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CONTENTS
Preferences ............................................................................................................................................................... 2
Welfare ..................................................................................................................................................................... 4
BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
• To draw a budget constraint, find the following points, the intercepts, where the consumer spends all of
his or her money on one good, and connect!
o I/Px = X intercept
o I/Py = Y intercept
o Slope is – Px/Py
The slope is the market exchange rate for the two goods
• A subsidy for one good will shift the BC to the right/up that amount
• A quantity discount will make the good relatively cheaper, so slope BC and intercept(s) change accordingly
• A limit on consumption (rationing) will look like a vertical or horizontal line at the limit
PREFERENCES
Ordinal Utility emphasizes the ordering of bundles of goods. We don’t care how much more bundle A is liked over
bundle B, but we know that we prefer A to B.
Cardinal Utility means that we get a certain amount of utility (happiness) from different bundles of goods, and we
care about making comparisons between goods to the extent we can say that Ernesto likes bundle A twice as much
as bundle B. Bundles can be ranked. (U(x,y) =…)
Indifference Curves:
• The slope at any point on an indifference curve is the marginal rate of substitution between the two
goods.
o MRS = -MUx/MUy
o To find marginal utility, calculate ∆x/∆u
o To find the optimal consumption bundle, set –Px/Py = MRS = -MUx/MUy
At this point, the individuals willingness to substitute one good for another is equal to
the market’s, so he she doesn’t have any incentive to move!
• Indifference curves cannot cross, duh
• Perfect Substitutes means that we are indifferent between the two goods, like Coke and Pepsi. For
perfect substitutes watch out for corner solutions. Indifference curves are straight lines.
• Perfect Complements means that we only consume two goods in fixed quantities, and get no extra utility
outside of this ratio. Indifference curves are 90 degree angles.
• When we throw a bad into the mix indifference curves are usually positively sloped
• A neutral good means the consumer is completely indifferent about its consumption, so indifference
curves are either vertical or horizontal lines, pointing towards the good we care about
• In the case of satiation, consuming too much or too little of a good takes away from utility, so we have a
bliss point, or satiation point.
• Monotonicity means that more is better!
CONSUMER CHOICE
The optimization principle says that we like to maximize utility within the constraints of our budget. We look
to reach the highest indifference curve based on our budget constraint. Again, to do this set the MRS = -Px/Py
When given a utility function and good prices, to find the optimal consumption bundle:
1) find the BC by calculating –Px/Py. This is the market’s rate of substitution
2) The equation for the BC is Y = -Px/Py(X) + (Py/I)
3) Find the consumer’s MRS by calculating MUx/MUy. It is easiest to take the derivative with respect to
the appropriate term to get marginal utility
4) Set MRS = -Px/Py, and solve for either X or Y.
5) Plug value back into any equation to get quantity of other good
• Marshellian Demand
• Hicksian Demand: holds utility constant
• Slutsky Equation: total change in demand equals the substitution plus the income effect. Give the
consumer enough money to get back to the original bundle
o I like to think that the substitution effect moves along the indifference curve
o And the income effect jumps up or down to a different indifference curve
• Hicks substitution effect: keeps utility constant. Give the consumer enough money to get back to his
original level of utility. So hicksian demand is compensated demand.
• The income expansion path is a plot of optimal choices given an increase in income and constant prices.
For normal goods it is a positively sloped line.
• An Engel Curve is a graph showing demand as a function of income. So if we demand more as income
increases, (prices held constant) the slope is positive.
• Elasticity is how sensitive demand is to a change in price.
o Elasticity = p∆q/q∆p
o Inelastic means that the curve is steeper, and a change in price has little affect on demand
o Elastic means that demand is very sensitive to a change in price, and the curve is flatter. Unit
elasticity is when elasticity = 1 (negative sign is implied)
o When we look at Elasticity of Substitution, which is the change in demand of one good / the
change in price of another, we can figure out good types
A positive elasticity of substitution means that demand for one good is increasing as the
price of the other increases, (or demand is decreasing as the price of the other
decrease) so we have substitutes
A negative elasticity of substitution means that demand for one good is increasing while
price for the other is decreasing, or demand for one good is decreasing when the price
of the other good is increasing, so we have complements
• A normal good is a good for which demand increases with an increase in income
• An inferior good is a good for which demand decreases as income increases.
• A giffen good is an inferior good for which demand increases when price increases (Irish potato famine)
• A luxury good is one for which demand increases at a higher rate than income
• A necessity is a good for which demand increases at a smaller rate than income
WELFARE
• Compensating Variation: how much income do we have to give someone to compensate them for a
change in price? (so they are just as well off, ie tangent to same indifference curve)
• Equivalent Variation: how much would the consumer be willing to pay to avoid the price change?
• Consumer Surplus: area under the demand curve, about the price. The willingness to pay is the demand
curve.
INTERTEMPORAL CHOICE
- the tradeoff between consumption now and at a later date
- To graph inertemporal budget constraint:
o First find the endowment point, or the point of consumption for which there is no lending or
borrowing.
o The x intercept, or present value of current and future money, is m1 + m2/1+r
o The y intercept, or future value of current and future moolah, is (1+r)m1 + m2
o Slope of budget line is –(1+r)
If the interest rate increases then we are better off saving for the future (we earn more
interest on our savings, so present consumption is more expensive) lenders are better
off
If the interest rate decreases then we are better off spending our money in the present
(we pay less in the present to borrow money in the future) borrowers are better off
• PDV: present discounted value?
• A bond is basically a way for the government to borrow money from the people. The borrower must pay
a coupon each period, and finally, the face value of the bond on the maturation date
• A perpetuity is a type of bond that doesn’t have a maturation date. The payments are made forever!
• The no arbitrage condition says that all assets must sell for their present value.
o P0 = p1/(1+r)
• Hotelling’s Rule says that… uhh I have no clue!
• Hyperbolic Discounting takes into account the fact that people value payment at a future time less than in
the present, and suggests that the discount factor is 1/(1+kt)
Aggregation of Demand
- just add up demand curves horizontally! So add up the demands at each price to get the aggregate curve
Public Goods:
Externalities:
Income Taxation:
Elasticity of Substitution:
Production Functions:
Complements: min{x1, x2}
Substitutes: x1 + x2
a b
Cobb Douglas Production Function: Ax x
Returns to Scale:
Multiply input by a factor of a, and see what happens. There are constant, increasing, and decreasing
returns to scale. Constant returns to scale means that long run maximum profits are zero.
Profits = pq – wL – rK
So Costs = wL + rK
Fixed Costs: Like a lump sum, do not depend on how much output is produced
Variable Costs: Vary by level of output. In the short run, if we have a fixed cost, then we take the L value at
that cost, and not the value from the isocost curve
CHAPTER 20: COST MINIMIZATION
Costs = wL + rK
Isocost Line: K = C/r –w/r(L)
• Slope = -w/r
• Intercepts = C/K, C/L
• At minimum cost, -MP1/MP2 = TRS = -w/r
• Isocost lines are usually linear, isoquants are convex
AC = TC/q
CHAPTER 21: COST CURVES
Total Costs = VC + FC
MC = derivative of cost function. ∆c/∆q. Passes through min of AC and AVC curves
MC = TC(x1) – TC(x2) / x2 – x1
AFC = FC/q (decrease with output)
CHAPTER 22: FIRM SUPPLY
If P < AVC then firm cannot cover fixed costs = shut down
If P = AVC then firm is indifferent between shutting down and producing nothing, because can still cover fixed costs
Profits = pq – AC(q)*q
If Demand = a – by
Then MR = a – 2by
Operates where MR = MC, then jumps to w on supply curve. So not employing enough, because would have to
increase wage to employ more.