Parkin 13ge Econ IM
Parkin 13ge Econ IM
Parkin 13ge Econ IM
C h a p t e r POSSIBILITES,
PREFERENCES,
AND CHOICES
Example: The budget line as a menu. Emphasize that the consumer’s budget line is like that part of a menu
that delineates all affordable combinations of food and drinks that are available to the consumer given a
budget.
If you want to push this analogy, have the students assign a price to each of the two goods and then choose a
level of income to be spent on the dinner. Draw the budget line and then have the students show how a rise
in the price of drinks or the price of food would rotate the budget line and change relative prices. Then have
100 CHAPTER 9
the students help you illustrate how an increase in income shifts the budget line allowing more food (perhaps
dessert) and the second glass of wine.
A Change In Price
The price effect shows how a change in the price of a good affects the quantity consumed of that
good.
When the price of the good on the x-axis falls, the budget line rotates around the y-axis intercept and
becomes flatter. The person moves to a new consumption point. The new consumption bundle
satisfies all three properties: It is on the new budget line, it is on the highest attainable indifference
curve, and the MRS equals the slope of the new budget line.
When the price of a good changes, tracking the change in the quantity of the good consumed reveals
the demand curve for that good.
The Economics in Action case study considers how the best affordable combination of movies, DVD rentals,
and video streaming have changed over time, largely due to changes in prices, first in the DVD rental market
and now with Netflix and video streaming. Have students illustrate this result for themselves, shifting the
budget line between movies and streaming and seeing what the new equilibrium might look like.
A Change In Income
The income effect shows how a change in income affects the buying plans of consumers.
When the price of the goods remains constant, a change in income shifts the budget line. This shift
changes which indifference curve is highest attainable indifference curve. The person moves to a
new consumption point. The new consumption bundle satisfies all three properties: it is on the new
budget line; it is on the highest attainable indifference curve; and the MRS equals the slope of the
new budget line.
A change in income shifts the demand curve, because a different quantity is consumed at the same
prices.
If income rises and more is consumed at each price (or if income falls and less is consumed at each
price) the good is a normal good.
Can the income effect for an inferior good ever dominate the substitution effect? Many economists have
studied the infamous potato famine in Ireland in the mid-19th century in search of the elusive “upward-
sloping demand curve” associated with strongly inferior goods. Indeed, when food became even scarcer than
usual in that poverty-stricken country, historical records indicate that Irish families consumed a greater
quantity of potatoes as the market price of potatoes increased. Many economists were misled into thinking
they had found historical evidence of the world’s first recorded positively-sloped demand curve! However,
they failed to remember their basic economics: it is the relative price of potatoes that is tracked on the
demand curve for potatoes, not the money price. The money price of potatoes rose more slowly than the
prices of other foods. This change lowered the relative price of potatoes to Irish families and so the quantity
they consumed increased, in accord with the law of demand. Although some experimental evidence exists to
show that demand curves with a positive slope might exist, there are no good real-world examples.
An Addendum: Relationship between MRS and MU ratios: If you’ve covered both the marginal utility
theory (from Chapter 8) and indifference curve theory of consumer choice in this chapter--and you’re
teaching an honors section of economics majors--you might want to spend a bit of time demonstrating the
equivalence of the two sets of results. The basic analysis that you might cover is the following: In marginal
utility theory, total utility is maximized when
MUM /PM = MUS/PS. (the subscript M stands for movies and the subscript S stands for sodas to be consistent
with the textbook example)
In indifference curve theory, the consumer is at the best affordable point when the marginal rate of
substitution of movies for soda equals the relative price of movies in terms of soda. That is:
MRS = PM /PS
These two propositions are equivalent. To see why, there are a couple of ways to explain this. If your
students are particularly good at math, begin with the fact that the change in total utility can be written as:
Change in Total Utility = MUM QM + MUS QS
where means “change in” and QM and QS are the quantities of movies and soda.
Because a consumer is indifferent between any pair of points along an indifference curve, you can think of
an indifference curve as a constant utility curve. So along an indifference curve, the change in total utility is
zero. When the change in total utility is zero,
0 = MUM QM + MUS QS,
And so
MUM QM = –MUS QS.
Now divide both sides of this equation by QM and also divide both sides by MUS to obtain:
QS /QM = -MUM /MUS
Notice that the left-hand side of the last equation is the change in soda divided by the change in movies
along an indifference curve, which is the slope of the indifference curve. But the magnitude of the slope of
an indifference curve is the marginal rate of substitution. So,
MRS = MUM /MUS
That is, the marginal rate of substitution of movies for soda is the ratio of the marginal utilities of movies
and soda.
Alternatively (or even in addition), many students appreciate an intuitive explanation of the relationship
between the MRS and MUM /MUS. Simply start with the marginal utility of a movie equal to some number
(20, for example). If the consumer would like a soda half as much as a movie, then the marginal utility of a
soda would be 10 in that example. In that case, MUM /MUS = 20/10 = 2.
Then ask students if they could answer the following question: “How many sodas would the consumer be
willing to give up for a movie?” Most students will see that the movie is worth 2 sodas. This is simply the
definition of the marginal rate of substitution, and it will always be the case that the ratio of marginal
utilities will be equal to the marginal rate of substitution.
Regardless of the method you use to show that MRS = MUM /MUS, the main point is that the consumer
chooses the best affordable point by making the MRS equal the relative price. But that is the same as
MUM /MUS = PM /PS.
Multiply both sides of this equation by MUS and divide both sides by PM to obtain the marginal utility theory
proposition:
MUM /PM = MUS /PS.
Economics in the News at the end of the chapter considers why it is taking students longer to finish college
and focuses especially on the impact of higher college costs on students’ behavior.
Additional Problems
1. Marc has an income of $20 per week. Root beer
costs $5 a can and CDs cost $10 each. Figure 9.1
illustrates his preferences.
a. What are the quantities of root beer and CDs that
Marc buys?
b. What is Marc’s marginal rate of substitution of
CDs for root beer at the point at which he
consumes?
2. Now suppose that in the situation described in
problem 1, the price of a CD falls to $5 and the
price of root beer and Marc’s income remain
constant.
a. Find the new quantities of root beer and CDs that
Marc buys.
b. Find two points on Marc’s demand curve for
CDs.
c. Find the substitution effect of the price change.
d. Find the income effect of the price change.
e. Are CDs a normal good or an inferior good for Marc?
3. Pete buys tuna and golf balls. The price of tuna is $2 a can, and the price of a golf ball is $1.
Each month, Pete spends all of his income and buys 20 cans of tuna and 40 golf balls. Next
month, the price of tuna will rise to $3 a can and the price of a golf ball will fall to 50¢.
Assume that Pete’s preference map shows indifference curves have a bowed in shape so that
they show a diminishing marginal rate of substitution.
a. Will Pete be able to buy 20 cans of tuna and 40 golf balls next month?
b. Will Pete want to buy 20 cans of tuna and 40 golf balls?
c. Which situation does Pete prefer: tuna at $2 a can and golf balls at $1 each or tuna at $3 a
can and golf balls at 50¢ each?
d. If Pete changes the quantities that he buys, which good will he buy more of and which less
of?
e. When the prices change next month, will there be an income effect and a substitution effect
at work or just one of them?
4. The sales tax is a tax on goods. Some people say that a consumption tax, a tax on both goods
and services, would be better. Explain and illustrate with a graph what would happen if we
replaced the sales tax with a consumption tax to
a. The relative price of books and haircuts.
b. The budget line showing the quantities of books and haircuts you can afford to buy.
c. Your purchases of books and haircuts.
marginal rate of substitution equals the new relative price. An income effect arises when the
consumer moves from one indifference curve to another, keeping the relative price constant.
4. a. Books are goods and so are taxed under both a sales tax and a consumption tax. Haircuts are services
and so are taxed only under a consumption tax. If the sales tax is replaced with a consumption tax,
the relative price of a haircut rises and the relative price of a book falls.
b. Assuming the sales tax and consumption tax are the
same rate, in the figure the budget line rotates
inward around a fixed book intercept. In Figure 9.2,
the new budget line is BL1. The price of a book does
not change but the price of a haircut rises.
c. In general, if the relative price of a haircut rises and
the relative price of a book falls, the substitution
effect leads consumers to buy more books and fewer
haircuts. There is, however, also an income effect.
The consumer’s real income falls, which decreases
the demand for normal goods. Assuming that both
books and haircuts are normal goods, then the
income effect offsets the substitution effect of
buying more books but reinforces the substitution
effect of buying fewer haircuts. In the figure, with
the sales tax and budget line BL0 the consumer is
initially at point A and buys 20 books per year and 4
haircuts per year. With the consumption tax and
budget line BL1 the consumer moves to point B and buys 15 books per year and 3 haircuts per year.
Could the low-income person be better off with an income subsidy of equal value to the
food stamp subsidy? Show that if the same level of income were given in place of food
stamps, this opens up even more combinations of goods and services than with food stamps.
It is impossible not find a higher indifference curve without a very unconventional
indifference curve map.
Could a low-income person be made equally as well off with a lower total income subsidy
than the initial food stamp subsidy? Ask them to consider why the government continues to
use food stamps instead of income assistance when the same quantity of extra income would
bring them even more utility. Ask them why the government doesn’t minimize total welfare
assistance expenditures by giving them just enough income to maintain a consumption bundle
on the same indifference curve as with the current food stamp expenditures. Students should
recognize that part of the government’s intention is to control the type of items purchased
with food stamps. If low-income households were simply given cash subsidies, the costs of
the welfare system would be lower, but not all low-income households would spend that cash
subsidy on food only.
4. Would the indifference curves of a preference map ever change shape when the prices of
goods change? Marketing managers for Ferrari claim that they would not consider a
significant price decrease in the face of falling demand. They worry that the decrease in the
perceived “exclusivity” of the brand would diminish the consumer perception of their product
and eventually decrease market demand. Ask the students to model this theory and show how
a sharp decline in the price of a Ferrari might causes a change in the consumer’s indifference
curves. (The answer is that if Ferraris were placed on the vertical axis, the indifference curves
are steeper.)
Would indifference curves ever move whenever the consumer’s income changes?
Consumers change their buying habits as they increase their income. They buy cars with
leather seats instead of cloth, designer dresses and purses, choose restaurants merely to “be
seen” dining there. Does this really represent a change in the preference mapping over
consumption possibilities when incomes increase? Does it change the slope of the
indifference curve?
5. Do perfect substitutes imply perfectly elastic demand? When indifference curves are straight
lines, the MRS is almost never equal to the relative price ratio, meaning the consumer selects
a “corner solution” (all of one good, or all of another, but not a mix of both). In the case of a
relative price change, the consumer immediately switches to consuming only the other good.
Ask the students if they have ever observed such peculiar consumer behavior in the real
world.
Do perfect complements imply perfectly inelastic demand? When the indifference curves are
90-degree angles, the consumer always purchases the product only in exact proportions. Ask
the students if there is any usefulness to separating out the two goods as separate items, or
whether it is more meaningful to consider them two necessary components of a single good.
For example, we rarely see single shoes being offered for sale, but surely the occasional
consumer loses a single shoe, or there are a small number of amputees that need only one
shoe. Why is there no market for single shoes? (As a counterexample, Lands’ End actually
sells single gloves or mittens to consumers who have lost one of a pair.)