ECON 100A Chapter Notes - Chapter 4: Inferior Good, Demand Curve, Giffen Good

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30 Sep 2016
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Price-consumption curve: curve tracing the utility-maximizing combinations of two goods as the price of one changes. Pattern of increasing consumption of good in response to decrease in price almost always holds. Individual demand curve: curve relating quantity of good that single consumer will buy to its price. Level of utility that can be attained changes as we move along the curve: the lower the price of product, the higher the level of utility. At every point on the demand curve, the consumer is maximizing utility by satisfying condition that. Mrs of good a for good b equals ratio of the prices of a and b. Income-consumption curve: curve tracing the utility-maximizing combinations of two goods as consumer"s income changes. Income changes appear as changes in budget line. Curve slopes upward because consumption of two goods increases as income increases. Normal: consumers want to buy more of them as incomes increase: income elasticity of demand is positive, qd increases with income.

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