Tracking the Invisible Hand: Convergence of Double Auctions to Competitive Equilibrium

Economics is the science of want and scarcity. We show that want and scarcity, operating within a simple exchange institution (double auction), can be sufficient for an economy consisting of multiple inter-related markets to attain competitive equilibrium (CE). We generalize Gode and Sunder‘s (1993a...

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Published inComputational economics Vol. 16; no. 3; pp. 257 - 284
Main Authors Bosch-Domènech, Antoni, Sunder, Shyam
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Dordrecht Society for Computational Economics 01.12.2000
Springer Nature B.V
SeriesComputational Economics
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ISSN0927-7099
1572-9974
DOI10.1023/A:1008776705863

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Summary:Economics is the science of want and scarcity. We show that want and scarcity, operating within a simple exchange institution (double auction), can be sufficient for an economy consisting of multiple inter-related markets to attain competitive equilibrium (CE). We generalize Gode and Sunder‘s (1993a,b) single-market finding to multi-market economies, and explore the role of the scarcity constraint in convergence of economies to CE. When the scarcity constraint is relaxed by allowing arbitrageurs in middle markets to enter speculative trades, prices still converge to CE, but allocative efficiency of the economy declines. Optimization by individual agents, often used to derive competitive equilibria, is unnecessary for an actual economy to approximately attain such equilibria. From the failure of humans to optimize in complex tasks, one need not conclude that the equilibria derived from the competitive model are descriptively irrelevant. We show that even in complex economic systems which are highly inefficient, such equilibria can be attained under a range of surprisingly weak assumptions about agent behavior.
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ISSN:0927-7099
1572-9974
DOI:10.1023/A:1008776705863