ECON 2300 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Quasilinear Utility, Reservation Price, Demand Curve

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15 Apr 2016
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You can buy as much gasoline as you wish at per gallon once you enter the gasoline market. A: you would pay up to the dollar value of the gains-to-trade you would enjoy once in the market. How can such gains-to-trade be measured: three such measures are: (cid:18535) consumer"s surplus (cid:18535) equivalent variation, and (cid:18535) compensating variation. Only in one special circumstance do these three measures coincide. This is not quite the same as the consumer"s demand curve for gasoline. + + for as long as rn - pg > 0. A consumer"s reservation-price curve is not quite the same as her ordinary demand curve. A reservation-price curve describes sequentially the values of successive single units of a commodity. An ordinary demand curve describes the most that would be paid for q units of a commodity purchased simultaneously.

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