The Samuelson condition, due to Paul Samuelson,[1] in the theory of public economics, is a condition for optimal provision of public goods.
For an economy with n consumers, the conditions is:
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
MRSi=MRT
MRSi is individual i marginal rate of substitution and MRT is the economy's marginal rate of transformation between the public good and an arbitrarily chosen private good. Note that while the marginal rates of substitution are indexed by individuals, the marginal rate of transformation is not; it is an economy wide rate.
If the private good is a numeraire good then the Samuelson condition can be re-written as:
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
MBi=MC
where
MBi
MC
When written this way, the Samuelson condition has a simple graphical interpretation. Each individual consumer's marginal benefit,
MBi
Let denote private goods, the public good, aggregate wealth, and how much is dedicated towards the production of public goods (sacrifices of private consumption made for the public good).
We maximize the weighted (by ) utility function for each consumer
i
max | |
xi,y |
\left\{\sumi\alphaiui(xi,yi)\right\}~subjectto:
g(z)=y~
y
w-z\geqslant
I | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
xi
We can solve using the Lagrangian method:
L=\sumi\alphaiui(x
I | |
i=1 |
xi\right)+\mu(g(z)-y)
The first order conditions are given by:
(1) xi:
| ||||
\alpha |
=λ \forall i;
(2) y: \sumi
| ||||
\alpha |
=\mu;
(3) z: \mug'=λ.
From (2) and (3):
g'\sumi
| ||||
\alpha |
=λ=
| ||||
\alpha |
Divide by
λ
g'
\sum
| ||||||||||
λ |
=
1 | |
g' |
But
λ=
| ||||
\alpha |
i
\sum
| = | ||||
|
1 | |
g' |
LHS is defined as the marginal rate of substitution of public for private good (for an individual
i
\sumiMRSi=MRT.