Arbitrage, rationality, and equilibrium
No-arbitrage is the fundamental principle of economic rationality which unifies normative decision theory, game theory, and market theory. In economic environments where money is available as a medium of measurement and exchange, no-arbitrage is synonymous with subjective expected utility maximization in personal decisions, competitive equilibria in capital markets and exchange economies, and correlated equilibria in noncooperative games. The arbitrage principle directly characterizes rationality at the market level; the appearance of deliberate optimization by individual agents is a consequence of their adaptation to the market. Concepts of equilibrium behavior in games and markets can thus be reconciled with the ideas that individual rationality is bounded, that agents use evolutionarily-shaped decision rules rather than numerical optimization algorithms, and that personal probabilities and utilities are inseparable and to some extent indeterminate. Risk-neutral probability distributions, interpretable as products of probabilities and marginal utilities, play a central role as observable quantities in economic systems. © 1991 Kluwer Academic Publishers.
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- Economic Theory
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- 50 Philosophy and religious studies
- 38 Economics
- 22 Philosophy and Religious Studies
- 17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
- 14 Economics
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Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Economic Theory
- 52 Psychology
- 50 Philosophy and religious studies
- 38 Economics
- 22 Philosophy and Religious Studies
- 17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
- 14 Economics