TY - JOUR
T1 - Sensitivity analysis for applied general equilibrium models in the presence of multiple Walrasian equilibria
AU - Berliant, Marcus
AU - Dakhlia, Sami
PY - 2002/4
Y1 - 2002/4
N2 - Pagan and Shannon's (1985) widely used approach employs local linearizations of a system of non-linear equations to obtain asymptotic distributions for the endogenous parameters (such as prices) from distributions over the exogenous parameters (such as estimates of taste, technology, or policy variables, for example). However, this approach ignores both the possibility of multiple equilibria as well as the problem (related to that of multiplicity) that critical points might be contained in the confidence interval of an exogenous parameter. We generalize Pagan and Shannon's approach to account for multiple equilibria by assuming that the choice of equilibrium is described by a random selection. We develop an asymptotic theory regarding equilibrium prices, which establishes that their probability density function is multimodal and that it converges to a weighted sum of normal density functions. An important insight is that if a model allows multiple equilibria, say i = 1, ..., I, but multiplicity is ignored, then the computed solution for the i-th equilibrium generally no longer coincides with the expected value of that i-th equilibrium. The error can be large and correspond to several standard deviations of the mean's estimate.
AB - Pagan and Shannon's (1985) widely used approach employs local linearizations of a system of non-linear equations to obtain asymptotic distributions for the endogenous parameters (such as prices) from distributions over the exogenous parameters (such as estimates of taste, technology, or policy variables, for example). However, this approach ignores both the possibility of multiple equilibria as well as the problem (related to that of multiplicity) that critical points might be contained in the confidence interval of an exogenous parameter. We generalize Pagan and Shannon's approach to account for multiple equilibria by assuming that the choice of equilibrium is described by a random selection. We develop an asymptotic theory regarding equilibrium prices, which establishes that their probability density function is multimodal and that it converges to a weighted sum of normal density functions. An important insight is that if a model allows multiple equilibria, say i = 1, ..., I, but multiplicity is ignored, then the computed solution for the i-th equilibrium generally no longer coincides with the expected value of that i-th equilibrium. The error can be large and correspond to several standard deviations of the mean's estimate.
KW - Delta-method
KW - General equilibrium models
KW - Multiplicity
KW - Non-uniqueness
KW - Sensitivity analysis
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0036003989
U2 - 10.1007/s001990000158
DO - 10.1007/s001990000158
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0036003989
SN - 0938-2259
VL - 19
SP - 459
EP - 476
JO - Economic Theory
JF - Economic Theory
IS - 3
ER -