Competitive equilibrium with equal incomes (CEEI) is a special kind of competitive equilibrium, in which the budget of all agents is the same. I.e, for every two agents A and B: ::\overrightarrow{p}\cdot \overrightarrow{x_A} = \overrightarrow{p}\cdot \overrightarrow{x_B} The CEEI allocation is important because it is guaranteed to be
envy-free: the bundle x_A gives agent A a maximum utility among of all the bundles with the same price, so in particular it gives him at least as much utility as the bundle x_B. One way to achieve a CEEI is to give all agents the same initial endowment, i.e., for every A and B: ::\overrightarrow{e_A} = \overrightarrow{e_B} (if there are n agents then every agent receives exactly 1/n of the quantity of every good). In such an allocation, no subsets of agents are self-sufficient. Hence, as a corollary of Gale's theorem: ::
In a linear economy, a CEEI always exists.
Examples In all examples below, there are two agents - Alice and George, and two goods - apples (x) and guavas (y). A.
Unique equilibrium: the utility functions are: :u_A(x,y)=3x+2y, :u_G(x,y)=2x+3y. The total endowment is T=(6,6). Without loss of generality, we can normalize the price vector such that P_x=1. What values can P_y have in CE? If P_y>3/2, then both agents want to give all their y for x; if P_y, then both agents want to give all their x for y; hence, in CE 2/3 \leq P_y \leq 3/2. If P_y=2/3, then Alice is indifferent between x and y, while George wants only y. Similarly, if P_y=3/2, then George is indifferent while Alice wants only x. If 2/3 , then Alice wants only x while George wants only y. Hence, the CE allocation must be [(6,0);(0,6)]. The price vector depends on the initial allocation. E.g., if the initial allocation is equal, [(3,3);(3,3)], then both agents have the same budget in CE, so P_y=P_x=1. This CE is essentially unique: the price vector may be multiplied by a constant factor, but the CE equilibrium will not change. B.
No equilibrium: Suppose Alice holds apples and guavas but wants only apples. George holds only guavas but wants both apples and guavas. The set {Alice} is self-sufficient, because Alice thinks that all goods held by George are worthless. Moreover, the set {Alice} is super-self-sufficient, because Alice holds guavas which are worthless to her. Indeed, a competitive equilibrium does not exist: regardless of the price, Alice would like to give all her guavas for apples, but George has no apples so her demand will remain unfulfilled. C.
Many equilibria: Suppose there are two goods and two agents, both agents assign the same value to both goods (e.g. for both of them, w_{apples}=w_{guavas}=1). Then, in equilibrium, the agents may exchange some apples for an equal number of guavas, and the result will still be an equilibrium. For example, if there is an equilibrium in which Alice holds 4 apples and 2 guavas and George holds 5 apples and 3 guavas, then the situation in which Alice holds 5 apples and 1 guava and George 4 apples and 4 guavas is also an equilibrium. But, in both these equilibria, the total utilities of both agents are the same: Alice has utility 6 in both equilibria, and George has utility 8 in both equilibria. This is not a coincidence, as shown in the following section. == Uniqueness of utilities in competitive equilibrium ==