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Lect5&amp 6 102 2005 Student

This document discusses consumer demand theory using indifference curve analysis. It introduces key concepts like indifference curves, budget constraints, income and substitution effects. Indifference curves represent combinations of goods that provide equal utility. Budget constraints show affordable combinations given prices and income. The demand curve is derived from the optimal point where an indifference curve is tangent to the budget constraint. A price change leads to income and substitution effects on consumption.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views19 pages

Lect5&amp 6 102 2005 Student

This document discusses consumer demand theory using indifference curve analysis. It introduces key concepts like indifference curves, budget constraints, income and substitution effects. Indifference curves represent combinations of goods that provide equal utility. Budget constraints show affordable combinations given prices and income. The demand curve is derived from the optimal point where an indifference curve is tangent to the budget constraint. A price change leads to income and substitution effects on consumption.

Uploaded by

adillawa
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BEHIND THE DEMAND CURVE II & III

 Indifference Analysis

 1. Assumptions
 2. Indifference curves & the budget constraint
 3. Derivation of the demand curve
 4. Income & substitution effects
Assumptions

 (i) Consumers rank preferences


 (ii) Preferences are transitive
 A to B, B to C then A to C
 (iii) Non-satiation

 Ordinal approach - ranking


 Assumptions → Indifference curve
Indifference curve
 Definition
 …joins together all the different combinations
of two goods which yield the same utility...
 Construction
 Slope = Marginal Rate of Substitution
(MRS)
 MRS=∆ Y\ ∆ X or MUy \ MUx
 Give up Y for X - same utility
30
Constructing an indifference
28
26
a

Pears Oranges Point


curve
24
22
30 6 a
b 24 7
20 c
20 8
18 14 10 d
16 10 13 e
Pears

14 8 15 f
12 6 20 g
10
8
6
4
2
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22

fig
Oranges
Indifference curves

 Convex - diminishing marginal rate of


substitution

 Indifference map
 …preferences
30

An indifference map
20
Units of good Y

10

I5
0
I4
0 10 20
I3
I2
I1

fig
Units of good X
Budget constraint

 Actual choice is based on income & prices


 Budget constraint
 Definition
 Shows all combinations of the two goods the
consumer is able to buy, given prices and
income
 Exhaust income
 Prices and income = fixed
 What if a price changes? (figure 3)
 What if income changes? (figure 4)
30 a

A budget line Units of Units of Point on


good X good Y budget line
20 0 30 a
Units of good Y

5 20
10 10
15 0

10

Assumptions

PX = £2
0 PY = £1
0 5 10 15 Budget
20 = £30

fig
Units of good X
40
Effect of an increase in income
on the budget line
30
Units of good Y

20

10
Assumptions

PX = £2
0 PY = £1
0 5 10 15 Budget
20 = £30

fig
Units of good X
Effect on the budget line of a fall
30

Assumptions
in the price of good X P = £2 X
PY = £1
20
Budget = £30
Units of good Y

10

0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30

fig
Units of good X
Effect on the budget line of a fall
30

Assumptions
in the price of good X P = £1 X
PY = £1
20
Budget = £30
Units of good Y

10

0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30

fig
Units of good X
Optimal consumption
 Where is utility maximised?
 Point of tangency
 MRSyx = Py\Px
Finding the optimum
consumption
Units of good Y

Budget line

I5
I4
I3
I2
I1
O
Units of figgood X
Derivation of the demand
schedule
 Step 1: Price falls - B pivots right
 Step 2: Optimal point of consumption
changes
 join optima = price consumption curve
 Step 3: Map optima into price-quantity
space
 Step 4: Demand curve (figure 5)
Deriving a demand curve
from a price-consumption
curve
Expenditure on
all other goods
a b Price-consumption
c d
curve

I4
I3
I
I1 2
B1 B2 B3 B4

Units of good X

P1 a
Price of good X

P2 b
P3 c
P4 d
Demand
fig
Q1 Q2 Q 3 Q 4 Units of good X
Income & substitution effects
 A price change
 (i) Income effect
 …i.e. the change in demand due to a change in
real income..
 (ii) Substitution effect
 …i.e. the change in demand due to a change in
relative prices
 Identifying the two effects
A conceptual experiment
 `What happens to demand if, after the price of a
good rises, the consumer’s income is increased
so that real income is unchanged?’
 Compensating variation
 Utility is left unchanged
 See Figure 6
Units of good Y Income and substitution effects: normal good

f
I1
I2
I3
I4
I5
B1 I6
QX1
Units of Good X
General rules
 Normal goods
 income & substitution effects move in the
same direction
 Inferior goods
 income & substitution effects move in
opposite directions

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