ECN 2111: Microeconomics: 21. The Theory of Consumer Choice
ECN 2111: Microeconomics: 21. The Theory of Consumer Choice
ECN 2111: Microeconomics: 21. The Theory of Consumer Choice
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The theory of consumer choice
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THE BUDGET CONSTRAINT: WHAT THE CONSUMER CAN AFFORD
• The budget constraint depicts the limit on the consumption “bundles”
that a consumer can afford.
– People consume less than they desire because their spending is
constrained, or limited, by their income.
• The budget constraint shows the various combinations of goods the
consumer can afford given his or her income and the prices of the two
goods.
• The Consumer’s Budget Constraint
– Any point on the budget constraint line indicates the consumer’s
combination or tradeoff between two goods.
– For example, if the consumer buys no pizzas, he can afford 500 pints of
Pepsi (point B). If he buys no Pepsi, he can afford 100 pizzas (point A).
• The Consumer’s Budget Constraint
– Alternately, the consumer can buy 50 pizzas and 250 pints of Pepsi.
• The slope of the budget constraint line equals the relative price of the
two goods, that is, the price of one good compared to the price of the
other.
• It measures the rate at which the consumer can trade one good for
the other.
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The Consumer’s Budget Constraint
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The Consumer’s Budget Constraint
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PREFERENCES: WHAT THE CONSUMER WANTS
• A consumer’s preference among consumption bundles may
be illustrated with indifference curves.
• Representing Preferences with Indifference Curves: An
indifference curve is a curve that shows consumption
bundles that give the consumer the same level of
satisfaction.
• The Consumer’s Preferences
– The consumer is indifferent, or equally happy, with the
combinations shown at points A, B, and C because they are all
on the same curve.
• The Marginal Rate of Substitution
– The slope at any point on an indifference curve is the marginal
rate of substitution.
• It is the rate at which a consumer is willing to trade one good for
another.
• It is the amount of one good that a consumer requires as
compensation to give up one unit of the other good.
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The Consumer’s Preferences
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Four Properties of Indifference Curves
• Higher indifference curves are preferred to lower ones.
• Indifference curves are downward sloping.
• Indifference curves do not cross.
• Indifference curves are bowed inward.
• Property 1: Higher indifference curves are preferred to
lower ones.
– Consumers usually prefer more of something to less of it.
– Higher indifference curves represent larger quantities of goods
than do lower indifference curves.
• Property 2: Indifference curves are downward sloping.
– A consumer is willing to give up one good only if he or she gets
more of the other good in order to remain equally happy.
– If the quantity of one good is reduced, the quantity of the other
good must increase.
– For this reason, most indifference curves slope downward.
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Higher indifference curves are preferred Indifference curves are downward sloping
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Four Properties of Indifference Curves
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The Impossibility of Intersecting Indifference Curves Bowed Indifference Curves
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Two Extreme Examples of Indifference Curves
• Perfect substitutes
• Perfect complements
• Perfect Substitutes
– Two goods with straight-line indifference curves are
perfect substitutes.
– The marginal rate of substitution is a fixed number.
• Perfect Complements
– Two goods with right-angle indifference curves are
perfect complements.
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Perfect Substitutes and Perfect Complements
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OPTIMIZATION: WHAT THE CONSUMER CHOOSES
• Consumers want to get the combination of goods on
the highest possible indifference curve.
• However, the consumer must also end up on or below
his budget constraint.
• Combining the indifference curve and the budget
constraint determines the consumer’s optimal choice.
• Consumer optimum occurs at the point where the
highest indifference curve and the budget constraint
are tangent.
• The consumer chooses consumption of the two goods
so that the marginal rate of substitution equals the
relative price.
• At the consumer’s optimum, the consumer’s valuation
of the two goods equals the market’s valuation.
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The Consumer’s Optimum
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How Changes in Income Affect the Consumer’s
Choices
• An increase in income shifts the budget
constraint outward.
– The consumer is able to choose a better
combination of goods on a higher
indifference curve.
• Normal versus Inferior Goods
– If a consumer buys more of a good when his or her
income rises, the good is called a normal good.
– If a consumer buys less of a good when his or her
income rises, the good is called an inferior good.
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An Increase in Income
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An Inferior Good
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How Changes in Prices Affect Consumer’s Choices
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A Change in Price
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Income and Substitution Effects
• A price change has two effects on consumption.
– An income effect
– A substitution effect
• The Income Effect
– The income effect is the change in consumption that results when a price
change moves the consumer to a higher or lower indifference curve.
• The Substitution Effect
– The substitution effect is the change in consumption that results when a
price change moves the consumer along an indifference curve to a point
with a different marginal rate of substitution.
• A Change in Price: Substitution Effect
– A price change first causes the consumer to move from one point on an
indifference curve to another on the same curve.
• Illustrated by movement from point A to point B.
• A Change in Price: Income Effect
– After moving from one point to another on the same curve, the consumer
will move to another indifference curve.
• Illustrated by movement from point B to point C.
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Income and Substitution Effects
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Income and Substitution Effects When the Price
of Pepsi Falls
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Deriving the Demand Curve
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Deriving the Demand Curve
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THREE APPLICATIONS
• Do all demand curves slope downward?
– Demand curves can sometimes slope upward.
– This happens when a consumer buys more of a good
when its price rises.
– Giffen goods
• Economists use the term Giffen good to describe a good that
violates the law of demand.
• Giffen goods are goods for which an increase in the price
raises the quantity demanded.
• The income effect dominates the substitution effect.
• They have demand curves that slope upwards.
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A Giffen Good
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THREE APPLICATIONS
• How do wages affect labor supply?
– If the substitution effect is greater than the
income effect for the worker, he or she works
more.
– If income effect is greater than the substitution
effect, he or she works less.
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The Work-Leisure Decision
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An Increase in the Wage
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An Increase in the Wage
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THREE APPLICATIONS
• How do interest rates affect household
saving?
– If the substitution effect of a higher interest rate is
greater than the income effect, households save
more.
– If the income effect of a higher interest rate is
greater than the substitution effect, households
save less.
• Thus, an increase in the interest rate could
either encourage or discourage saving.
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The Consumption-Saving Decision
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An Increase in the Interest Rate
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