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Chapter The theory of consumer choice David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000 Power Point presentation by Peter Smith Four key elements in consumer choice Consumer’s income Prices of goods Consumer preferences The assumption that consumers maximize utility 6.2 The budget line Consider a student with a budget of £50 to spend on meals and films A B Films Income and prices together determine the combinations of the goods that the consumer can afford The budget line separates the affordable from the unaffordable G C D E F 0 10 12 Meals Price of meals is £5; price of films is £10 6.3 Modelling consumer preferences Quantity of films Assume the consumer prefers more to less Compared with point “a”: – c a – b the consumer would prefer to be to the north-east e.g at “c” but prefers “a” to such points as “b” to the south-west Quantity of meals 6.4 Quantity of films Modelling consumer preferences (2) “a” is preferred to all points in the dominated region Preferred region d c a b Dominated region e but the consumer would prefer any point in the preferred region to “a” points like “d” and “e” involve more of one good and less of the other compared with “a” Quantity of meals 6.5 Quantity of films Modelling consumer preferences (3) An indifference curve like U2U2 shows all the consumption bundles that yield the same utility to the consumer U2 – U2 Quantity of meals – – ICs slope downwards (given our assumptions) their slope gets steadily flatter to the right ICs cannot intersect 6.6 The consumer’s choice Quantity of films The point at which utility is maximized is found by bringing together the ICs and the budget line U U1 B U3 The choice point is at C where the budget line is at a tangent to an IC C E BL U3 U1U2 Points B and E are also affordable but give lower utility, being on a lower IC Quantity of meals 6.7 Adjustment to an income change A change in the consumer’s income shifts the budget line without changing the slope the change in the pattern of consumer choice depends on the nature of the two goods 6.8 Films Normal goods BL1 When both goods are NORMAL, an increase in income induces a new choice point at C': U2 U1 BL0 C' The quantity demanded of each good increases C U2 U1 Meals 6.9 An inferior good and a normal good Films BL1 BL0 U1 U2 When “meals” is an inferior good the increase in income takes the consumer from C to C' The quantity of meals falls and the quantity of films C' increases C U2 U1 Meals 6.10 Adjustment to a price change An increase in the price of one good shifts the budget line – altering its slope – which reflects relative prices 6.11 An increase in the price of meals (1) Films The increase in price of meals shifts the budget line from BL0 to BL1 BL1 BL0 Meals The increase in price reduces purchasing power 6.12 Films An increase in the price of meals (2) U1 The consumer moves from the original choice point C U2 to a new position at E C U2 E BL1 U1 BL0 Meals Tracing out more of such points at different prices enables us to identify the Demand curve 6.13 Response to a price change The response to a price change comprises two effects: The SUBSTITUTION EFFECT – is the adjustment to the change in relative prices THE INCOME EFFECT – is the adjustment to the change in real income 6.14 The income and substitution effects Films H U1 The consumer moves from C to E U2 D C U2 E H BL1 U1 BL0 Meals The hypothetical budget line HH has the slope of the NEW relative prices and is tangent to the OLD indifference curve 6.15 The substitution effect Films H U1 The SUBSTITUTION U2 EFFECT is from C to D D along U2U2 C U2 E H BL1 U1 BL0 Meals – It is always negative – a price increase leads to a fall in demand 6.16 The income effect Films H U1 The INCOME EFFECT is from D to E U2 – D it reflects the fall in real income at constant relative prices – it may be positive or negative – depending on whether the good is normal or inferior C U2 E H BL1 U1 BL0 Meals 6.17 ... downwards (given our assumptions) their slope gets steadily flatter to the right ICs cannot intersect 6. 6 The consumer’s choice Quantity of films The point at which utility is maximized is found by bringing... goods 6. 8 Films Normal goods BL1 When both goods are NORMAL, an increase in income induces a new choice point at C'': U2 U1 BL0 C'' The quantity demanded of each good increases C U2 U1 Meals 6. 9... increases C U2 U1 Meals 6. 10 Adjustment to a price change An increase in the price of one good shifts the budget line – altering its slope – which reflects relative prices 6. 11 An increase in the

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