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Existence, regularity, and constrained suboptimality of competitive allocations when the asset market is incomplete
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1986
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EconomicsFinancial EconomicsAsset PricingGeneral Equilibrium TheoryEquilibrium ProblemMarket EquilibriumCompetitive AllocationsMarket MechanismBusinessEconomic AnalysisAsset AllocationAsset MarketPareto ImprovementIntertemporal Portfolio ChoiceMarket Equilibrium ComputationMarket DesignFinanceCompetitive Equilibria
Let assets be denominated in an a priori specified numeraire. Whether or not the asset is complete, a competitive equilibrium exists as long as arbitrage is possible when assets are free. Generically, the set of competitive equilibria is finite, and the equilibrium prices and allocations in the commodity spot markets are uniquely determined by the asset allocation is generically constrained suboptimal: there exists an arbitrarily small reallocation of the existing assets, which leads to a Pareto improvement in welfare when prices and allocations in the commodity spot markets adjust to maintain equilibrium. (This abstract was borrowed from another version of this item.)