User:IssaRice/Moral public goods example: Difference between revisions
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If each noble starts out with <math>\alpha</math> times as much wealth as the average peasant, we have <math>x_n = \alpha x_p</math>. | If each noble starts out with <math>\alpha</math> times as much wealth as the average peasant, we have <math>x_n = \alpha x_p</math>. | ||
So to solve for the highest tax that the nobles are willing to pay, we want to find <math>a > 0</math> such that <math display=inline>u(x_n, | So to solve for the highest tax that the nobles are willing to pay, we want to find <math>a > 0</math> such that <math display=inline>u(x_n, x_n/\alpha) = u(x_n - a, x_n/\alpha + \frac{N_n}{N_p}a)</math>. | ||
This is <math display=inline>\log x_n + \log( | This is <math display=inline>\log x_n + \log(x_n/\alpha) = \log(x_n - a) + \log(x_n/\alpha + \frac{N_n}{N_p}a)</math> which reduces to the following quadratic in <math>a</math>: <math display=inline>x_n(x_n/\alpha) = (x_n - a) (x_n/\alpha + \frac{N_n}{N_p}a)</math>. | ||
Revision as of 19:53, 26 January 2020
working out the general optimal tax for the example given in https://www.greaterwrong.com/posts/pqKwra9rRYYMvySHc/moral-public-goods
each noble has utility function , where is the noble's own wealth and is the average wealth of a peasant (since the donation/tax is distributed equally among peasants, this is the same as saying the wealth of a single peasant).
a tax of amount shifts the current utility amount to , where is the number of nobles and is the number of peasants. This is because each noble loses , so there is to distribute, and this is divided by the number of peasants.
If each noble starts out with times as much wealth as the average peasant, we have .
So to solve for the highest tax that the nobles are willing to pay, we want to find such that .
This is which reduces to the following quadratic in : .