The optimal consumption function in a Brownian model of accumulation. Part A: The consumption function as solution of a boundary value problem (Q5941454)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1635647
Language Label Description Also known as
English
The optimal consumption function in a Brownian model of accumulation. Part A: The consumption function as solution of a boundary value problem
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1635647

    Statements

    The optimal consumption function in a Brownian model of accumulation. Part A: The consumption function as solution of a boundary value problem (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    20 August 2001
    0 references
    We consider a neo-classical model of optimal economic growth with c.r.r.a. utility in which the traditional deterministic trends representing population growth, technological progress, depreciation and impatience are replaced by Brownian motions with drift. When transformed to `intensive' units, this is equivalent to a stochastic model of optimal saving with diminishing returns to capital. For the intensive model, we give sufficient conditions for optimality of a consumption plan (open-loop control) comprising a finite welfare condition, a martingale condition for shadow prices and a transversality condition as \(t\rightarrow \infty\). We then replace these by conditions for optimality of a plan generated by a consumption function (closed-loop control), i.e. a function \(H(z)\) expressing log-consumption as a time-invariant, deterministic function of log-capital \(z.\) Making use of the exponential martingale formula we replace the martingale condition by a nonlinear, non-autonomous second-order o.d.e. which an optimal consumption function must satisfy; this has the form \(H''(z)=F[H'(z), \theta(z), z]\), where \(\theta(z)=\exp{H(z)-z}\). Economic considerations suggest certain limiting values which \(H'(z)\) and \(\theta(z)\) should satisfy as \(z\rightarrow \pm \infty\), thus defining a two-point boundary value problem (b.v.p.) -- or rather, a family of problems, depending on the values of parameters. We prove two theorems showing that a consumption function which solves the appropriate b.v.p. generates an optimal plan. Proofs that a unique solution of each b.v.p. exists are given in a separate paper (Part B).
    0 references
    0 references
    optimal economic growth
    0 references
    optimal saving
    0 references
    consumption plan
    0 references
    exponential martingale formula
    0 references
    two-point boundary value problem
    0 references