Utility Function #47
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Hi Pascal, I was wondering where the separable utility function you used in the videos comes from? I am trying to understand how it connects to Cobb-Douglas, CES, and the log transform of Cobb-Douglas because it seems very similar but not quite the same. Do you have any resources for understanding the theory behind this function? Thanks! |
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As a follow up question -- why does epsilon have to be greater than 1? My elasticity of substitution is 0.16 and I do get a solution in the model, so I'm not sure why this matters. |
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The separable utility function is just a concave transformation of the CES utility function. It is obtained by taking the CES utility function to the power of You can also see the utility function as the sum of two isoelastic utility functions: one over consumption plus one over relative real wealth. |
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The separable utility function is just a concave transformation of the CES utility function. It is obtained by taking the CES utility function to the power of$(\epsilon-1)/\epsilon < 1$ . Unlike the CES utility function this utility function is not homothetic (homogeneous of degree 1), but that does not matter since there is no growth in the model. Having a separable utility function greatly simplifies the analysis.
You can also see the utility function as the sum of two isoelastic utility functions: one over consumption plus one over relative real wealth.