A Theoretical Analysis of the Economics of Efficiency, Bargaining and Welfare Distribution | Chapter 1 | An Overview on Business, Management and Economics Research Vol. 8
This
chapter develops a joint analysis of efficiency and distributional issues in an
economy in general equilibrium with a focus on bargaining under bounded
rationality. We propose evolutionary schemes representing bargaining, where
each step of the bargaining process identifies who is willing to make a
concession depending on the relative perceived cost of bargaining failure. Our
analysis relies on evolutionary strategies based on the Nash-Harsanyi
bargaining model, but we go beyond the Nash-Harsanyi model by generalizing it
with ordinal preferences as well as allowing for inefficient bargaining
agreements. We show that our evolutionary schemes converge to bargaining
agreements under general conditions. The analysis covers the case where the
bargaining agreement is inefficient as well as the case where the bargaining
process converges to an efficient allocation located on the Pareto utility
frontier. We show that the outcome of the bargaining process can be represented
by the simple maximization of a “generalized Nash product.” We explore the
implications of bargaining agreements for income distribution. Finally, we
discuss our model’s insights in analyzing the performance of an economy,
emphasizing the roles of preferences, decentralization, and public goods. In
the presence of strong linkages between threat points and welfare distribution,
the design and implementation of conflict resolution mechanisms need further
investigations.
Author(s) Details:
Jean-Paul Chavas,
Department
of Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.
Mingcong
Pan,
Department
of Agricultural and Applied Economics and Department of Political Science,
University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/AOBMER-V8/article/view/13103
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