Title: Theory of Consumer Choice
1Chapter 21
- Theory of Consumer Choice
- Ratna K. Shrestha
2Theory of Consumer Choice
- ... addresses the following questions and
links them in understanding - How do wages affect labor supply?
- How do interest rates affect household saving?
- Do the poor prefer to receive cash or in-kind
transfers?
3The Budget Constraint
- Shows what combination of goods the consumer can
afford given his income and the prices of the two
goods. - Assume I 1000
- Ppizza 10
- Ppepsi 2
4The Budget Constraint
Pepsi (2)
- I 1000
- Ppizza 10 Ppepsi 2
- I PpizzaPizza PpepsiPepsi
- Assume Pizza X and Pepsi Y, then rewriting
- Y I/PY PX/PY X
B
500
A
Pizza (10)
100
5The Budget Constraint
Pepsi (2)
Any point on the budget constraint line equals
1,000, the income available to spend on the two
products.
B
500
Slope Ppizza /Ppepsi 10/2 5
C
250
A
Pizza (10)
50
100
6Preferences
- Indifference curves illustrate consumers
preference between different bundles of goods and
services. - An indifference curve depicts bundles of goods
that make the consumer equally well-off. It
shows the combinations of goods that give the
consumer the same level of utility. - In the next slide, the levels of utility that the
consumer can derive from three bundles A or B or
C, which are on the same curve, are equal. - The bundle D provides higher utility than bundle
A, B or C.
7Indifference Curves
Pepsi
.
Utility I2 gt Utility I1
C
.
.
.
B
D
I2
I1
A
Pizza
8Indifference Curves
Pepsi
.
Slope between points A and B (MRS). Tradeoff
between the two bundles.
C
.
.
.
B
D
I2
I1
A
Pizza
9Marginal Rate of Substitution
- The rate at which consumers are willing to trade
one good for another is called the marginal rate
of substitution (MRS). - MRS measures how many Pepsi you have to
sacrifice to get one more Pizza and be equally
well off as before. - MRS ?Pepsi / ?Pizza
10Properties of Indifference Curves
- Higher indifference curves are preferred to lower
ones. - Indifference curves are downward sloping.
- Indifference curves do not cross.
- Indifference curves are bowed inward.
11(1) Higher indifference curves are preferred to
lower ones
Properties of Indifference Curves
- Because consumers prefer more consumption to
less, higher indifference curves are preferred to
lower ones. - Indifference curves farther from the origin
represent higher levels of well-being or utility.
12Indifference Curves
Pepsi
At both B and D, you have equal Pepsi. But at D
you have more Pizza ? I2 gt I1
.
C
.
.
D
.
B
I2 gt I1
I1
A
Pizza
13Properties of Indifference Curves
- (2) Indifference curves are downward sloping
- The fact that the consumer is willing to give up
one of the goods only if he/she is given some
more of the other good results in the
indifference curve being downward sloping.
- (3) Indifference curves do not cross
- In order for preference rankings to be
consistent, indifference curves cannot intersect
or cross. - If indifference curves were to cross the
assumption that more is preferred to less would
be violated.
14Indifference curves do not cross.
Properties of Indifference Curves
C
A
B
0
15(4) Indifference curves are bowed inward.
Properties of Indifference Curves
When Pizza 2, you give up 6 Pepsi to have one
more pizza. But when Pizza 6, you give up only
1 Pepsi to have one more pizza.
0
16Perfect Substitutes
Nickels
6
Nickel and dimes are perfect substitutes 2
Nickel 1 dime all the time.
4
2
I3
I2
I1
Dimes
3
2
1
17Perfect Complements
Left Shoes
I2
1
I1
Right Shoes
1
18Consumers Optimal Choice
Pepsi
Consumers indifference curves, based on
personal preferences.
I3
I2
I1
Pizza
19Consumers Optimal Choice
Pepsi
Budget constraint.
B
At both A and B you spend the same income. Which
point will you choose?
A
I3
I2 gt I1
I1
Pizza
20Consumers Optimal Choice
Pepsi
.
Optimal Choice
QPepsi
I3
I2
I1
Pizza
QPizza
21Consumers Optimal Choice
- The point at which the indifference curve and the
budget constraint touch (i.e. are tangent)
maximizes consumers utility for the given
income. - That is, consumer chooses the two goods so that
the marginal rate of substitution equals the
relative price (or Price Ratio).
22An Increase in Income...
Initial optimum
Initial budget constraint
I1
0
23An Inferior Good...
Quantity
of Pepsi
Initial optimum
Initial budget constraint
I1
Quantity
0
of Pizza
24A Change in Price...
I 1000 PPepsi 2 to 1 PPizza 10
Quantity of Pepsi
1,000
B
500
A
Initial budget constraint
Quantity of Pizza
100
0
25Income and Substitution Effects
- The price effect can be divided into
- an income effect
- a substitution effect
26Income and Substitution Effects...
Initial optimum
A
I1
Initial budget constraint
Quantity of Pizza
0
27 Deriving demand curve The Consumers Optimal
choices when Ppepsi falls from 2 to 1 (say I
200)
Quantity of Pepsi
Price of Pepsi
A
B
2
150
I2
New budget constraint
B
1
A
50
I1
0
0
Quantity of Pizza
Quantity of Pepsi
50
150
Initial budget constraint
28Applications(1) How do increase in wages
affect labor supply?
29Work-Leisure Decision...
Consumption
Available hour 100 w 50 The optimum
work-leisure choice is where BL is tangent to ID
curve.
5,000
Optimum
3,000
I3
2,000
I2
I1
Hours of Leisure
0
100
60
40
30An Increase in the Wage...
(a) Stronger preferences for consumption
(substitution effectgt Income effect)
the labor supply curve slopes upward.
Wage
Consumption
S
B
B
I2
A
BC1
A
BC2
I1
0
0
Hours of Labor Supplied
Hours of Leisure
31An Increase in the Wage...
(b) Stronger preferences for leisure (Income
effectgtSubstitution effect)
Wage
. .the labor supply curve slopes backward.
Consumption
BC2
B
B
A
A
I2
BC1
I1
0
0
Hours of Labor Supplied
Hours of Leisure
32(2) How do interest rates affect household
saving?
- An increase in the interest rate could either
encourage or discourage saving.
33Consumption-Saving Decision...
Consumption
Budget constraint
when Old
110,000
Optimum
55,000
I3
I2
I1
Consumption
0
50,000
100,000
when Young
34An Increase in the Interest Rate...
(a) Higher Interest Rate Raises Saving
(b) Higher Interest Rate Lowers Saving
Consumption when Old
Consumption when Old
BC2
BC2
B
B
I2
BC1
A
I2
BC1
A
I1
I1
Consumption when young
0
0
Consumption when Young
35(3) Cash Vs. In Kind Transfer
36Cash versus In-Kind Transfers...
(a) The Constraint Is Not Binding
Cash Transfer
In-Kind Transfer
Food
Food
(with 1,000 cash)
BC2
BC2
(with 1,000 food stamps)
BC1
BC1
B
B
I2
I2
1,000
1,000
A
A
I1
I1
0
0
Nonfood
Nonfood
Consumption
Consumption
37Cash versus In-Kind Transfers...
(b) The Constraint Is Binding
Cash Transfer
In-Kind Transfer
Food
Food
BC2
(with 1,000 cash)
BC2
(with 1,000 food stamps)
BC1
BC1
I3
I2
I1
1,000
1,000
B
C
B
A
A
I2
I1
0
0
Nonfood
Nonfood
Consumption
Consumption