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The Wong-Viner Envelope Theorem or Nonsmooth Joint Costs, Rental Valuation and the Short-Run Approach to Long-Run Equilibrium

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Author Info
Anthony Horsley
Andrew J Wrobel

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Abstract

The standard Wong-Viner envelope theorem is of little use in the context of production with multiple outputs because the differentiability assumptions its builds on are so severely restrictive that even the simplest of applications fail to satisfy them. Common sources of this failure are capacity constraints, which lead to nonsmooth joint costs. However, the analysis can be extended to the case of general convex costs by using subdifferential calculus. A reformulation of the original theorem is also required, and we do this by reinterpreting the capital input optimality condition in valuation terms, viz., as the equality of marginal rental values of the fixed inputs to their rental prices. This form of the condition is not only sufficiently stronger but also easier to use because the short-run profit function can actually be differentiable (in the fixed inputs) even when the short-run cost is not. Remarkably, this can be so even with fixed-coefficients techniques, as we demonstrate. The extended Wong-Viner theorem can serve as a proper basis for a short-run approach to the implementation of long-run marginal cost pricing by a public utility supplying a good with cyclical demands and prices. This generalises the Boiteux-Dreze analysis of purely thermal electricity generation to any (convex) technology supplying a good differentiated over time and/or other characteristics. As an application, a case study of electricity generation combined with energy storage techniques (viz., pumped storage and storage hydro) is presented. It gives, for the first time, a sound method of calculating efficiency rents for the fixed assets, such as the special geological sites suitable for the provision of reservoirs. A basic advantage of the analysis to a publicly-owned utility is the guarantee that the short-run marginal costs are correctly identified as long-run marginal costs.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines, LSE in its series STICERD - Theoretical Economics Paper Series with number 299.

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Date of creation: 1996
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Handle: RePEc:cep:stitep:299

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  1. Anthony Horsley & Andrew J Wrobel, 2000. "The Short-Run Approach to LRMC Pricing for Multiple Outputs with Nondifferentiable Costs," STICERD - Theoretical Economics Paper Series 393, Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines, LSE. [Downloadable!]
  2. Anthony Horsley & Andrew J Wrobel, 1999. "Efficiency Rents of Storage Plants in Peak-Load Pricing, II: Hydroelectricity - (Now published as Efficiency rents of hydroelectric storage plants in continuous-time peak-load pricing, in The Current ," STICERD - Theoretical Economics Paper Series 372, Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines, LSE. [Downloadable!]
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