Consider another example:
Consider a pure exchange economy with two goods X and Y and two consumers A and B.
Suppose utility functions are $$u_A(x_A, y_A) = \min(x_A, y_A)$$ and $$u_B(x_B, y_B) = \min(x_B, y_B)$$
Endowment of A is $$\omega_A = (0, 5)$$ and endowment of B is $$\omega_B = (10, 0)$$.
Equilibrium price vector $(p_x, p_y)$ and allocation $((x_A, y_A), (x_B, y_B))$ satisfy the following:
Optimality Conditions (Allocation must solve the utility maximization problem of the two consumers, i.e. it must lie on the demand functions)
- $(x_A, y_A) \in \begin{cases} \left\{\left(\frac{5p_y}{p_x + p_y}, \frac{5p_y}{p_x + p_y}\right)\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x = 0, y\geq 0\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y = 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x \geq 5, y= 5\right\} & \text{if } p_x = 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \end{cases} $
- $(x_B, y_B) \in \begin{cases} \left\{\left(\frac{10p_x}{p_x + p_y}, \frac{10p_y}{p_x + p_y}\right)\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x = 10, y\geq 10\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y = 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x \geq 0, y= 0\right\} & \text{if } p_x = 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \end{cases} $
Feasibility Conditions
- $x_A + x_B = 10$
- $y_A + y_B = 5$
Clearly, any price vector $(p_x, p_y)$ satisfying $p_x = 0$ and $p_y > 0$ supports any of the allocations in the set $\{((x_A, 5), (x_B, 0))| 5 \leq x_A \leq 10, x_A+x_B = 10 \}$ as equilibrium. Utility of B in all these competitive equilibria is 0, and A gets everything.
Suppose B destroys part of his endowment and the revised endowment of A is $$\omega_A = (0, 5)$$ and endowment of B is $$\omega_B = (4, 0)$$ In this new problem, optimality conditions are
- $(x_A, y_A) \in \begin{cases} \left\{\left(\frac{5p_y}{p_x + p_y}, \frac{5p_y}{p_x + p_y}\right)\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x = 0, y\geq 0\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y = 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x \geq 5, y= 5\right\} & \text{if } p_x = 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \end{cases} $
- $(x_B, y_B) \in \begin{cases} \left\{\left(\frac{4p_x}{p_x + p_y}, \frac{4p_y}{p_x + p_y}\right)\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x = 4, y\geq 4\right\} & \text{if } p_x > 0 \text{ and } p_y = 0 \\ \left\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2_+: x \geq 0, y= 0\right\} & \text{if } p_x = 0 \text{ and } p_y > 0 \end{cases} $
Feasibility Conditions
- $x_A + x_B = 4$
- $y_A + y_B = 5$
Clearly, any price vector $(p_x, p_y)$ satisfying $p_x > 0$ and $p_y = 0$ supports any of the allocations in the set $\{((0, y_A), (4, y_B))| 4 \leq y_B \leq 5, y_A+y_B = 5 \}$ as equilibrium. Now utility of A in all these competitive equilibria is 0, and B gets everything. B's utility has gone up to 4 in comparison to Scenario 1 where his utility was 0. This happened because he destroyed part of his endowment.