Community indifference curve

A community indifference curve is an illustration of different combinations of commodity quantities that would bring a whole community the same level of utility. The model can be used to describe any community, such as a town or an entire nation. In a community indifference curve, the indifference curves of all those individuals are aggregated and held at an equal and constant level of utility.

History

Invented by Tibor Scitovsky, a Hungarian born economist, in 1941.

Solving for a CIC

A community indifference curve (CIC) provides the set of all aggregate endowments ( x ¯ , y ¯ ) = ( x 1 + x 2 , y 1 , + y 2 ) {\displaystyle ({\bar {x}},{\bar {y}})=(x_{1}+x_{2},y_{1},+y_{2})} needed to achieve a given distribution of utilities, ( u 1 ¯ , u 2 ¯ ) {\displaystyle ({\bar {u_{1}}},{\bar {u_{2}}})} . The community indifference curve can be found by solving for the following minimization problem:

min y ¯  s.t.  U 1 ( x 1 , y 1 ) u 1 ¯  and  U 2 ( x ¯ , y ¯ 1 ) u 2 ¯ {\displaystyle \min {\bar {y}}{\text{ s.t. }}U_{1}(x_{1},y_{1})\geq {\bar {u_{1}}}{\text{ and }}U_{2}({\bar {x}},{\bar {y}}-1)\geq {\bar {u_{2}}}}

CICs assume allocative efficiency amongst members of the community. Allocative Efficiency provides that M R S 1 x y = M R S 2 x y {\displaystyle MRS_{1}xy=MRS_{2}xy} . The CIC comes from solving for y ¯ {\displaystyle {\bar {y}}} in terms of x ¯ {\displaystyle {\bar {x}}} , y c i c ( x ¯ ) {\displaystyle y_{cic}({\bar {x}})} .

Community indifference curves are an aggregate of individual indifference curves.


See also

  • Indifference curve

References

Albouy, David. "Welfare Economics with a Full Production Economy." Economics 481. Fall 2007.

Deardorff's Glossary of International Economics.


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