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Linear utility

In economics and consumer theory, a linear utility function is a function of the form:

or, in vector form:

where:

  • is the number of different goods in the economy.
  • is a vector of size that represents a bundle. The element represents the amount of good in the bundle.
  • is a vector of size that represents the subjective preferences of the consumer. The element represents the relative value that the consumer assigns to good . If , this means that the consumer thinks that product is totally worthless. The higher is, the more valuable a unit of this product is for the consumer.

A consumer with a linear utility function has the following properties:

  • The preferences are strictly monotone: having a larger quantity of even a single good strictly increases the utility.
  • The preferences are weakly convex, but not strictly convex: a mix of two equivalent bundles is equivalent to the original bundles, but not better than it.
  • The marginal rate of substitution of all goods is constant. For every two goods :
.
  • The indifference curves are straight lines (when there are two goods) or hyperplanes (when there are more goods).
  • Each demand curve (demand as a function of price) is a step function: the consumer wants to buy zero units of a good whose utility/price ratio is below the maximum, and wants to buy as many units as possible of a good whose utility/price ratio is maximum.
  • The consumer regards the goods as perfect substitute goods.

Economy with linear utilities Edit

Define a linear economy as an exchange economy in which all agents have linear utility functions. A linear economy has several properties.

Assume that each agent   has an initial endowment  . This is a vector of size   in which the element   represents the amount of good   that is initially owned by agent  . Then, the initial utility of this agent is  .

Suppose that the market prices are represented by a vector   - a vector of size   in which the element  is the price of good  . Then, the budget of agent   is  . While this price vector is in effect, the agent can afford all and only the bundles   that satisfy the budget constraint:  .

Competitive equilibrium Edit

A competitive equilibrium is a price vector and an allocation in which the demands of all agents are satisfied (the demand of each good equals its supply). In a linear economy, it consists of a price vector   and an allocation  , giving each agent a bundle   such that:

  •   (the total amount of all goods is the same as in the initial allocation; no goods are produced or destroyed).
  • For every agent  , its allocation   maximizes the utility of the agent,  , subject to the budget constraint  .

In equilibrium, each agent holds only goods for which his utility/price ratio is weakly maximal. I.e, if agent   holds good   in equilibrium, then for every other good  :

 

(otherwise, the agent would want to exchange some quantity of good   with good  , thus breaking the equilibrium).

Without loss of generality, it is possible to assume that every good is desired by at least one agent (otherwise, this good can be ignored for all practical purposes). Under this assumption, an equilibrium price of a good must be strictly positive (otherwise the demand would be infinite).

Existence of competitive equilibrium Edit

David Gale[1] proved necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of a competitive equilibrium in a linear economy. He also proved several other properties of linear economies.

A set   of agents is called self-sufficient if all members of   assign a positive value only for goods that are owned exclusively by members of   (in other words, they assign value   to any product   which is owned by members outside  ). The set   is called super-self-sufficient if someone in   owns a good which is not valued by any member of   (including himself). Gale's existence theorem says that:

A linear economy has a competitive equilibrium if and only if no set of agents is super-self-sufficient.

Proof of "only if" direction: Suppose the economy is in equilibrium with price   and allocation  . Suppose   is a self-sufficient set of agents. Then, all members of   trade only with each other, because the goods owned by other agents are worthless for them. Hence, the equilibrium allocation satisfies:

 .

Every equilibrium allocation is Pareto efficient. This means that, in the equilibrium allocation  , every good is held only by an agent which assigns positive value to that good. By the equality just mentioned, for each good  , the total amount of   held by members of   in the equilibrium allocation   equals the total amount of   held by members of   in the initial allocation  . Hence, in the initial allocation  , every good is held by a member of  , only if it is valuable to one or more members of  . Hence,   is not super-self-sufficient.

Competitive equilibrium with equal incomes Edit

Competitive equilibrium with equal incomes (CEEI) is a special kind of competitive equilibrium, in which the budget of all agents is the same. I.e, for every two agents   and  :

 

The CEEI allocation is important because it is guaranteed to be envy-free:[2] the bundle   gives agent   a maximum utility among of all the bundles with the same price, so in particular it gives him at least as much utility as the bundle  .

One way to achieve a CEEI is to give all agents the same initial endowment, i.e., for every   and  :

 

(if there are   agents then every agent receives exactly   of the quantity of every good). In such an allocation, no subsets of agents are self-sufficient. Hence, as a corollary of Gale's theorem:

In a linear economy, a CEEI always exists.

Examples Edit

In all examples below, there are two agents - Alice and George, and two goods - apples (x) and guavas (y).

A. Unique equilibrium: the utility functions are:

 ,
 .

The total endowment is  . Without loss of generality, we can normalize the price vector such that  . What values can   have in CE? If  , then both agents want to give all their y for x; if  , then both agents want to give all their x for y; hence, in CE  . If  , then Alice is indifferent between x and y, while George wants only y. Similarly, if  , then George is indifferent while Alice wants only x. If  , then Alice wants only x while George wants only y. Hence, the CE allocation must be [(6,0);(0,6)]. The price vector depends on the initial allocation. E.g., if the initial allocation is equal, [(3,3);(3,3)], then both agents have the same budget in CE, so  . This CE is essentially unique: the price vector may be multiplied by a constant factor, but the CE equilibrium will not change.

B. No equilibrium: Suppose Alice holds apples and guavas but wants only apples. George holds only guavas but wants both apples and guavas. The set {Alice} is self-sufficient, because Alice thinks that all goods held by George are worthless. Moreover, the set {Alice} is super-self-sufficient, because Alice holds guavas which are worthless to her. Indeed, a competitive equilibrium does not exist: regardless of the price, Alice would like to give all her guavas for apples, but George has no apples so her demand will remain unfulfilled.

C. Many equilibria: Suppose there are two goods and two agents, both agents assign the same value to both goods (e.g. for both of them,  ). Then, in equilibrium, the agents may exchange some apples for an equal number of guavas, and the result will still be an equilibrium. For example, if there is an equilibrium in which Alice holds 4 apples and 2 guavas and George holds 5 apples and 3 guavas, then the situation in which Alice holds 5 apples and 1 guava and George 4 apples and 4 guavas is also an equilibrium.

But, in both these equilibria, the total utilities of both agents are the same: Alice has utility 6 in both equilibria, and George has utility 8 in both equilibria. This is not a coincidence, as shown in the following section.

Uniqueness of utilities in competitive equilibrium Edit

Gale[1] proved that:

In a linear economy, all agents are indifferent between all the equilibria.

Proof. The proof is by induction on the number of traders. When there is only a single trader, the claim is obvious. Suppose there are two or more traders and consider two equilibria: equilibrium X with price vector   and allocation  , and equilibrium Y with price vector   and allocation  . There are two cases to consider:

a. The price vectors are the same up to multiplicative constant:   for some constant  . This means that in both equilibria, all agents have exactly the same budget set (they can afford exactly the same bundles). In equilibrium, the utility of every agent is the maximum utility of a bundle in the budget set; if the budget set is the same, then so is the maximum utility in that set.

b. The price vectors are not proportional. This means that the price of some goods changed more than others. Define the highest price-rise as:

 

and define the highest price-rise goods as those good/s that experienced the maximum price change (this must be a proper subset of all goods since the price-vectors are not proportional):

 

and define the highest price-rise holders as those trader/s that hold one or more of those maximum-price-change-goods in Equilibrium Y:

 

In equilibrium, agents hold only goods whose utility/price ratio is weakly maximal. So for all agents in  , the utility/price ratio of all goods in   is weakly maximal under the price vector  . Since the goods in   experienced the highest price-rise, when the price vector is   their utility/price ratio is strongly maximal. Hence, in Equilibrium X, all agents in   hold only goods from  . In equilibrium X, someone must hold goods that are not in  ; hence,   must be a proper subset of the agents.

So in equilibrium X, the  -agents hold only  -goods, and in equilibrium Y,  -agents hold all the  -goods. This allows us to do some budget calculations:

On one hand, in equilibrium X with price  , the  -agents spend all their budget on  -goods, so:

 

(where   is the total initial endowment from good  ).

On the other hand, in equilibrium Y with price  , the  -agents can afford all the  -goods, so:

 

Combining these equations leads to the conclusion that, in both equilibria, the  -agents only trade with each other:

 .

Hence, the agents not in   also only trade with each other. This means that equilibrium X is composed of two equilibria: one that involves only  -agents and  -goods, and the other that involves only non- -agents and non- -goods. The same is true for agent Y. Since   is a proper subset of the agents, the induction assumption can be invoked and the theorem is proved.

Calculating competitive equilibrium Edit

Eaves[3] presented an algorithm for finding a competitive equilibrium in a finite number of steps, when such an equilibrium exists.

Related concepts Edit

Linear utilities functions are a small subset of Quasilinear utility functions.

Goods with linear utilities are a special case of substitute goods.

Suppose the set of goods is not finite but continuous. E.g., the commodity is a heterogeneous resource, such as land. Then, the utility functions are not functions of a finite number of variables, but rather set functions defined on Borel subsets of the land. The natural generalization of a linear utility function to that model is an additive set function. This is the common case in the theory of fair cake-cutting. An extension of Gale's result to this setting is given by Weller's theorem.

Under certain conditions, an ordinal preference relation can be represented by a linear and continuous utility function.[4]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Gale, David (1976). "The linear exchange model". Journal of Mathematical Economics. 3 (2): 205–209. doi:10.1016/0304-4068(76)90029-x.
  2. ^ Varian, H. R. (1974). "Equity, envy, and efficiency" (PDF). Journal of Economic Theory. 9: 63–91. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(74)90075-1. hdl:1721.1/63490.
  3. ^ a b Eaves, B.Curtis (1976). "A finite algorithm for the linear exchange model" (PDF). Journal of Mathematical Economics. 3 (2): 197–203. doi:10.1016/0304-4068(76)90028-8.
  4. ^ a b Candeal-Haro, Juan Carlos; Induráin-Eraso, Esteban (1995). "A note on linear utility". Economic Theory. 6 (3): 519. doi:10.1007/bf01211791.
  5. ^ Jaffray, Jean-Yves (1989). "Linear utility theory for belief functions". Operations Research Letters. 8 (2): 107–112. doi:10.1016/0167-6377(89)90010-2.

linear, utility, economics, consumer, theory, linear, utility, function, function, form, displaystyle, dots, dots, vector, form, displaystyle, overrightarrow, overrightarrow, cdot, overrightarrow, where, displaystyle, number, different, goods, economy, display. In economics and consumer theory a linear utility function is a function of the form u x 1 x 2 x m w 1 x 1 w 2 x 2 w m x m displaystyle u x 1 x 2 dots x m w 1 x 1 w 2 x 2 dots w m x m dd or in vector form u x w x displaystyle u overrightarrow x overrightarrow w cdot overrightarrow x dd where m displaystyle m is the number of different goods in the economy x displaystyle overrightarrow x is a vector of size m displaystyle m that represents a bundle The element x i displaystyle x i represents the amount of good i displaystyle i in the bundle w displaystyle overrightarrow w is a vector of size m displaystyle m that represents the subjective preferences of the consumer The element w i displaystyle w i represents the relative value that the consumer assigns to good i displaystyle i If w i 0 displaystyle w i 0 this means that the consumer thinks that product i displaystyle i is totally worthless The higher w i displaystyle w i is the more valuable a unit of this product is for the consumer A consumer with a linear utility function has the following properties The preferences are strictly monotone having a larger quantity of even a single good strictly increases the utility The preferences are weakly convex but not strictly convex a mix of two equivalent bundles is equivalent to the original bundles but not better than it The marginal rate of substitution of all goods is constant For every two goods i j displaystyle i j M R S i j w i w j displaystyle MRS i j w i w j dd The indifference curves are straight lines when there are two goods or hyperplanes when there are more goods Each demand curve demand as a function of price is a step function the consumer wants to buy zero units of a good whose utility price ratio is below the maximum and wants to buy as many units as possible of a good whose utility price ratio is maximum The consumer regards the goods as perfect substitute goods Contents 1 Economy with linear utilities 2 Competitive equilibrium 3 Existence of competitive equilibrium 4 Competitive equilibrium with equal incomes 4 1 Examples 5 Uniqueness of utilities in competitive equilibrium 6 Calculating competitive equilibrium 7 Related concepts 8 ReferencesEconomy with linear utilities EditDefine a linear economy as an exchange economy in which all agents have linear utility functions A linear economy has several properties Assume that each agent A displaystyle A nbsp has an initial endowment e A displaystyle overrightarrow e A nbsp This is a vector of size m displaystyle m nbsp in which the element e A i displaystyle e A i nbsp represents the amount of good i displaystyle i nbsp that is initially owned by agent A displaystyle A nbsp Then the initial utility of this agent is w A e A displaystyle overrightarrow w A cdot overrightarrow e A nbsp Suppose that the market prices are represented by a vector p displaystyle overrightarrow p nbsp a vector of size m displaystyle m nbsp in which the elementp i displaystyle p i nbsp is the price of good i displaystyle i nbsp Then the budget of agent A displaystyle A nbsp is p e A displaystyle overrightarrow p cdot overrightarrow e A nbsp While this price vector is in effect the agent can afford all and only the bundles x displaystyle overrightarrow x nbsp that satisfy the budget constraint p x p e A displaystyle overrightarrow p cdot overrightarrow x leq overrightarrow p cdot overrightarrow e A nbsp Competitive equilibrium EditA competitive equilibrium is a price vector and an allocation in which the demands of all agents are satisfied the demand of each good equals its supply In a linear economy it consists of a price vector p displaystyle overrightarrow p nbsp and an allocation X displaystyle X nbsp giving each agent a bundle x A displaystyle overrightarrow x A nbsp such that A x A A e A displaystyle sum A overrightarrow x A sum A overrightarrow e A nbsp the total amount of all goods is the same as in the initial allocation no goods are produced or destroyed For every agent A displaystyle A nbsp its allocation x A displaystyle overrightarrow x A nbsp maximizes the utility of the agent w A x displaystyle overrightarrow w A cdot overrightarrow x nbsp subject to the budget constraint p x p e A displaystyle overrightarrow p cdot overrightarrow x leq overrightarrow p cdot overrightarrow e A nbsp In equilibrium each agent holds only goods for which his utility price ratio is weakly maximal I e if agent A displaystyle A nbsp holds good i displaystyle i nbsp in equilibrium then for every other good j displaystyle j nbsp w A i p i w A j p j displaystyle w A i p i geq w A j p j nbsp dd otherwise the agent would want to exchange some quantity of good i displaystyle i nbsp with good j displaystyle j nbsp thus breaking the equilibrium Without loss of generality it is possible to assume that every good is desired by at least one agent otherwise this good can be ignored for all practical purposes Under this assumption an equilibrium price of a good must be strictly positive otherwise the demand would be infinite Existence of competitive equilibrium EditDavid Gale 1 proved necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of a competitive equilibrium in a linear economy He also proved several other properties of linear economies A set S displaystyle S nbsp of agents is called self sufficient if all members of S displaystyle S nbsp assign a positive value only for goods that are owned exclusively by members of S displaystyle S nbsp in other words they assign value w i 0 displaystyle w i 0 nbsp to any product i displaystyle i nbsp which is owned by members outside S displaystyle S nbsp The set S displaystyle S nbsp is called super self sufficient if someone in S displaystyle S nbsp owns a good which is not valued by any member of S displaystyle S nbsp including himself Gale s existence theorem says that A linear economy has a competitive equilibrium if and only if no set of agents is super self sufficient dd Proof of only if direction Suppose the economy is in equilibrium with price p displaystyle overrightarrow p nbsp and allocation x displaystyle x nbsp Suppose S displaystyle S nbsp is a self sufficient set of agents Then all members of S displaystyle S nbsp trade only with each other because the goods owned by other agents are worthless for them Hence the equilibrium allocation satisfies A S x A A S e A displaystyle sum A in S overrightarrow x A sum A in S overrightarrow e A nbsp dd Every equilibrium allocation is Pareto efficient This means that in the equilibrium allocation x displaystyle x nbsp every good is held only by an agent which assigns positive value to that good By the equality just mentioned for each good i displaystyle i nbsp the total amount of i displaystyle i nbsp held by members of S displaystyle S nbsp in the equilibrium allocation x displaystyle x nbsp equals the total amount of i displaystyle i nbsp held by members of S displaystyle S nbsp in the initial allocation e displaystyle e nbsp Hence in the initial allocation e displaystyle e nbsp every good is held by a member of S displaystyle S nbsp only if it is valuable to one or more members of S displaystyle S nbsp Hence S displaystyle S nbsp is not super self sufficient Competitive equilibrium with equal incomes EditCompetitive equilibrium with equal incomes CEEI is a special kind of competitive equilibrium in which the budget of all agents is the same I e for every two agents A displaystyle A nbsp and B displaystyle B nbsp p x A p x B displaystyle overrightarrow p cdot overrightarrow x A overrightarrow p cdot overrightarrow x B nbsp dd The CEEI allocation is important because it is guaranteed to be envy free 2 the bundle x A displaystyle x A nbsp gives agent A displaystyle A nbsp a maximum utility among of all the bundles with the same price so in particular it gives him at least as much utility as the bundle x B displaystyle x B nbsp One way to achieve a CEEI is to give all agents the same initial endowment i e for every A displaystyle A nbsp and B displaystyle B nbsp e A e B displaystyle overrightarrow e A overrightarrow e B nbsp dd if there are n displaystyle n nbsp agents then every agent receives exactly 1 n displaystyle 1 n nbsp of the quantity of every good In such an allocation no subsets of agents are self sufficient Hence as a corollary of Gale s theorem In a linear economy a CEEI always exists dd Examples Edit In all examples below there are two agents Alice and George and two goods apples x and guavas y A Unique equilibrium the utility functions are u A x y 3 x 2 y displaystyle u A x y 3x 2y nbsp u G x y 2 x 3 y displaystyle u G x y 2x 3y nbsp The total endowment is T 6 6 displaystyle T 6 6 nbsp Without loss of generality we can normalize the price vector such that P x 1 displaystyle P x 1 nbsp What values can P y displaystyle P y nbsp have in CE If P y gt 3 2 displaystyle P y gt 3 2 nbsp then both agents want to give all their y for x if P y lt 2 3 displaystyle P y lt 2 3 nbsp then both agents want to give all their x for y hence in CE 2 3 P y 3 2 displaystyle 2 3 leq P y leq 3 2 nbsp If P y 2 3 displaystyle P y 2 3 nbsp then Alice is indifferent between x and y while George wants only y Similarly if P y 3 2 displaystyle P y 3 2 nbsp then George is indifferent while Alice wants only x If 2 3 lt P y lt 3 2 displaystyle 2 3 lt P y lt 3 2 nbsp then Alice wants only x while George wants only y Hence the CE allocation must be 6 0 0 6 The price vector depends on the initial allocation E g if the initial allocation is equal 3 3 3 3 then both agents have the same budget in CE so P y P x 1 displaystyle P y P x 1 nbsp This CE is essentially unique the price vector may be multiplied by a constant factor but the CE equilibrium will not change B No equilibrium Suppose Alice holds apples and guavas but wants only apples George holds only guavas but wants both apples and guavas The set Alice is self sufficient because Alice thinks that all goods held by George are worthless Moreover the set Alice is super self sufficient because Alice holds guavas which are worthless to her Indeed a competitive equilibrium does not exist regardless of the price Alice would like to give all her guavas for apples but George has no apples so her demand will remain unfulfilled C Many equilibria Suppose there are two goods and two agents both agents assign the same value to both goods e g for both of them w a p p l e s w g u a v a s 1 displaystyle w apples w guavas 1 nbsp Then in equilibrium the agents may exchange some apples for an equal number of guavas and the result will still be an equilibrium For example if there is an equilibrium in which Alice holds 4 apples and 2 guavas and George holds 5 apples and 3 guavas then the situation in which Alice holds 5 apples and 1 guava and George 4 apples and 4 guavas is also an equilibrium But in both these equilibria the total utilities of both agents are the same Alice has utility 6 in both equilibria and George has utility 8 in both equilibria This is not a coincidence as shown in the following section Uniqueness of utilities in competitive equilibrium EditGale 1 proved that In a linear economy all agents are indifferent between all the equilibria dd Proof The proof is by induction on the number of traders When there is only a single trader the claim is obvious Suppose there are two or more traders and consider two equilibria equilibrium X with price vector p displaystyle overrightarrow p nbsp and allocation x displaystyle x nbsp and equilibrium Y with price vector q displaystyle overrightarrow q nbsp and allocation y displaystyle y nbsp There are two cases to consider a The price vectors are the same up to multiplicative constant p C q displaystyle overrightarrow p C cdot overrightarrow q nbsp for some constant C displaystyle C nbsp This means that in both equilibria all agents have exactly the same budget set they can afford exactly the same bundles In equilibrium the utility of every agent is the maximum utility of a bundle in the budget set if the budget set is the same then so is the maximum utility in that set b The price vectors are not proportional This means that the price of some goods changed more than others Define the highest price rise as M max i q i p i displaystyle M max i q i p i nbsp dd and define the highest price rise goods as those good s that experienced the maximum price change this must be a proper subset of all goods since the price vectors are not proportional H i q i p i M displaystyle H i q i p i M nbsp dd and define the highest price rise holders as those trader s that hold one or more of those maximum price change goods in Equilibrium Y S A y A i gt 0 for some i H displaystyle S A y A i gt 0 text for some i in H nbsp dd In equilibrium agents hold only goods whose utility price ratio is weakly maximal So for all agents in S displaystyle S nbsp the utility price ratio of all goods in H displaystyle H nbsp is weakly maximal under the price vector q displaystyle overrightarrow q nbsp Since the goods in H displaystyle H nbsp experienced the highest price rise when the price vector is p displaystyle overrightarrow p nbsp their utility price ratio is strongly maximal Hence in Equilibrium X all agents in S displaystyle S nbsp hold only goods from H displaystyle H nbsp In equilibrium X someone must hold goods that are not in H displaystyle H nbsp hence S displaystyle S nbsp must be a proper subset of the agents So in equilibrium X the S displaystyle S nbsp agents hold only H displaystyle H nbsp goods and in equilibrium Y S displaystyle S nbsp agents hold all the H displaystyle H nbsp goods This allows us to do some budget calculations On one hand in equilibrium X with price p displaystyle overrightarrow p nbsp the S displaystyle S nbsp agents spend all their budget on H displaystyle H nbsp goods so p A S e A i H p i e i displaystyle overrightarrow p cdot sum A in S overrightarrow e A leq sum i in H p i cdot overrightarrow e i nbsp dd where e i displaystyle overrightarrow e i nbsp is the total initial endowment from good i displaystyle i nbsp On the other hand in equilibrium Y with price q displaystyle overrightarrow q nbsp the S displaystyle S nbsp agents can afford all the H displaystyle H nbsp goods so q A S e A i H q i e i displaystyle overrightarrow q cdot sum A in S overrightarrow e A geq sum i in H q i cdot overrightarrow e i nbsp dd Combining these equations leads to the conclusion that in both equilibria the S displaystyle S nbsp agents only trade with each other A S y A A S x A A S e A displaystyle sum A in S y A sum A in S x A sum A in S e A nbsp dd Hence the agents not in S displaystyle S nbsp also only trade with each other This means that equilibrium X is composed of two equilibria one that involves only S displaystyle S nbsp agents and H displaystyle H nbsp goods and the other that involves only non S displaystyle S nbsp agents and non H displaystyle H nbsp goods The same is true for agent Y Since S displaystyle S nbsp is a proper subset of the agents the induction assumption can be invoked and the theorem is proved Calculating competitive equilibrium EditEaves 3 presented an algorithm for finding a competitive equilibrium in a finite number of steps when such an equilibrium exists Related concepts EditLinear utilities functions are a small subset of Quasilinear utility functions Goods with linear utilities are a special case of substitute goods Suppose the set of goods is not finite but continuous E g the commodity is a heterogeneous resource such as land Then the utility functions are not functions of a finite number of variables but rather set functions defined on Borel subsets of the land The natural generalization of a linear utility function to that model is an additive set function This is the common case in the theory of fair cake cutting An extension of Gale s result to this setting is given by Weller s theorem Under certain conditions an ordinal preference relation can be represented by a linear and continuous utility function 4 References Edit a b c Gale David 1976 The linear exchange model Journal of Mathematical Economics 3 2 205 209 doi 10 1016 0304 4068 76 90029 x Varian H R 1974 Equity envy and efficiency PDF Journal of Economic Theory 9 63 91 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 74 90075 1 hdl 1721 1 63490 a b Eaves B Curtis 1976 A finite algorithm for the linear exchange model PDF Journal of Mathematical Economics 3 2 197 203 doi 10 1016 0304 4068 76 90028 8 a b Candeal Haro Juan Carlos Indurain Eraso Esteban 1995 A note on linear utility Economic Theory 6 3 519 doi 10 1007 bf01211791 Jaffray Jean Yves 1989 Linear utility theory for belief functions Operations Research Letters 8 2 107 112 doi 10 1016 0167 6377 89 90010 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Linear utility amp oldid 1021892906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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