ECON 040 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Weighted Arithmetic Mean, Indifference Curve, Giffen Good

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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. If the income effect more than offsets the substitution effect, we have a giffen. Good, for which a decrease in price causes the quantity demanded to fall. Ximing spends his money on rice, a giffen good, and all other goods. Show that when the price of rice falls, ximing buys less rice. Decompose this total effect of a price change on his rice consumption into a substitution effect and an income effect. Compensating variation: the amount of money one would have to give a consumer to offset completely the harm from a price increase. Draw the imaginary budget line, l*, parallel to the new budget line, l2, but tangent to the original (higher) indifference curve, i1.

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