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An Economy with Personal Currency: Theory and Evidence
Martin Angerer, Jürgen Huber, Martin Shubik and Shyam Sunder
Yale School of Management Faculty Workshop, October 1, 2008
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Background of Theory
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BEYOND GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM
• Work brings together two strands: Strategic Market Games (M.S.) and Minimal Intelligence Agents (S.S.)
• General Equilibrium is the right abstraction to study efficient prices.
• But it is inadequate for dynamics.
• Strategic Market games offer a fully defined process model of trade.
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Arrow’s Concern
• Arrow worried (1972) that process models would proliferate too many special cases.
• They do, but there is a solution: Minimal Institutions and bounding behavior.
• 3 trading mechanisms—natural lower bounds.
• 2 types of agents—von Neumann players and minimal intelligence players (upper and lower bounds).
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An Overview• Background paper briefly: Three Minimal Market Institutions• Is personal currency/credit issued by individuals sufficient to operate
an economy efficiently with no outside or government money?• Sahi-Yao (1991) and Sorin (1995)’s construction of a strategic
market game proves that it is possible• We report on a laboratory experiment in which each agent issues
IOUs, and a costless efficient clearinghouse adjusts the exchange rates so markets always clear
• Result: when information system and clearinghouse preclude moral hazard, information asymmetry or need for trust, such economy operates efficiently without government money
• Result: When agents have opportunity to default on their delivery promises, a high enough penalty is needed for efficiency
• It may be better to look for explanations for the prevalence of government money either in the abovementioned frictions, or in our unwillingness to experiment with innovation
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Three Minimal Market Institutions: Theory and Experimental Evidence
Jürgen Huber, Martin Shubik, and Shyam Sunder
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Market setup (in all three settings)
• Two goods (A and B) traded for money• Each trader endowed with either good A or B,
and money• Multiplicative earnings function:
Earnings = √(A . B) + net money• Money carried over from period to period
(except in double auction)
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Three Minimal Market Institutions
1. The sell-all model (strategy set dimension 1: all commodity endowment sold; each trader bids an amount of money to buy each commodity)
2. The buy-sell model (strategy set dimension 2: each trader offers the quantity of the endowed good and bids money for the other good)
3. The simultaneous double auction model (strategy set dimension 4: each trader offers to sell each good and bids to buy each good)
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Endowments(Good A, Good B, Money)
• (200, 0, 6000) or (0, 200, 6000) in sell-all
• (200, 0, 4000) or (0, 200, 4000) in buy-sell
• 20, 0 4000) or (0, 20, 4000) in double-auction
• 10 traders in each market (5+5)
• One buy-sell market with 20 traders (10+10)
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Initial Endowment
CGE
Quantity/
Price
NCE (5+5)
Quantity/
Price
A B A B A B
Sell All 200 0 100/20 100/ 20 110/20.1 90/
20.1
Buy Sell 200 0 100/20 100/ 20 122/20 78/ 20
Double Auction 20 0 10/ 100 10/ 100 11/ 100 9 100
General and Non-Cooperative Equilibria
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Comparison of markets I
Avg. Earnings as percentage of maximum
86%
88%
90%
92%
94%
96%
98%
100%
Sell all Buy sell Double auction
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Comparison of markets II
Standard deviation of final wealth
0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
Sell all Buy sell Double auction
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Comparison of markets III'Symmetry' of Investment in different Treatments
0.00
0.20
0.40
0.60
0.80
1.00
Sell All Buy-Sell Double Auction
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Conclusions from the Background Paper
• The non-cooperative and general competitive equilibrium models provide a reasonable anchor to locate the observed outcomes of the three market mechanisms
• Unlike well known results from many partial equilibrium double auctions, prices and allocations in our double auctions reveal significant and persistent deviations from CGE predictions
• The market form has a significant influence on allocative efficiency and the return distribution: the outcome paths from the three market mechanisms exhibit significant differences among them.
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A Practical Example
• A few days ago the New York Stock Exchange provided a good example of a primarily credit-driven market with exogenous uncertainty
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The Current Paper:Need for Government Money?
• Is outside or government money necessary to operate an economy efficiently?
• Proponents of alternatives to government money suggest that if all individuals and institutions could issue debt as means of payment, market will sort out the risk and reputations of accepting such paper;
• For example, Black (1970); rates of interest in the City of London for “prime” and “lesser” names, discounting of bills issued by hundreds of banks in the free banking era of the U.S.
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Summary Results
• Outside or government money is not needed if there is perfect clearing and no default
• Result is valid under conditions which are clearly counterfactual (like M&M on neutrality of cost of capital with respect to leverage)
• Logical possibility of such an economy does not mean that an economy will actually function smoothly with private money under exogenous uncertainty, and dispersed and imperfect information
• Process dynamics, trust and evaluation are core issues in functioning of a financial system and are absent in Black or M&M equilibrium models
• Presence of moral hazard requires sufficiently high penalties on defaults for efficient functioning
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Equilibrium
• Sorin establishes the existence of an active non-cooperative equilibrium set of prices and exchange rates which converges to a competitive equilibrium as the number of traders increases
• The clearinghouse calculates prices and exchange rates by balancing the expenditures and revenues for all
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Sorin (1995) Model
., Iibtqp iii
Consider a set A of n agents and set I of m goods. There are m posts, one for each good where each agent α bids quantity of money bi α for good i and offers a quantity of goods qi α of good i for sale. t(α) is the exchange rate for currency of agent α.The equations defining prices in terms of the unit of account t(1) are:
And the budget balance gives
., Apqbt iiii
i
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Acceptability of Government Money
• No bank (much less individual) can match visibility of government• Government’s reputation is known to all• Government is better able to enforce the rules of the game• Government money expedites and simplifies taxation as an
unintended consequence• Hands additional policy options to government (e.g., financing of
wars and control of economy)• Acceptability of IOUs requires trust; trust in government may be
higher in most instances than in even big banks (individuals have little chance)
• Everyone-a-banker game could be seen as a simplified version of governments issuing their own money in international exchanges to settle their payments
• Treatment 1: No frictional and informational issues: is the logical possibility of private money economy also a behavioral possibility
• Treatment 2: Introduce moral hazard of default, and vary penalties
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Laboratory Model• Computer implements the sell-all model• Uses the quantities endowed and money bid for each good to
calculate a market clearing price for each good and exchange rates for each trader’s money
• Computer acts as a clearing house as well as a perfect reputation enforcement mechanism (no reneging, no bankruptcy in Treatment 1)
• Examines every-one-a-banker model in absence of uncertainty-related explanations for government money
• Yields high efficiencies• Key theoretical claim that government money is not needed for
efficiency exchanges is supported experimentally under these circumstances– Ideal contract enforcement, credit evaluation, and clearing
arrangements
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Experiment
• Two goods• Two types of traders with endowment (200,0) and (0,
200)• Upper limit on IOUs issued: 6,000• Each agent submits bids for each good each period
subject to the sum of the two bids < 6,000• Computer calculates the prices of two goods in each
personal currency and allocates goods• Points earned = √(CA* CB)• CE: 2000 IOUs issued to get 100 units of each good• NCE: with 5+5 agents, bid 2214+1811 for the two goods
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Allocation of Money
• Fig. 1: Money spending balanced between goods A and B
• CGE predicts equal amount spent on two goods• With 5+5 subjects, non-cooperative equilibrium
predicts 55 percent of the money being spent to the owned good (22 percent more than the other good)
• Table 2 and Figure 1 data are weakly consistent with this prediction
• The results appear to be closer to CE than to non-cooperative equilibrium
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Figure 1
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Symmetry of Investment
• Smaller investment /larger investment in the two goods (0-1)
• Period-wise averages charted in Figure 2
• Symmetry ranges from .7 to .95, slightly higher than the average of .65 in sell-all treatment in HSS (2007) experiment
• Why?
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Figure 2
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Credit Limit Actually Used
• Varied widely over range 30-90 percent for individual periods of individual sessions and over 30-70 percent for individual periods averaged across sessions (Figure 3)
• Little stability
• Suggest continuum of non-cooperative equilibria
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Figure 3
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Link Between Money Printed (Percent of Credit Limit Used) and Earnings of Individuals
• No detectable link
• The economy offers no advantage to those who print more
• Also, no disadvantage to those who print less
• The clearinghouse mechanism adjusts the exchange rates among money issued by various players appropriately
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Figure 6: Points Earned Relative to Money Issued (Pooled Data for 5 sessions)
Points Earned Relative to Money Issued (Pooled Data)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00
Money Issued as Fraction of Maximum Possible
Po
ints
Ea
rne
d
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Allocative Efficiency
• Actual number of points earned/Maximum possible points (i.e. CGE)
• Observations in range 96.9 to 99.3 (Figure 4)• Most traders invested equal amounts in the two
goods• Session 1 has lowest symmetry and efficiency• With efficient decisions from the beginning, little
opportunity to “learn” over time• Low cross sectional dispersion of earnings
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Figure 4
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Figure 6 (MI sessions added)
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Goods Delivered under Option to Default
• When subjects were given the option of defaulting on their promise to deliver all units of the goods they were endowed with
• Actual delivery depended on default penalty
• Figure 5: Higher the default penalty, lower the rate of default
• Average delivery of 94, 60 and 26 percent with penalty of 5, 2.5 and 0 per unit
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Figure 5
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Efficiency under Option to Default
• Percent of maximum payoff actually earned (Figure 4, 6)
• As penalty drops, default rates rise, and efficiency drops (91, 71 and 67 respectively for penalty of 5, 2.5, and 0)
• Drop in efficiency does not seem to stop the default rates from rising
• Efficiency of MI economies falls sharply with higher penalty because such agents do not adjust their behavior to the level of penalties (Figure 6)
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Owned Good Bias Under Moral Hazard
• Theory predicts spending bias towards the “other” good with option to default
• Figure 7 and Table 2: data supports this prediction
• As the default penalty drops, subjects spend less on the owned good (8, 39 and 47 percent higher with penalty of 5, 2.5 and 0)
• Patterns stable over 20 periods of sessions• Symmetry measure reflects these biases (Figure
8)
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Figure 7: Period-wise Share of Money Bid for Owned-Goods in
Presence of Option to Default Black line: Share of spending on own good; Grey line: Spending on other good
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Figure 8
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Figure 9
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Figure 10
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Discussion and Extensions
• Modeling calls for ruthless simplification and abstraction from “details”
• Some subtle “details” may change the outcomes• They can be identified through successive
empirical observations of varying environments• As a starting point, we use a simple and
symmetrical environment to compare the empirical observations with theoretical predictions
• Significant deviations suggest revision of theory
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Formation of Reputation
• In Treatment 2 (with option to default), anonymity of default did not permit individuals to develop a reputation
• Whether reputations may provide an adequate mechanism to deter default and promote efficiency remains to be examined
• Design of future experiments with roles for reputation and expertise (e.g., non-delivery)– Social context problem in laboratory
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Conclusions
• Theoretical analyses of strategic market games indicate that economy can approximate competitive outcomes with individually issued credit lines alone (without fiat or commodity money)
• This model abstracts away from transactions costs, intertemporal credit, possibility of default (forcing all traders to have perfect reputation for trustworthiness) through a perfect clearinghouse mechanism for enforcement (no accounting problems of intertemporal trade)
• Treatment 1 in the lab economy mimics these conditions postulated in the model economy (and tells us little about what would happen when these conditions are violated)
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Conclusions
• What happens with strategic option to default? (Treatment 2)?
• High enough penalties are needed to ensure high delivery rates and efficiency
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Conclusions
• In the meantime, results reveal considerable power of market structure in producing efficient outcomes when reputation is not an issue
• Under such (perfect) circumstances, the claim that government money is not needed for efficient exchange is supported analytically as well as experientially
• Future experiments to be carried out under weaker conditions
• In the free banking era in the U.S., different bank notes sold at different discount rates depending on their individual reputation and acceptability
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Thank You