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Ch 4. The Theory of Individual Behavior

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Title: Ch 4. The Theory of Individual Behavior


1
Ch 4. The Theory of Individual Behavior
2
Consumer Behavior
  • Assume 2 goods exist in the economy.
  • Assume a consumer is able to order his or her
    preferences for alternative bundles or
    combinations of goods from best to worst.

3
Consumer Behavior
  • A gt B
  • the consumer prefers bundle A to bundle B.
  • A B
  • the consumers view the two bundles as equally
    satisfying. He or she indifferent between bundles
    A and B.

4
Consumer Behavior
  • The preference ordering is assumed to satisfy
    four basic properties
  • 1. Completeness.
  • 2. More is better.
  • 3. Diminishing marginal rate of
  • substitution.
  • 4. Transitivity.

5
Consumer Behavior
  • Completeness
  • - for any two bundles, say A and B,
  • either A gt B, B gt A, A B.

6
Consumer Behavior
  • More is better
  • - for any two bundles, say A and B,
  • either A gt B, B gt A, A B.
  • Figure 4-1 Page 120.

7
Consumer Behavior
  • Diminishing marginal rate of substitution
  • - As a consumer obtains more of good
  • X, the rate at which he or she is
  • willing to substitute good X for good
  • Y decreases.

8
Consumer Behavior
  • Transitivity
  • - For any three bundles, A, B, and C,
  • if A gt B and B gt C, then A gt C.
  • Similarly A B, and B C, then A - C

9
The Budget Constraint
  • Budget set
  • The bundles of goods a consumer can
  • afford.
  • Px X Py Y equals or less M
  • The budget set.

10
The Budget Constraint
  • Budget line
  • The bundles of goods that exhaust a
  • consumers income.
  • Px X Py Y M
  • The budget line.

11
Changes In Income
  • Changes in income shrink or expand opportunities.
  • Figure 4-5 Page 126.

12
Changes In Prices
  • Figure 4-6 Page 127.

13
Consumer Equilibrium
  • The objective of the consumer is to choose the
    consumption bundle that maximizes his or her
    utility, or satisfaction.
  • Consumer equilibrium
  • The affordable bundle that yields the greatest
    satisfaction to the consumer.
  • Figure 4-8 Page 128.

14
Consumer Equilibrium
  • Consumer equilibrium
  • MRS (Px / Py)
  • MRS marginal rate of substitution
  • Px price of good X
  • Py price of good Y

15
Comparative Statics(Price Changes and Consumer
Behavior)
  • A change in the price of a good will lead to a
    change in the equilibrium consumption bundle.
  • Figure 4-9 Page 130.
  • Change in consumer equilibrium due to a
    decrease in the price of good X (Note that good
    Y is a substitute for good X).

16
Comparative Statics(Price Changes and Consumer
Behavior)
  • Figure 4-10 Page 131.
  • When the price of good X falls, the consumption
    of complementary good Y rises.

17
Comparative Statics(Income Changes and Consumer
Behavior)
  • Figure 4-11 Page 132.
  • An increase in income increases the consumption
    of normal goods.
  • Figure 4-12 Page 133.
  • An increase in income decreases the equilibrium
    consumption of good X (an inferior good).

18
Conceptual and Computational Questions
  • A consumer has 400 to spend on
  • goods X and Y. The market prices of these
    two goods are Px 10 and Py 40.
  • 1.a. Illustrate the consumers opportunity
    set in a
  • carefully labeled diagram.
  • 1.b. Show how the consumers opportunity
    set
  • changes if income increases by 400.
    How
  • does the 400 increases in income
    alter the
  • market rate of substitution between
    goods X
  • and Y?

19
Conceptual and Computational Questions
  • A consumer must divide 250 between the
    consumption of product X and product Y. The
    relevant market prices are Px5 and Py10.
  • 2.a. Write the equation for the consumers
  • budget line.
  • 2.b. Illustrate the consumers opportunity
    set in a
  • carefully labeled diagram.
  • 2.c. Show how the consumers opportunity
    set
  • changes when the price of good X
    increases
  • to 10?

20
Conceptual and Computational Questions
  • A consumer is in equilibrium at point A in the
    accompanying figure (Figure at page 148). The
    price of good X is 5.
  • 3.a. What is the price of good Y?
  • 3.b. What is the consumers income?
  • 3.c. At point A, how many units of good
    X does
  • the consumer purchase?
  • 3.d. Suppose the budget line changes so
    that the
  • consumer achieves a new
    equilibrium at
  • point B. What change in the
    economic
  • environment led to this new
    equilibrium? Is
  • the consumer better off or worse
    off as a
  • result of the price change?
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