ECON-221 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Indifference Curve, Budget Constraint

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An indifference curve is a set of points, each representing a combination of some amount of good x and some amount of good y, that all yield the same amount of total utility. The consumer depicted here is indifferent between bundles a and b, b and c, and a and c. because. More is better , our consumer is unequivocally worse off at a" then a. Properties of indifference curves: when we move along an indifference curve, the amount of utility we gain from an additional good is offset by the loss of utility from the other. The slope of an indifference curve is the ratio of the marginal utility of x to the marginal utility of y, and it is negative. This was defined earlier as the marginal rate of substitution. Slope becomes less steep because of diminishing marginal utility and the that mrs is = slope of indifference curve.

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