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Production function problem (Lagrange multiplier)

Mathematics Asked on November 26, 2021

I want to solve this production function using Lagrange multiplier

$$begin{equation}
begin{aligned}
max_{} quad & U(x)=(sum_{i=1}^{n}{theta_{i}x_{i}^{rho}})^{frac{1}{rho}} \
textrm{s.t.} quad & sum_{i=1}^{n}{p_{i}x_{i}=I}\
end{aligned}
end{equation}$$

What I have been doing

Apply lagrangian

$$L(x_i, lambda)=(sum_{i=1}^{n}{theta_{i}x_{i}^{rho}})^{frac{1}{rho}} – lambda(sum_{i=1}^{n}{p_{i}x_{i} – I})$$

Finding the FOCs

$$frac{partial{L}}{partial{lambda}} = I – sum_{i=1}^{n}{p_{i}x_{i}}$$
$$frac{partial{L}}{partial{x_i}} = frac{theta_k x_k^rho(sum_{i=1}^{n}{theta_{i}x_{i}^{rho}})^{frac{1}{rho}})}{x_k(sum_{i=1}^{n}{theta_{i}x_{i}^{rho}})} – lambda p_k$$
Process here

Why can’t it be solved this way?

I’ve been reading and found that in order to solve this problem you have to find a growing monotone function to simplify the utility function.

$$v(x)=U(x)^rho $$
$$max_{} quad v(x)=sum_{i=1}^{n}{theta_{i}x_{i}^{rho}}$$

There would be how to work with the long line?

One Answer

In this case, maximizing $U(x)$ and $U(x)^p$ would be equivalent. The second case is much easier though: if you write the problem begin{equation} begin{aligned} max_{} quad & U(x)^p = sum_{i=1}^{n}{theta_{i}x_{i}^{rho}} \ textrm{s.t.} quad & sum_{i=1}^{n}{p_{i}x_{i}=I}\ end{aligned} end{equation} then the optimality conditions are:
begin{equation} begin{aligned} theta_i rho x_i^{rho-1} - lambda p_i = 0 quad forall i \ sum_{i=1}^n p_i x_i = I end{aligned} end{equation} Injecting the first one into the second one, we get begin{equation} sum_{i=1}^n p_i left(frac{lambda p_i}{theta_i} right)^{frac{1}{rho-1}} = I end{equation} then solve for $lambda$ and inject back in the first equation.

Answered by cvanaret on November 26, 2021

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