ECON101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Comparative Statics, Indifference Curve, Budget Constraint

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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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Represents a consumer"s liking or disliking of a good or service. All the combinations of the two goods that provide a consumer with the same level of satisfaction or utility is depicted by an indifference curve. Tend to be negatively sloped and convex. Assumes that more is better (neoclassical perspective) Slope at any point: the marginal rate of substitution. Represents subjective rate of substitution for consumers. Slope decreases as consumption of x increases. Tendency for a person to be willing to give up less of good y to get one more unit of good x, while at the same time, remain indifferent as the quantity of good x increases. Different types of indifference curves: perfect substitution, perfect complements. The slope of the indifference curve = the slope of the budget line. In utility approach: mux/px = muy/py, mux/muy = px/py, mrs = px/py. Comparative statics: compare between two equilibrium points.

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