The Core in a Distributional Economy
Michael Greinecker, Konrad Podczeck
TLDR
This paper shows core analysis and blocking coalitions can be identified in distributional economies, providing a new proof of core-equivalence.
Key contributions
- Challenges the assertion that core analysis requires explicit individual agents.
- Shows blocking coalitions can be identified purely from characteristic distributions.
- Provides a novel, purely distributional proof of the classical core-equivalence theorem.
- Extends methods to large matching markets and atomless Shapley-value.
Why it matters
This paper fundamentally redefines core analysis for large economies, showing it's possible without explicit agents. It resolves a long-standing theoretical challenge, simplifying economic modeling and broadening the applicability of core concepts to new domains like matching markets.
Original Abstract
An economy, large or small, has traditionally been defined in terms of an explicit set of agents and an assignment of characteristics to each agent. But when individual agents are negligible, most economically relevant properties of an economy can be defined in terms of the distribution of characteristics alone. Agents need not be specified. It has been frequently asserted that the distributional description of an economy is too sparse for core analysis. Notions of coalitions and blocking require the individualistic description of agents. This paper shows that this is not so. The presence of blocking coalitions can be directly identified in terms of distributions alone. Indeed, we give a purely distributional proof of the classical core-equivalence theorem that delivers the core-equivalence theorem for individualistic economies as a corollary. Our methods have applications outside of general equilibrium theory. They apply to large matching markets and to analogs of the Shapley-value for atomless economies.
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