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Preferences

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Preferences. Preference Relation. The consumer strictly prefers bundle ... Q: What do these two relations imply? How are the ... Satiation. Well-behaved ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preferences


1
Preferences
2
Preference Relation
  • The consumer strictly prefers bundle X to bundle
    Y
  • The consumer is indifferent between X and Y

3
Weak Preference
  • If
  • or
  • Then

4
How are the relations related?
  • Q What do these two relations imply?

5
How are the relations related?
  • A The consumer is indifferent between X and Y

6
Assumption I Complete Preferences
  • For any two bundles X and Y
  • X preferred to Y
  • Y preferred to X
  • Indifference

7
Assumption II Reflexive
  • Any bundle X is at least as good as itself

8
Assumption III Transitive
  • If
  • And
  • Then

9
Indifference curves
  • Indifference curve
  • Weakly preferred set

10
Q Can indifference curves cross?

11
Perfect substitutes
12
Perfect complements
13
Satiation
14
Well-behaved preferences
  • Lets impose some extra assumptions to rule out
    less interesting situations
  • Well-behaved preferences satisfy two properties
  • Monotonicity
  • Convexity

15
Monotonicity
  • Consider two bundles
  • where Y has at least as much of both goods
    and more of one.
  • Then
  • Monotonicity implies that indifference curves
    have negative slopes

16
Indifference curves have negative slopes
17
Convexity
  • Consider two bundles
  • Convexity implies that, for

18
Convex preferences
19
Non-convex preferences
20
Marginal rate of substitution
  • The MRS is the slope of the indifference curve at
    a point
  • MRSderivative of indifference curve

21
Interpretation of MRS
  • The MRS measures the rate at which the consumer
    is willing to substitute one good for the other.
  • If good 2 is measured in dollars, the MRS
    measures the consumers willingness to pay for an
    extra unit of good 1.
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