FINAL EXAMINATION
Instructions: ALL SECTIONS ARE EQUALLY WEIGHTED. If a question
has multiple parts, indicate exactly where you answer each part. GOOD LUCK!!
VERY SHORT ANSWERS:
ANSWER ALL OF THESE. Carefully define the following terms. Whenever
possible, give both mathematical and verbal definition.
| Quasi-Convex
| Risk Premium
|
| Time Separable Utility
| Risk Aversion
|
| Bellman's Equation
| Substitution Axiom
|
| Moral Hazard
| Archimedean Axiom
|
| Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives
| Anonymity Principle
|
SHORT ANSWERS:
DO ANY TWO (2) OF THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS. ALL QUESTIONS ARE EQUALLY
WEIGHTED.
- Define the weak Pareto criterion. Is it an ordering? (Show.) Is
it a good collective choice rule? (Discuss.)
- Consider Robin, who attends a lot of parties. S/he loves cake, but
s/he is polite: s/he never takes the largest piece available, but s/he
takes the biggest piece subject to that normative constraint. Is Robin
rational? Is s/he a maximizer? Does s/he obey Sen's alpha and beta?
(If not, which is violated?)
- Use expected utility theory to analyze the optimal response of
potential tax-cheats to the risk of audit. You can assume the IRS wishes to
recoup its losses on average.
- Prove the first fundamental theorem of welfare economics
algebraically and interpret your proof.
LONGER ANSWER:
ALL STUDENTS MUST ANSWER ONE (1) OF THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS:
- Give a precise statement of Arrow's impossibility theorem and
discuss its implications as you see them. Prove Arrow's impossibility
theorem.
- Hall (1978, JPE) considered a simple consumption problem:
max E0Sumt=0infty betatU(ct) subject to the budget constraint
At+1=R(At+y-ct) with U(ct)=-(cbar-ct)2/2.
- Set up the associated Bellman equation and interpret.
- Derive the first order and envelope conditions and interpret. (An
interpretation gives the economic reasoning behind these conditions; do
not just restate the equations in words.)
- Derive Hall's result that consumption follows a martingale with
drift. Be sure to provide economic interpretations at each step of your
derivation. (What are the implications of this result for empirical research
on the consumption function?)
- Give an intuitive discussion of the principal agent problem along
with some concrete, real world situations where it might arise. Suggest a
general procedure by which the principal might derive an optimal contract
with the agent, and indicate precisely the constraints which the principal
must incorporate in this procedure. Present and interpret the first order
conditions, with careful attention to the sign and magnitude of the
multipliers. (Good intuition is as important to your answer as algebra.)