80: Indifference curves and consumer choice Flashcards
indifference curve
line that shows all the consumption bundles that yield the same amount of total utility for an individual
indifference curve map
the entire utility function for someone, a collection of indifference curves each corresponding to a different utility level
properties of indifference curves for ordinary goods (4)
a) never cross
b) farther from origin –> represents higher level of utility
c) slope downward
d) convex shape
marginal rate of substitution
MUx/MUy
slope of the I curve
∆Qy/∆Qx = -MUx/MUy
diminishing marginal rate of substitution
someone who consumes only a little of good A and a lot of good B will be willing to trade a lot of good B for just one more unit of A
properties of ordinary goods (2)
a) consumers require more of one to compensate for less of the other
b) diminishing rate of marginal substitution
tangency condition
when the I curve and the BL just touch due to the I curve’s convex shape, determining the optimal consumption bundle
where do the I curve and the BL touch?
where their slopes are equal
slope of budget line
-Price of Y / price of X
relative price of A in terms of B
rate at which A trades for B in the market
relative price of A in terms of B equation
Pa / Pb
relative price rule
at the optimal consumption bundle, MRS = relative price: MUa/MUb = Pa/Pb