Social Choice Session 6 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Social Choice Session 6

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Title: Social Choice Session 6


1
Social Choice Session 6
  • Carmen Pasca and John Hey

2
Plan for today
  • Remember that we are trying to find/express
    Societys preferences.
  • They come from individuals in society. So far we
    have shown that aggregating individual ordinal
    preferences is impossible.
  • We have shown that getting agreement on
    principles is impossible.
  • Today we are going to talk about aggregating
    individual cardinal/measurable preferences. Is
    this possible?
  • First we need to talk about existence of cardinal
    preferences.
  • We do this through Neumann-Morgenstern utility
    theory which seems to provide cardinality.
  • Then we talk about comparability.
  • We finish looking at Nash Bargaining Theory.
  • We conclude?

3
Cardinal preferences
  • So far we have maintained the assumption that
    preferences are ordinal just the ordering can
    be expressed.
  • This appears to have seriously constrained what
    we can do.
  • Surely we can measure intensity of preferences?
    And how increases in goods/consumption increases
    happiness?
  • Neumann-Morgenstern utility theory seems to let
    us do this.
  • So we can cardinally measure the utility of
    individuals.
  • The next tricky question is whether we can
    compare the happiness of different individuals.
    If we can, fine..
  • if not, perhaps we can borrow results from Nash
    Bargaining theory

4
Our framework and assumptions
  • Denote Societys utility/happiness by U.
  • Individuals in society receive money income x.
  • Denote is utility by ui ui(xi).
  • This could just be ui(xi) xi but we keep it
    general.
  • Then societys happiness is some function of the
    ui.
  • We could have U (u1 uI )
    Egalitarian.
  • Or U min(u1, ,uI ) Rawlsian.
  • Or U max(u1-ud)(u2-ud) Nash special
    case
  • Or
  • To make this operative the ui must be
    cardinal/measurable.
  • (We concentrate on this and ignore in this
    session the issue of the form of the function.)

5
Notice the advantages of this
  • If society has a sum of money to distribute, then
    it can be done optimally through maximisation of
    Societys welfare function.
  • We just have to agree on the form of the
    function.
  • Here we have assumed that the happiness of the
    members of society depends only on their money
    income
  • but if this method works it can be generalised
  • so that, for example, the happiness depends on
    goods and services consumed (this is not a big
    generalisation) and also depends on the
    consumption of goods and services by others in
    society.

6
Neumann-Morgenstern utility theory
  • Is essentially a theory of decision-making under
    risk
  • but does lead to a cardinal utility function.
  • We constrain ourselves to money outcomes (as
    above).
  • Fix end-points B and W (BgtW) the Best and
    Worst.
  • Put u(W) 0 and u(B) 1.
  • Like temperature centigrade freezing is 00
    boiling 1000.
  • Let X be some amount of money between the best
    and the worst W lt X lt B.
  • We are going to find u(X).
  • We can do this for any X so we can find the
    utility function.
  • Note that this is individual specific.

7
How do we find utility values?
  • Easy peasy!
  • Ask what must the probability p be to make you
    indifferent between getting X with certainty and
    playing out a lottery which gives you B with
    probability p and W with probability (1-p)?

8
So?
  • Put u(B)1 and u(W)0.
  • Then the utility of the left equals expected
    utility of the right
  • u(X) pu(B) (1-p)u(W) p1 (1-p)0 p
  • We have found the utility of X!!! Precisely p.
  • Note that we can do this for any X (between B and
    W).
  • Clever?!

9
Example with W 0, B 1000 and X 500
  • Put u(1000)1 and u(0)0.
  • Then the utility of the left equals expected
    utility of the right
  • u(500) 0.75u(1000) 0.25u(0) 0.751
    0.250 0.75
  • We have found the utility of 500 for an
    individual with the above preferences.
  • Clever?!

10
Implications
  • Using this method we can find the utility of any
    amount of money between W and B for any
    individual.
  • The shape of the function is individual specific.
  • It reflects the attitude to risk of the
    individual.
  • Ask yourself what is the form if the individual
    is risk-neutral (that is does not care/worry
    about risk)?
  • It is cardinal.
  • It depends upon the end points W and B.
  • If they change the function changes linearly.
  • This is exactly like temperature. Freezing and
    boiling temperatures 0 and 100 Celsius, 32 and
    212 Fahrenheit.
  • Temp Fahrenheit 32 (180/100)Temp Celsius. Is
    this a problem?

11
Comparability?
  • Now let us ask about comparability.
  • We note that the utility function that we have
    derived is unique only up to a linear
    transformation
  • We need to fix end-points if we want to use these
    functions to find social welfare/happiness as in
    the previous slides.
  • Can we have the same end-points for everyone?
  • Is Socrates dissatisfied happier than a pig
    satisfied?
  • During the 19th and 20th centuries most
    economists argued that one cannot measure
    happiness on an absolute scale.
  • But the idea is coming back into fashion. Andrew
    Oswald is a particularly energetic proponent. See
    his article on measuring and comparing
    International Happiness.

12
John Heys view
  • The idea of measuring happiness is crp.
  • To say that I am happier than Professoressa Pasca
    is meaningless.
  • But to say that I am happier today that yesterday
    has some merits.
  • And to say that Brlscn is happier than Amanda
    Knox (and indeed most people in Italy) seems
    reasonable.
  • Perhaps it is OK to say that the Pope is happier
    than Ruby?
  • A hermit happier than a Ghedaffi?
  • Perhaps society needs to take a view?
  • But what is society? The Great and the Good? The
    Disinterested Few? Grand Old Men? We will see
    later

13
One way out?
  • Nash Bargaining Theory.
  • Let us consider this with just two members in
    society u and v.
  • Suppose they are bargaining over money. If they
    do not reach agreement then they get some default
    d.
  • Suppose u gets x and v gets y if agreement is
    reached.
  • Nash showed that under some axioms (see the next
    slide) the solution is the allocation x to u and
    y to v such that the expression
  • u(x)-u(d)v(y)-v(d)
  • is maximised.

14
Nashs axioms
  • See the Wikipedia article.
  • Invariant to affine transformations or Invariant
    to equivalent utility representations so we do
    not worry about comparibility.
  • Pareto optimality so there is no other solution
    which is better for both than this.
  • Independence of irrelevant alternatives we have
    come across this before with Arrow.
  • Symmetry the two individuals are treated
    symmetrically (by the state).

15
Extensions and problems
  • Can be extended to more than two people.
  • The same conclusions apply.
  • Its implementation requires all people in society
    to agree to the axioms, including symmetry. (Note
    this latter does not imply that x y).
  • Problems?
  • We need to know the utility functions?
  • We already know how to find them.
  • But our method requires that people answer
    honestly.
  • Is it in their own interests so to do?
  • Question for the nonna.

16
Conclusions
  • We started this lecture with a long liturgy of
    impossibilities
  • but with hope in our hearts.
  • We ended it with less hope and more
    impossibilities
  • but greater clarity about what The State needs
    to know.
  • We need to judge what the State does, not from
    our own selfish perspectives, but as Grand Old
    Men taking a benevolent and disinterested view of
    Society.
  • But another question strikes us at this stage
  • Why do we need a State at all? Why can we not
    just let the individuals in society get on and
    run it by themselves?.
  • What is wrong with anarchy? Or perhaps a little
    anarchy?
  • We move on to this in the next session.
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