The following examples involve an
exchange economy with two agents, Jane and Kelvin, two
goods e.g. bananas (x) and apples (y), and no money. 1.
Graphical example: Suppose that the initial allocation is at point X, where Jane has more apples than Kelvin does and Kelvin has more bananas than Jane does. By looking at their
indifference curves J_1 of Jane and K_1 of Kelvin, we can see that this is not an equilibrium - both agents are willing to trade with each other at the prices P_x and P_y. After trading, both Jane and Kelvin move to an indifference curve which depicts a higher level of utility, J_2 and K_2. The new indifference curves intersect at point E. The slope of the tangent of both curves equals -P_x / P_y. And the MRS_{Jane} = P_x / P_y; MRS_{Kelvin} = P_x / P_y. The
marginal rate of substitution (MRS) of Jane equals that of Kelvin. Therefore, the 2 individuals society reaches
Pareto efficiency, where there is no way to make Jane or Kelvin better off without making the other worse off. 2.
Arithmetic example: suppose that both agents have
Cobb–Douglas utilities: :u_J(x,y) = x^a y^{1-a} :u_K(x,y) = x^b y^{1-b} where a,b are constants. Suppose the initial endowment is E=[(1,0), (0,1)]. The demand function of Jane for x is: :x_J(p_x,p_y,I_J) = \frac{a\cdot I_J}{p_x} = \frac{a\cdot (1\cdot p_x)}{p_x} = a The demand function of Kelvin for x is: :x_K(p_x,p_y,I_K) = \frac{b\cdot I_K}{p_x} = \frac{b\cdot p_y}{p_x} The market clearance condition for x is: :x_J + x_K = E_{J,x} + E_{K,x} = 1 This equation yields the equilibrium price ratio: :\frac{p_y}{p_x} = \frac{1-a}{b} We could do a similar calculation for y, but this is not needed, since
Walras' law guarantees that the results will be the same. Note that in CE, only relative prices are determined; we can normalize the prices, e.g, by requiring that p_x+p_y=1. Then we get p_x=\frac{b}{1+b-a}, p_y=\frac{1-a}{1+b-a}. But any other normalization will also work. 3.
Non-existence example: Suppose the agents' utilities are: :u_J(x,y)=u_K(x,y) = \max(x,y) and the initial endowment is [(2,1),(2,1)]. In CE, every agent must have either only x or only y (the other product does not contribute anything to the utility so the agent would like to exchange it away). Hence, the only possible CE allocations are [(4,0),(0,2)] and [(0,2),(4,0)]. Since the agents have the same income, necessarily p_y = 2 p_x. But then, the agent holding 2 units of y will want to exchange them for 4 units of x. 4. For existence and non-existence examples involving linear utilities, see Linear utility#Examples.
Indivisible items When there are indivisible items in the economy, it is common to assume that there is also money, which is divisible. The agents have
quasilinear utility functions: their utility is the amount of money they have plus the utility from the bundle of items they hold.
A. Single item: Alice has a car which she values as 10. Bob has no car, and he values Alice's car as 20. A possible CE is: the price of the car is 15, Bob gets the car and pays 15 to Alice. This is an equilibrium because the market is cleared and both agents prefer their final bundle to their initial bundle. In fact, every price between 10 and 20 will be a CE price, with the same allocation. The same situation holds when the car is not initially held by Alice but rather in an auction in which both Alice and Bob are buyers: the car will go to Bob and the price will be anywhere between 10 and 20. On the other hand, any price below 10 is not an equilibrium price because there is an
excess demand (both Alice and Bob want the car at that price), and any price above 20 is not an equilibrium price because there is an
excess supply (neither Alice nor Bob want the car at that price). This example is a special case of a
double auction.
B. Substitutes: A car and a horse are sold in an auction. Alice only cares about transportation, so for her these are perfect substitutes: she gets utility 8 from the horse, 9 from the car, and if she has both of them then she uses only the car so her utility is 9. Bob gets a utility of 5 from the horse and 7 from the car, but if he has both of them then his utility is 11 since he also likes the horse as a pet. In this case it is more difficult to find an equilibrium (see
below). A possible equilibrium is that Alice buys the horse for 5 and Bob buys the car for 7. This is an equilibrium since Bob wouldn't like to pay 5 for the horse which will give him only 4 additional utility, and Alice wouldn't like to pay 7 for the car which will give her only 1 additional utility.
C. Complements: A horse and a carriage are sold in an auction. There are two potential buyers: AND and XOR. AND wants only the horse and the carriage together - they receive a utility of v_{and} from holding both of them but a utility of 0 for holding only one of them. XOR wants either the horse or the carriage but doesn't need both - they receive a utility of v_{xor} from holding one of them and the same utility for holding both of them. Here, when v_{and} , a competitive equilibrium does NOT exist, i.e, no price will clear the market.
Proof: consider the following options for the sum of the prices (horse-price + carriage-price): • The sum is less than v_{and}. Then, AND wants both items. Since the price of at least one item is less than v_{xor}, XOR wants that item, so there is excess demand. • The sum is exactly v_{and}. Then, AND is indifferent between buying both items and not buying any item. But XOR still wants exactly one item, so there is either excess demand or excess supply. • The sum is more than v_{and}. Then, AND wants no item and XOR still wants at most a single item, so there is excess supply.
D. Unit-demand consumers: There are
n consumers. Each consumer has an index i=1,...,n. There is a single type of good. Each consumer i wants at most a single unit of the good, which gives him a utility of u(i). The consumers are ordered such that u is a weakly increasing function of i. If the supply is k\leq n units, then any price p satisfying u(n-k)\leq p\leq u(n-k+1) is an equilibrium price, since there are
k consumers that either want to buy the product or indifferent between buying and not buying it. Note that an increase in supply causes a decrease in price. == Existence of a competitive equilibrium ==