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Chapter 3 Preferences Key Concept: characterize preferences by a binary comparison measuring at least as good as . Derive the indifference curves for a given preference. The marginal rate of substitution (MRS) measures the marginal willingness to pay for x in terms of y. Chapter 3 Preferences
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Chapter 3 Preferences • Key Concept: characterize preferences by a binary comparison measuring at least as good as. • Derive the indifference curves for a given preference. • The marginal rate of substitution (MRS)measures the marginal willingness to pay for x in terms of y.
Chapter 3 Preferences • Choose the “best” thing one can “afford.” • How do you find the best?
Through cat-cat binary comparisons, we can find the cutest cat.
A binary relation : w • (x1, x2) w (y1, y2) • (x1, x2) is at least as good as (y1, y2)
(x1, x2) w (y1, y2) • This binary relation w is complete and transitive.
Complete • every two bundles can be compared • for any (x1, x2), (y1, y2) • either (x1, x2) w (y1, y2) • (y1, y2) w (x1, x2) or • both
Transitive • for any (x1, x2), (y1, y2), (z1, z2) • if (x1, x2) w (y1, y2) and (y1, y2) w (z1, z2) • then (x1, x2) w (z1, z2)
From this binary relation w, one can derive two other binary relations s and i.
(x1, x2) s (y1, y2) if and only if (x1, x2) w (y1, y2) and it is not the case that (y1, y2) w (x1, x2). • Read this as the consumer strictly prefers (x1, x2) to (y1, y2).
(x1, x2) i (y1, y2) if and only if (x1, x2) w (y1, y2) and (y1, y2) w (x1, x2). • Read this as the consumer is indifferent between (x1, x2) and (y1, y2).
Given a binary relation w and for (x1, x2), can list all the bundles that are at least as good as it -- the weakly preferred set. • Similarly, can list all the bundles for which the consumer is indifferent to it -- the indifference curve.
We don’t need to use the idea of utility. • Preferences are enough.
Perfect substitutes • ten dollar coins and five dollar coins
Perfect complements • left shoe and right shoe
Satiation • smart and tall
Useful assumptions • Monotonicity: • the more, the better • if x1≥ y1, x2≥ y2 and (x1, x2) ≠ (y1, y2), then (x1, x2) s (y1, y2) • This implies indifference curves have negative slopes (examine).
Convexity • Averages are preferred to extremes. • if (y1, y2) w (x1, x2) and (z1, z2) w (x1, x2), then for any weight t between 0 and 1, (ty1+(1-t)z1, ty2+(1-t)z2) w (x1, x2)
We often assume it to get an interior solution instead of a corner solution.
Strict convexity: obviously stronger than convexity. • if (y1, y2) w (x1, x2), (z1, z2) w (x1, x2), and (y1, y2) ≠ (z1, z2), • then for any weight t strictly in between 0 and 1, • (ty1+(1-t)z1, ty2+(1-t)z2) s (x1, x2)
Strict convexity rules out preferences such as the perfect substitute type.
To describe preferences, a useful way is to calculate the marginal rate of substitution (MRS).
The MRS measures the rate at which the consumer is “just” willing to substitute one thing for the other. • Specify which for which and is evaluated where.
MRS1, 2 • for a little of good 1, the amount of good 2 that the consumer is willing to give up to stay indifferent about this change • ∆x2/ ∆x1
The MRS1, 2 at a point is the slope of the indifference curve at that point (to stay put) and measures the marginal willingness to pay for good 1 in terms of good 2. • If good 2 is money, then it is often called the marginal willingness to pay.
Useful assumption • diminishing MRS • when you have more of x1, it can substitute for x2 less
Chapter 3 Preferences • Key Concept: characterize preferences by a binary comparison measuring at least as good as. • Derive the indifference curves for a given preference. • The marginal rate of substitution (MRS)measures the marginal willingness to pay for x in terms of y.