ECON 2010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 31: Budget Constraint, Indifference Curve, Substitute Good

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10 Dec 2016
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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The slope of an indifference curve has a negative marginal rate of substitution. The slope of a budget constraint is the price ratio. Remember: the higher the indifference curves the better. Indifference curves are between perfect compliments and perfect substitutes. The optimum indifference curve is the furthest feasible indifference curve. If income increases, the slope remains the same but the indifference curve shifts out. If the price ratio (slope) of the budget constraint the budget constraint shifts out and optimization changes. This will result in the income effect, price will fall and consumers can afford the bundle plus more normal goods and will buy less inferior goods. The substitution effect will cause the price to fall and consumers will shift their priorities towards cheaper goods. In the example below the price of pepsi decreases and the optimum shifts from a to b. C represents the difference between b and c.

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