allocation. B does
not envy As post-trade allocation.
74Fair Allocations
OB
Swap As and Bs post-trade allocations
Post-trade allocation -- is it fair?
OA
Post-trade allocation is Pareto-efficient
and envy-free hence it is fair.