ECON 306 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Risk Aversion, Economic Equilibrium, Perfect Competition

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Indifference curve: (cid:272)he(cid:373)ati(cid:272) illust(cid:396)atio(cid:374) of a(cid:374) i(cid:374)di(cid:448)idual"s p(cid:396)efe(cid:396)e(cid:374)(cid:272)e (cid:271)et(cid:449)ee(cid:374) t(cid:449)o goods or services that each give utility. In econ 208 we did this with two goods. For labour it is a trade-off between leisure and work. The person is indifferent between various combinations of consumptions and leisure on an indifference curve. The curve looks like 1/x. (convex at the origin) The slope of the curve is the marginal rate of substitution: how much you are willing to substitute one hour of leisure for one hour of consumption. At constant level of utility: what is the most consumption willing to give up to get an extra hour of leisure time (v) Loss is u from less consumption = -muc * c. Gain in u from more leisure = +muc * v. With no change in u: -muc * c = +muv * v. A(cid:374)d f(cid:396)o(cid:373) the a(cid:271)o(cid:448)e e(cid:395)uatio(cid:374), c/ v = -muc/+muv.

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