ECON 230D1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Indifference Curve, Normal Good, Inferior Good

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Chapter 5 consumer theory: deriving demand curves. Income-consumption curve: how consumption changes when income changes holding prices constant. Increasing income shifts the budget curve to the right, increasing the size of the opportunity set: engle curve relationship between quantity demanded and income. Income and substitution effects with an inferior good. If a good is inferior, the income effect and the substitution effect move in opposite directions: for most inferior goods, the income effect is smaller than the substitution effect. It is a contrast to a necessity good, for which demand increases proportionally less than income: the veblen good snob status, upward-sloping, people buy more when the price increases. Ja(cid:272)kie"s ea(cid:396)(cid:374)ed i(cid:374)(cid:272)o(cid:373)e e(cid:395)ual: wh: budget line, l1 y = w1h, y = w1(24-n, the negative wage rate is equal to the marginal rate of transformation. If the supply curve is backward sloping then a decrease in wage will prompt more working hours in a day (work is an inferior good)

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