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Chapter Consumer Choice Chapter Four Overview The Budget Constraint Consumer Choice Duality Some Applications Revealed Preference Chapter Four Key Definitions Budget Set: • The set of baskets that are affordable Budget Constraint: • The set of baskets that the consumer may purchase given the limits of the available income Budget Line: • The set of baskets that one can purchase when spending all available income PxX + PyY = I Chapter Four The Budget Constraint Assume only two goods available: X and Y • Price of x: Px ; Price of y: Py • Income: I Total expenditure on basket (X,Y): PxX + PyY The Basket is Affordable if total expenditure does not exceed total Income: PXX + PYY ≤ I Chapter Four A Budget Constraint Example Two goods available: X and Y I = $10 Px = $1 Py = $2 All income spent on X → I/Px units of X bought All income spent on Y → I/Py units of X bought Budget Line 1: 1X + 2Y = 10 Or Y = – X/2 Slope of Budget Line = -Px/Py = -1/2 Chapter Four A Budget Constraint Example Y I/PY= Budget line = BL1 A • -PX/PY = -1/2 B •C • I/PX = 10 Chapter Four X Budget Constraint • Location of budget line shows what the income level is • Increase in Income will shift the budget line to the right – More of each product becomes affordable • Decrease in Income will shift the budget line to the left – less of each product becomes affordable Chapter Four A Budget Constraint Example Y I = $12 PX = $1 PY = $2 Shift of a budget line If income rises, the budget line shifts parallel to the right (shifts out) Y = - X/2 … BL2 If income falls, the budget line shifts parallel to the left (shifts in) BL2 BL1 10 Chapter Four 12 X Budget Constraint • Location of budget line shows what the income level is • Increase in Income will shift the budget line to the right – More of each product becomes affordable • Decrease in Income will shift the budget line to the left – less of each product becomes affordable Chapter Four A Budget Constraint Example Y Rotation of a budget line If the price of X rises, the budget line gets steeper and the horizontal intercept shifts in I = $10 PX = $1 BL1 PY = $3 If the price of X falls, the budget line gets flatter and the horizontal intercept shifts out Y = 3.33 - X/3 … BL2 3.3 BL2 10 Chapter Four X Interior Consumer Optimum Y Example 50X + 200Y = I 2.5 • 10 U = 25 Chapter Four X Equal Slope Condition MUx/Px = MUy/Py “At the optimal basket, each good gives equal bang for the buck” Now, we have two equations to solve for two unknowns (quantities of X and Y in the optimal basket): MUx/Px = MUY/PY PxX + PyY = I Chapter Four Contained Optimization What are the equations that the optimal consumption basket must fulfill if we want to represent the consumer’s choice among three goods? • MUX / XP = MUY / PY is an example of “marginal reasoning” to maximize • PX X + PY Y = I reflects the “constraint” Chapter Four Contained Optimization U(F,C) = FC PF = $1/unit PC = $2/unit I = $12 Solve for optimal choice of food and clothing Chapter Four Some Concepts Corner Points: One good is not being consumed at all – Optimal basket lies on the axis Composite Goods: A good that represents the collective expenditure on every other good except the commodity being considered Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Duality The mirror image of the original (primal) constrained optimization problem is called the dual problem Min PxX + PyY (X,Y) subject to: U(X,Y) = U* where: U* is a target level of utility If U* is the level of utility that solves the primal problem, then an interior optimum, if it exists, of the dual problem also solves the primal problem Chapter Four Optimal Choice Y Example: Expenditure Minimization • Optimal Choice (interior solution) U = U* Decreases in expenditure level PXX + PYY = E* Chapter Four X Optimal Choice Y Example: Expenditure Minimization 50X + 200Y = E 25 = XY (constraint) Y/X = 1/4 (tangency condition) 2.5 • 10 Chapter Four U = 25 X Revealed Preference Suppose that preferences are not known Can we infer them from purchasing behavior? If A purchased, it must be preferred to all other affordable bundles Chapter Four Revealed Preference Suppose that preferences are “standard” – then: All baskets to the Northeast of A must be preferred to A This gives us a narrower range over which indifference curve must lie This type of analysis is called revealed preference analysis Chapter Four ... the commodity being considered Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Some Concepts Chapter Four Duality The mirror... in the marketplace.” Chapter Four Interior Consumer Optimum Y • B Preference Direction • •C Optimal Choice (interior solution) IC BL Chapter Four X Interior Consumer Optimum Chapter Four Interior... Line 1: 20X + 40Y = 800 Or Y = 20 – X/2 Slope of Budget Line = -Px/Py = -1/2 Chapter Four A Budget Constraint Example Chapter Four Consumer Choice Assume: Only non-negative quantities "Rational”