Chapter204 PDF
Chapter204 PDF
Nicholson and Snyder, Copyright ©2008 by Thomson South-Western. All rights reserved.
Complaints about the
Economic Approach
• Do individuals make the “lightning
calculations” required for utility
maximization?
– the utility-maximization model predicts many
aspects of behavior
– economists assume that people behave as
if they made such calculations
Complaints about the
Economic Approach
• The economic model of choice is
extremely selfish
– nothing in the model prevents individuals
from getting satisfaction from “doing good”
Optimization Principle
• To maximize utility, given a fixed amount
of income, an individual will buy the
goods and services:
– that exhaust total income
– for which the MRS is equal to the rate at
which goods can be traded for one another
in the marketplace
A Numerical Illustration
• Assume that the individual’s MRS = 1
– willing to trade one unit of x for one unit of
y
• Suppose the price of x = $2 and the
price of y = $1
• The individual can be made better off
– trade 1 unit of x for 2 units of y in the
marketplace
The Budget Constraint
• Assume that an individual has I dollars
to allocate between good x and good y
pxx + pyy ≤ I
Quantity of y The individual can afford
If all income is spent
on y, this is the amount
to choose only combinations
of y that can be purchased of x and y in the shaded
triangle
Quantity of x
FOCs for a Maximum
• We can add the individual’s utility map
to show the utility-maximization process
U3
Point B is the point of utility
U2 maximization
U1
Quantity of x
FOCs for a Maximum
• Utility is maximized where the indifference
curve is tangent to the budget constraint
Quantity of y
U2
Quantity of x
SOCs for a Maximum
• The tangency rule is necessary but not
sufficient unless we assume that MRS is
diminishing
– if MRS is diminishing, then indifference curves
are strictly convex
– if MRS is not diminishing, we must check
second-order conditions to ensure that we are
at a maximum
SOCs for a Maximum
• The tangency rule is only a necessary
condition
– we need MRS to be diminishing
Quantity of y
There is a tangency at point A,
but the individual can reach a higher
level of utility at point B
B
A
U2
U1
Quantity of x
Corner Solutions
• Individuals may maximize utility by choosing
to consume only one of the goods
Quantity of x
A
The n-Good Case
• The individual’s objective is to maximize
utility = U(x1,x2,…,xn)
•
•
•
∂ℒ /∂xn = ∂U/∂xn - λpn = 0
∂ℒ /∂λ = I - p1x1 - p2x2 - … - pnxn = 0
Implications of FOCs
• For any two goods,
B A
U1
U2
Quantity of x
The Lump Sum Principle
• An income tax that collected the same
amount would shift the budget constraint
to I’
Quantity of y Utility is maximized now at point
I’ C on U3
A
B C
U3 U1
U2
Quantity of x
The Lump Sum Principle
• If the utility function is Cobb-Douglas with α
= β = 0.5, we know that
A
Expenditure level E1 is too small to achieve U1
U1
Quantity of x
Expenditure Minimization
• The individual’s problem is to choose
x1,x2,…,xn to minimize
total expenditures = E = p1x1 + p2x2 +…+ pnxn