Abstract

In 1951, Kenneth Arrow and Gerard Debreu independently established what is still today probably the central argument of economic theory: They proved that any competitive equilibrium of an “Arrow–Debreu” economy is Pareto optimal. In 1954, they jointly discovered a subclass of economies, now referred to as convex Arrow–Debreu economies, for which competitive equilibria always exist. Debreu (1970) introduced the techniques of differential topology into economics and proved that the competitive equilibria of smooth, convex Arrow–Debreu economies are generically locally unique. In this chapter we extend the study of the existence, optimality, and local uniqueness of competitive equilibria to a wider class of economies: The class of economies, suggested by Arrow in 1953, in which the asset market is possibly incomplete. We show that when assets pay off in some numéraire commodity, equilibria exist and are typically locally unique, even when the asset market is incomplete. However, when the asset market is incomplete, competitive equilibrium allocations are typically Pareto suboptimal in a strong sense: The market does not make efficient use of the existing assets.

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