Convergence of Bayesian learning to general equilibrium in mis-specified models. (Q1867783)

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Convergence of Bayesian learning to general equilibrium in mis-specified models.
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    Convergence of Bayesian learning to general equilibrium in mis-specified models. (English)
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    2 April 2003
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    A central unanswered question in the economic theory is that of price formation in a disequilibrium. This paper pays the groundwork for a model that has been suggested as an answer to this question in, particularly, \textit{K. J. Arrow} [Toward a theory of price adjustment, in: M. Abramovitz, et al. (Ed.), The Allocation of Economic Resources, Stanford University Press, Stanford (1959)], \textit{F. M. Fisher} [Disequilibrium Foundations of Equilibrium Economics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1983; Zbl 0544.90001)] and \textit{F. Hahn} [Information dynamics and equilibrium, in: F. Hahn (Ed), The Economics of Missing Markets, Information, and Games, Clarendon Press, Oxford (1989; Zbl 0699.90002)]. The authors consider sellers that monopolistically compete in prices but have incomplete information about the structure of the market they face. They entertain a simple demand conjecture in which sales are perceived to depend on the own price only, and set prices to maximize the expected profits. Prior beliefs on the parameters of conjectured demand are updated into posterior beliefs upon each observation of sales at the proposed prices, using Bayes' rule. The rational learning process, thus constructed, drives the prices dynamics of the model. Its properties are analyzed. Moreover, a sufficient condition is provided, relating objectively possible events and subjective beliefs, under which the price process is globally stable on a conjectural equilibrium for almost all objectively possible developments of history.
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    disequilibrium theory
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    oligopolistic price setting
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    Bayesian learning
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    conjectural equilibrium
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    global stability
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