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Consumer Behavior Representative Consumer • Rationale • Two goods • Consumption bundles
Representative Consumer: • Preferences • Three properties of preferences: 1.More is preferred to less 2.Likes diversity 3.C and L are normal goods
Preferences, Utility function, andIndifference Curves • Utility function • What is an indifference curve? • Properties of indifference curves (derived from properties of preferences).
MRS(l,C), Marginal Rate ofSubstitution of l for C • MRS(l,C) amount of C we would give up to get one additional unit of l (at the margin). • Equal to (-1) times the slope of the indifference curve • Properties:
Consumer Choice • Consumer’s “problem” is to choose the best consumption bundle subject to constraints: – Time constraint – Budget constraint
Income (or “Wealth”) Effects: • “What happens when non-wage income changes?” • Change in non-wage income induces a “pure income (wealth) effect”. • Recall “both goods are normal” assumption… So what is the net effect of Δ(π – T ) > 0 ?
Increase in the real wage rate:Income and substitution effects • Key: w is 1. wage earned on labor hours, but also 2. Price of leisure relative to consumption! • Increase in w increases (w*h + π – T) • Then both goods normal, so… • But w increases price of l relative to C, so… • Conclusion: Consumption must rise, but leisure may rise or fall.
Increase in the real wage rate:Income and substitution effects
Labor Supply Curve • Ns(w) = h – l(w) • What is the effect of an increase in non-wage income? (dividends or lump-sum taxes)
Production of Goods • What are goods good for? • “Technology”: the Production Function: Y = zF( K, Nd ) – K and Nd are inputs or “factors of production”. – z is total factor productivity. • K is determined by past investment • Nd may be varied in the short run.
Marginal Products, MPN • Marginal product of labor (MPN) is the amount of additional output produced by adding an additional unit of Nd (holding K fixed).
Marginal Products, MPK • Marginal product of capital (MPK) is the amount of additional output produced by adding an additional unit of K (holding Nd fixed).
Cobb-Douglas Production Fn • Y = zKa (Nd)b
Assumptions about the productionfunction • 1. Constant returns to scale (CRS) Increasing production fn: • 2. ↑K or ↑Nd causes ↑Y Equivalent statement: MPN>0, MPK>0, Diminishing marginal products: • 3. MPN decreases as N increases. • 4. MPK decreases as K increases. Complementarities in production: • 5. MPN increases as K increases (and MPK increases as N increases).
Complementarities in prod’n: • 5. MPN increases as K increases (and MPK increases as N increases).
Figure 4.17 Adding Capital Increases the Marginal Product of Labor
What’s z? • Total factor productivity represents level of technology or efficiency in prod’n. Examples of z changes – technological advance, discovery of new techniques,etc. – Random economic shocks (weather) – Inefficiency induced by gov’t regulation – Energy price shocks
Figure 4.19 Effect of an Increase in Total Factor Productivity on the Marginal Product of Labor
The Objective of the Firm is… MAXIMIZE PROFIT! Profit is... – Revenue minus costs: • π = Y – w*Nd= zF( K, Nd ) – w*Nd
Cobb-Douglas Production fn andthe Solow Residual • Y = zKa (Nd)b • – Exhibits CRS if b = 1 – a • Theory says that share of Y paid to labor should be 1-a: 1 – a = w*N / Y • Looking at data, set 1 – a = .64 (a = .36). • The “Solow residual” is measure of TFP (z) obtained this way: • z = Y / ( K.36 (Nd).64 )