Lexicographic preferences
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Lexicographic preferences
Lexicographic preferences (lexicographical order based on the order of amount of each good) describe comparative preferences where an economic agent infinitely prefers one good (X) to another (Y). Thus if offered several bundles of goods, the agent will choose the bundle that offers the most X, no matter how much Y there is. Only when there is a tie of Xs between bundles will the agent start comparing Ys. For example, if for a given bundle (X;Y;Z) an agent orders her preferences according to the rule X>Y>Z, then the bundles {(5;3;3), (5;1;6), (3,5,3)} would be ordered, from most to least preferred:
ImplicationsIf all agents have the same lexicographic preferences, then general equilibrium cannot exist because agents won't sell to each other (as long as price of the less preferred is more than zero). But if the price of the less wanted is zero, then all agents want an infinite amount of the good. Equilibrium cannot be attained. LP can still exist with GE. For example,
LP preferences are the classical example of rational preferences that are not representable by a . The relation is not continuous because for a decreasing convergent sequence x_n \rightarrow 0 we have (x_n,0)>(0,1), while the limit (0,0) is smaller than (0,1).
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