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The Theory of Linear Economic Models

TLDR
Gale as mentioned in this paper provides a complete and lucid treatment of important topics in mathematical economics which can be analyzed by linear models, including games, linear programming, and the Neumann model of growth.
Abstract
In the past few decades, methods of linear algebra have become central to economic analysis, replacing older tools such as the calculus. David Gale has provided the first complete and lucid treatment of important topics in mathematical economics which can be analyzed by linear models. This self-contained work requires few mathematical prerequisites and provides all necessary groundwork in the first few chapters. After introducing basic geometric concepts of vectors and vector spaces, Gale proceeds to give the main theorems on linear inequalities—theorems underpinning the theory of games, linear programming, and the Neumann model of growth. He then explores such subjects as linear programming; the theory of two-person games; static and dynamic theories of linear exchange models, including problems of equilibrium prices and dynamic stability; and methods of play, optimal strategies, and solutions of matrix games. This book should prove an invaluable reference source and text for mathematicians, engineers, economists, and those in many related areas.

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Asset pricing and bid-ask spread

P Asquit, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of the bid-ask spread on asset pricing was studied and it was shown that market-observed expexted return is an increasing and concave function of the spread.
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The assignment game I: The core

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the optimal assignment game is a dual problem of a linear programming problem dual to optimal assignment, and that these outcomes correspond exactly to the price lists that competitively balance supply and demand.
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Markets in licenses and efficient pollution control programs

TL;DR: In this paper, Arrow has demonstrated that when externalities are present in a general equilibrium system, a suitable expansion of the commodity space would lead to Pareto optimality by bringing externalities under the control of the price system.
Journal ArticleDOI

On cores and indivisibility

TL;DR: In this paper, an economic model of trading in commodities that are inherently indivisible, like houses, is investigated from a game-theoretic point of view, and the concepts of balanced game and core are developed, and a general theorem of Scarf's is applied to prove that the market in question has a nonempty core, that is, at least one outcome that no subset of traders can improve upon.