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Constant elasticity of substitution

Constant elasticity of substitution (CES), in economics, is a property of some production functions and utility functions. Several economists have featured in the topic and have contributed in the final finding of the constant. They include Tom McKenzie, John Hicks and Joan Robinson. The vital economic element of the measure is that it provided the producer a clear picture of how to move between different modes or types of production.

Specifically, it arises in a particular type of aggregator function which combines two or more types of consumption goods, or two or more types of production inputs into an aggregate quantity. This aggregator function exhibits constant elasticity of substitution.

CES production function edit

Despite having several factors of production in substitutability, the most common are the forms of elasticity of substitution. On the contrary of restricting direct empirical evaluation, the constant Elasticity of Substitution are simple to use and hence are widely used.[1] McFadden states that;

The constant E.S assumption is a restriction on the form of production possibilities, and one can characterize the class of production functions which have this property. This has been done by Arrow-Chenery-Minhas-Solow for the two-factor production case.[1]

The CES production function is a neoclassical production function that displays constant elasticity of substitution. In other words, the production technology has a constant percentage change in factor (e.g. labour and capital) proportions due to a percentage change in marginal rate of technical substitution. The two factor (capital, labor) CES production function introduced by Solow,[2] and later made popular by Arrow, Chenery, Minhas, and Solow is:[3][4][5][6]

 

where

  •   = Quantity of output
  •   = Factor productivity
  •   = Share parameter
  •  ,   = Quantities of primary production factors (Capital and Labor)
  •   =   = Substitution parameter
  •   =   = Elasticity of substitution
  •   = degree of homogeneity of the production function. Where   = 1 (Constant return to scale),   < 1 (Decreasing return to scale),   > 1 (Increasing return to scale).

As its name suggests, the CES production function exhibits constant elasticity of substitution between capital and labor. Leontief, linear and Cobb–Douglas functions are special cases of the CES production function. That is,

  • If   approaches 1, we have a linear or perfect substitutes function;
  • If   approaches zero in the limit, we get the Cobb–Douglas production function;
  • If   approaches negative infinity we get the Leontief or perfect complements production function.

The general form of the CES production function, with n inputs, is:[7]

 

where

  •   = Quantity of output
  •   = Factor productivity
  •   = Share parameter of input i,  
  •   = Quantities of factors of production (i = 1,2...n)
  •   = Elasticity of substitution.

Extending the CES (Solow) functional form to accommodate multiple factors of production creates some problems. However, there is no completely general way to do this. Uzawa showed the only possible n-factor production functions (n>2) with constant partial elasticities of substitution require either that all elasticities between pairs of factors be identical, or if any differ, these all must equal each other and all remaining elasticities must be unity.[8] This is true for any production function. This means the use of the CES functional form for more than 2 factors will generally mean that there is not constant elasticity of substitution among all factors.

Nested CES functions are commonly found in partial equilibrium and general equilibrium models. Different nests (levels) allow for the introduction of the appropriate elasticity of substitution.

CES utility function edit

The same CES functional form arises as a utility function in consumer theory. For example, if there exist   types of consumption goods  , then aggregate consumption   could be defined using the CES aggregator:

 

Here again, the coefficients   are share parameters, and   is the elasticity of substitution. Therefore, the consumption goods   are perfect substitutes when   approaches infinity and perfect complements when   approaches zero. In the case where   approaches one is again a limiting case where L'Hôpital's Rule applies. The CES aggregator is also sometimes called the Armington aggregator, which was discussed by Armington (1969).[9]

CES utility functions are a special case of homothetic preferences.

The following is an example of a CES utility function for two goods,   and  , with equal shares:[10]: 112 

 

The expenditure function in this case is:

 

The indirect utility function is its inverse:

 

The demand functions are:

 
 

A CES utility function is one of the cases considered by Dixit and Stiglitz (1977) in their study of optimal product diversity in a context of monopolistic competition.[11]

Note the difference between CES utility and isoelastic utility: the CES utility function is an ordinal utility function that represents preferences on sure consumption commodity bundles, while the isoelastic utility function is a cardinal utility function that represents preferences on lotteries. A CES indirect (dual) utility function has been used to derive utility-consistent brand demand systems where category demands are determined endogenously by a multi-category, CES indirect (dual) utility function. It has also been shown that CES preferences are self-dual and that both primal and dual CES preferences yield systems of indifference curves that may exhibit any degree of convexity.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b McFadden, Daniel (June 1963). "Constant Elasticity of Substitution Production Functions". The Review of Economic Studies. 30 (2): 73–83. doi:10.2307/2295804. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2295804.
  2. ^ Solow, R.M (1956). "A contribution to the theory of economic growth". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 70 (1): 65–94. doi:10.2307/1884513. hdl:10338.dmlcz/143862. JSTOR 1884513.
  3. ^ Arrow, K. J.; Chenery, H. B.; Minhas, B. S.; Solow, R. M. (1961). "Capital-labor substitution and economic efficiency". Review of Economics and Statistics. 43 (3): 225–250. doi:10.2307/1927286. JSTOR 1927286.
  4. ^ Jorgensen, Dale W. (2000). Econometrics, vol. 1: Econometric Modelling of Producer Behavior. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-262-10082-3.
  5. ^ Klump, R; McAdam, P; Willman, A. (2007). "Factor Substitution and Factor Augmenting Technical Progress in the US: A Normalized Supply-Side System Approach". Review of Economics and Statistics. 89 (1): 183–192. doi:10.1162/rest.89.1.183. hdl:10419/152801. S2CID 57570638.
  6. ^ de La Grandville, Olivier (2016). Economic Growth: A Unified Approach. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316335703. ISBN 9781316335703.
  7. ^ http://www.econ.ucsb.edu/~tedb/Courses/GraduateTheoryUCSB/elasticity%20of%20substitutionrevised.tex.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ Uzawa, H (1962). "Production functions with constant elasticities of substitution". Review of Economic Studies. 29 (4): 291–299. doi:10.2307/2296305. JSTOR 2296305.
  9. ^ Armington, P. S. (1969). "A theory of demand for products distinguished by place of production". IMF Staff Papers. 16 (1): 159–178. doi:10.2307/3866403. JSTOR 3866403.
  10. ^ Varian, Hal (1992). Microeconomic Analysis (Third ed.). New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-95735-7.
  11. ^ Dixit, Avinash; Stiglitz, Joseph (1977). "Monopolistic Competition and Optimum Product Diversity". American Economic Review. 67 (3): 297–308. JSTOR 1831401.
  12. ^ Baltas, George (2001). "Utility-Consistent Brand Demand Systems with Endogenous Category Consumption: Principles and Marketing Applications". Decision Sciences. 32 (3): 399–421. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5915.2001.tb00965.x.

External links edit

  • Anatomy of CES Type Production Functions in 3D
  • Closed form solution for a firm with an N-dimensional CES technology
  • Monopolists revenue function

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This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is the lede is poorly expressed and confusing Please help improve this article if you can December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Constant elasticity of substitution CES in economics is a property of some production functions and utility functions Several economists have featured in the topic and have contributed in the final finding of the constant They include Tom McKenzie John Hicks and Joan Robinson The vital economic element of the measure is that it provided the producer a clear picture of how to move between different modes or types of production Specifically it arises in a particular type of aggregator function which combines two or more types of consumption goods or two or more types of production inputs into an aggregate quantity This aggregator function exhibits constant elasticity of substitution Contents 1 CES production function 2 CES utility function 3 References 4 External linksCES production function editDespite having several factors of production in substitutability the most common are the forms of elasticity of substitution On the contrary of restricting direct empirical evaluation the constant Elasticity of Substitution are simple to use and hence are widely used 1 McFadden states that The constant E S assumption is a restriction on the form of production possibilities and one can characterize the class of production functions which have this property This has been done by Arrow Chenery Minhas Solow for the two factor production case 1 The CES production function is a neoclassical production function that displays constant elasticity of substitution In other words the production technology has a constant percentage change in factor e g labour and capital proportions due to a percentage change in marginal rate of technical substitution The two factor capital labor CES production function introduced by Solow 2 and later made popular by Arrow Chenery Minhas and Solow is 3 4 5 6 Q F a Kr 1 a Lr yr displaystyle Q F cdot left a cdot K rho 1 a cdot L rho right frac upsilon rho nbsp where Q displaystyle Q nbsp Quantity of output F displaystyle F nbsp Factor productivity a displaystyle a nbsp Share parameter K displaystyle K nbsp L displaystyle L nbsp Quantities of primary production factors Capital and Labor r displaystyle rho nbsp s 1s displaystyle frac sigma 1 sigma nbsp Substitution parameter s displaystyle sigma nbsp 11 r displaystyle frac 1 1 rho nbsp Elasticity of substitution y displaystyle upsilon nbsp degree of homogeneity of the production function Where y displaystyle upsilon nbsp 1 Constant return to scale y displaystyle upsilon nbsp lt 1 Decreasing return to scale y displaystyle upsilon nbsp gt 1 Increasing return to scale As its name suggests the CES production function exhibits constant elasticity of substitution between capital and labor Leontief linear and Cobb Douglas functions are special cases of the CES production function That is If r displaystyle rho nbsp approaches 1 we have a linear or perfect substitutes function If r displaystyle rho nbsp approaches zero in the limit we get the Cobb Douglas production function If r displaystyle rho nbsp approaches negative infinity we get the Leontief or perfect complements production function The general form of the CES production function with n inputs is 7 Q F i 1naiXir 1r displaystyle Q F cdot left sum i 1 n a i X i r right frac 1 r nbsp where Q displaystyle Q nbsp Quantity of output F displaystyle F nbsp Factor productivity ai displaystyle a i nbsp Share parameter of input i i 1nai 1 displaystyle sum i 1 n a i 1 nbsp Xi displaystyle X i nbsp Quantities of factors of production i 1 2 n s 11 r displaystyle s frac 1 1 r nbsp Elasticity of substitution Extending the CES Solow functional form to accommodate multiple factors of production creates some problems However there is no completely general way to do this Uzawa showed the only possible n factor production functions n gt 2 with constant partial elasticities of substitution require either that all elasticities between pairs of factors be identical or if any differ these all must equal each other and all remaining elasticities must be unity 8 This is true for any production function This means the use of the CES functional form for more than 2 factors will generally mean that there is not constant elasticity of substitution among all factors Nested CES functions are commonly found in partial equilibrium and general equilibrium models Different nests levels allow for the introduction of the appropriate elasticity of substitution CES utility function editThe same CES functional form arises as a utility function in consumer theory For example if there exist n displaystyle n nbsp types of consumption goods xi displaystyle x i nbsp then aggregate consumption X displaystyle X nbsp could be defined using the CES aggregator X i 1nai1sxis 1s ss 1 displaystyle X left sum i 1 n a i frac 1 s x i frac s 1 s right frac s s 1 nbsp Here again the coefficients ai displaystyle a i nbsp are share parameters and s displaystyle s nbsp is the elasticity of substitution Therefore the consumption goods xi displaystyle x i nbsp are perfect substitutes when s displaystyle s nbsp approaches infinity and perfect complements when s displaystyle s nbsp approaches zero In the case where s displaystyle s nbsp approaches one is again a limiting case where L Hopital s Rule applies The CES aggregator is also sometimes called the Armington aggregator which was discussed by Armington 1969 9 CES utility functions are a special case of homothetic preferences The following is an example of a CES utility function for two goods x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp with equal shares 10 112 u x y xr yr 1 r displaystyle u x y x r y r 1 r nbsp The expenditure function in this case is e px py u pxr r 1 pyr r 1 r 1 r u displaystyle e p x p y u p x r r 1 p y r r 1 r 1 r cdot u nbsp The indirect utility function is its inverse v px py I pxr r 1 pyr r 1 1 r r I displaystyle v p x p y I p x r r 1 p y r r 1 1 r r cdot I nbsp The demand functions are x px py I px1 r 1 pxr r 1 pyr r 1 I displaystyle x p x p y I frac p x 1 r 1 p x r r 1 p y r r 1 cdot I nbsp y px py I py1 r 1 pxr r 1 pyr r 1 I displaystyle y p x p y I frac p y 1 r 1 p x r r 1 p y r r 1 cdot I nbsp A CES utility function is one of the cases considered by Dixit and Stiglitz 1977 in their study of optimal product diversity in a context of monopolistic competition 11 Note the difference between CES utility and isoelastic utility the CES utility function is an ordinal utility function that represents preferences on sure consumption commodity bundles while the isoelastic utility function is a cardinal utility function that represents preferences on lotteries A CES indirect dual utility function has been used to derive utility consistent brand demand systems where category demands are determined endogenously by a multi category CES indirect dual utility function It has also been shown that CES preferences are self dual and that both primal and dual CES preferences yield systems of indifference curves that may exhibit any degree of convexity 12 References edit a b McFadden Daniel June 1963 Constant Elasticity of Substitution Production Functions The Review of Economic Studies 30 2 73 83 doi 10 2307 2295804 ISSN 0034 6527 JSTOR 2295804 Solow R M 1956 A contribution to the theory of economic growth The Quarterly Journal of Economics 70 1 65 94 doi 10 2307 1884513 hdl 10338 dmlcz 143862 JSTOR 1884513 Arrow K J Chenery H B Minhas B S Solow R M 1961 Capital labor substitution and economic efficiency Review of Economics and Statistics 43 3 225 250 doi 10 2307 1927286 JSTOR 1927286 Jorgensen Dale W 2000 Econometrics vol 1 Econometric Modelling of Producer Behavior Cambridge MA MIT Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 262 10082 3 Klump R McAdam P Willman A 2007 Factor Substitution and Factor Augmenting Technical Progress in the US A Normalized Supply Side System Approach Review of Economics and Statistics 89 1 183 192 doi 10 1162 rest 89 1 183 hdl 10419 152801 S2CID 57570638 de La Grandville Olivier 2016 Economic Growth A Unified Approach Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781316335703 ISBN 9781316335703 http www econ ucsb edu tedb Courses GraduateTheoryUCSB elasticity 20of 20substitutionrevised tex pdf bare URL PDF Uzawa H 1962 Production functions with constant elasticities of substitution Review of Economic Studies 29 4 291 299 doi 10 2307 2296305 JSTOR 2296305 Armington P S 1969 A theory of demand for products distinguished by place of production IMF Staff Papers 16 1 159 178 doi 10 2307 3866403 JSTOR 3866403 Varian Hal 1992 Microeconomic Analysis Third ed New York Norton ISBN 0 393 95735 7 Dixit Avinash Stiglitz Joseph 1977 Monopolistic Competition and Optimum Product Diversity American Economic Review 67 3 297 308 JSTOR 1831401 Baltas George 2001 Utility Consistent Brand Demand Systems with Endogenous Category Consumption Principles and Marketing Applications Decision Sciences 32 3 399 421 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5915 2001 tb00965 x External links editAnatomy of CES Type Production Functions in 3D Closed form solution for a firm with an N dimensional CES technology Monopolists revenue function Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constant elasticity of substitution amp oldid 1215038670, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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