Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best...

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Chapter 2 Budget Constraint

Transcript of Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best...

Page 1: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

Chapter 2Budget Constraint

Page 2: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Consumption Theory

Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford.

In this chapter, we examine how to describe what a consumer can afford: the budget constraint, and budget set.

What is best for a consumer, or the preference on the possible consumption bundles, will be discussed in the next chapter.

Page 3: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints

A consumption bundle containing x1 units of commodity 1, x2 units of commodity 2 and so on up to xn units of commodity n is denoted by the vector (x1, x2, … , xn).

Commodity prices are p1, p2, … , pn.

Page 4: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints

Q: When is a consumption bundle (x1, … , xn) affordable at prices p1, … , pn?

A: When total expenditure is smaller than income: p1x1 + … + pnxn mwhere m is the consumer’s (disposable) income.

That is, the consumer’s affordable consumption bundles are those that don’t cost more than m.

Page 5: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints

The bundles that are only just affordable form the consumer’s budget constraint. This is the set

{ (x1,…,xn) | x1 0, …, xn and p1x1 + … + pnxn m }.

Page 6: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints

The consumer’s budget set is the set of all affordable bundles;B(p1, … , pn, m) ={ (x1, … , xn) | x1 0, … , xn 0 and p1x1 + … + pnxn m }

The budget constraint is the upper boundary of the budget set.

Page 7: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set and Constraint for Two Commodities

x2

x1

Budget constraint isp1x1 + p2x2 = m.

m /p1

m /p2

Page 8: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set and Constraint for Two Commodities

x2

x1

Budget constraint isp1x1 + p2x2 = m.

m /p2

m /p1

Page 9: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set and Constraint for Two Commodities

x2

x1

Budget constraint isp1x1 + p2x2 = m.

m /p1

Just affordable

m /p2

Page 10: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set and Constraint for Two Commodities

x2

x1

Budget constraint isp1x1 + p2x2 = m.

m /p1

Just affordableNot affordable

m /p2

Page 11: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set and Constraint for Two Commodities

x2

x1

Budget constraint isp1x1 + p2x2 = m.

m /p1

Affordable

Just affordableNot affordable

m /p2

Page 12: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set and Constraint for Two Commodities

x2

x1

Budget constraint isp1x1 + p2x2 = m.

m /p1

BudgetSet

the collection of all affordable bundles.

m /p2

Page 13: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set and Constraint for Two Commodities

x2

x1

p1x1 + p2x2 = m is x2 = -(p1/p2)x1 + m/p2

so slope is -p1/p2.

m /p1

BudgetSet

m /p2

Page 14: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraint for Three Commodities

x2

x1

x3

m /p2

m /p1

m /p3

p1x1 + p2x2 + p3x3 = m

Page 15: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Set for Three Commodities

x2

x1

x3

m /p2

m /p1

m /p3

{ (x1,x2,x3) | x1 0, x2 0, x3 0 and p1x1 + p2x2 + p3x3 m}

Page 16: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints For n = 2 and x1 on the horizontal axis,

the constraint’s slope is -p1/p2. What does it mean?

Holding income m constant, increasing x1 by 1 unit must reduce x2 by p1/p2 units.

21

2

12 p

mx

p

px

Page 17: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraintsx2

x1

Slope is -p1/p2

+1

-p1/p2

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Budget Constraintsx2

x1

+1

-p1/p2

Opp. cost of an extra unit of commodity 1 is p1/p2 units foregone of commodity 2.

Page 19: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraintsx2

x1

The opp. cost of an extra unit of commodity 2 is p2/p1 units foregone of commodity 1.

-p2/p1

+1

Page 20: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Sets & Constraints as Income or Price Changes The budget constraint and budget

set depend upon prices and income. When prices and incomes change,

the set of goods that a consumer can afford changes as well. How do these changes affect the budget constraint and budget set?

Page 21: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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How do the budget set and budget constraint change as income m increases?

Originalbudget set

x2

x1

Page 22: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Higher income gives more choice

Originalbudget set

New affordable consumptionchoices

x2

x1

Original andnew budgetconstraints areparallel (sameslope).

Page 23: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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How do the budget set and budget constraint change as income m decreases?

Originalbudget set

x2

x1

Page 24: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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How do the budget set and budget constraint change as income m decreases?x2

x1

New, smallerbudget set

Consumption bundlesthat are no longeraffordable.Old and new

constraintsare parallel.

Page 25: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Income Changes Increases in income m shift the constraint

outward in a parallel manner, thereby enlarging the budget set and improving choice.

Decreases in income m shift the constraint inward in a parallel manner, thereby shrinking the budget set and reducing choice.

The slope –p1 / p2 does not change.

Page 26: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Income Changes When income increases, no original

choice is lost and new choices are added, so higher income cannot make a consumer worse off.

When income decreases, a consumer may (typically will) be worse off, as one can no longer afford some of the bundles anymore.

Page 27: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Price Changes What happens to the budget

constraint and budget set if one of the prices changes?

For example, consider a situation in which p1 decreases while p2 and income remain unchanged.

Page 28: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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How do the budget set and budget constraint change as p1 decreases?

Originalbudget set

x2

x1

m/p2

m/p1’ m/p1”

-p1’/p2

Page 29: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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How do the budget set and budget constraint change as p1 decreases?

Originalbudget set

x2

x1

m/p2

m/p1’ m/p1”

New affordable choices

-p1’/p2

Page 30: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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How do the budget set and budget constraint change as p1 decreases?

Originalbudget set

x2

x1

m/p2

m/p1’ m/p1”

New affordable choices

Budget constraint pivots; slope flattens from -p1’/p2 to -p1”/p2

-p1’/p2

-p1”/p2

Page 31: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Price Changes Reducing the price of one commodity pivots

the constraint outward. No old choice is lost and new choices are added, so reducing one price cannot make the consumer worse off.

Similarly, increasing one price pivots the constraint inwards, reduces choice and may (typically will) make the consumer worse off.

Page 32: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Tax and Subsidy Quantity/per-unit tax: price increases

from p to p+t. Quantity/per-unit subsidy: price

decreases from p to p-s. Ad valorem/value tax: price increases

from p to (1+t)p. Ad valorem/value subsidy: price

decreases from p to (1-s)p.

Page 33: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Uniform Ad Valorem Sales Taxes A uniform sales tax levied at rate t

on all goods changes the constraint from p1x1 + p2x2 = mto (1+t)p1x1 + (1+t)p2x2 = mi.e. p1x1 + p2x2 = m/(1+t).

Page 34: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Uniform Ad Valorem Sales Taxesx2

x1

mp2

mp1

p1x1 + p2x2 = m

Page 35: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Uniform Ad Valorem Sales Taxesx2

x1

mp2

mp1

p1x1 + p2x2 = m

p1x1 + p2x2 = m/(1+t)

mt p( )1 1

mt p( )1 2

Page 36: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Uniform Ad Valorem Sales Taxesx2

x1

mt p( )1 2

mp2

mt p( )1 1

mp1

Equivalent income lossis

mmt

ttm

1 1

Page 37: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Uniform Ad Valorem Sales Taxesx2

x1

mt p( )1 2

mp2

mt p( )1 1

mp1

A uniform ad valoremsales tax levied at rate tis equivalent to an incometax levied at rate t

t1.

Page 38: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Lump-Sum Tax and Subsidy Lump-sum tax: government tax a fixed

sum of money, T, regardless of individual’s behavior.

This is equivalent to a decrease in income by T, implying an inward parallel shift of budget line.

Similarly, lump-sum subsidy S implies an outward parallel shift of budget line corresponding to an amount S.

Page 39: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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The Food Stamp Program

Food stamps are coupons that can be legally exchanged only for food.

How does a commodity-specific gift such as a food stamp alter a family’s budget constraint?

Here we assume one of the two goods is food.

Page 40: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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The Food Stamp Program

Suppose m = $100, pF = $1 and the price of “other goods” is pG = $1.

The budget constraint is then F + G =100.

Page 41: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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The Food Stamp ProgramG

F100

100

F + G = 100: before stamps.

Page 42: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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The Food Stamp ProgramG

F100

100

F + G = 100: before stamps.

Budget set after 40 foodstamps issued.

14040

Page 43: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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The Food Stamp ProgramG

F100

100

F + G = 100: before stamps.

Budget set after 40 foodstamps issued.

140

The family’s budgetset is enlarged.

40

Page 44: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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The Food Stamp Program

What if food stamps can be traded on a black market for $0.50 each?

Page 45: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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The Food Stamp ProgramG

F100

100

F + G = 100: before stamps.

Budget constraint after 40 food stamps issued.

140

120

Black market trading makes the budget set larger again.

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Page 46: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Relative Prices How does the unit of account affect the

budget constraint and budget set? Suppose prices and income are

measured in dollars. Say p1=$2, p2=$3, m = $12. Then the constraint is 2x1 + 3x2 = 12.

Page 47: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Relative Prices If prices and income are measured in cents,

then p1=200, p2=300, m=1200 and the constraint is 200x1 + 300x2 = 1200,the same as 2x1 + 3x2 = 12.

Changing the unit of account changes neither the budget constraint nor the budget set.

Page 48: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Relative Prices

The constraint for p1=2, p2=3, m=12 2x1 + 3x2 = 12 can also be written as

1x1 + (3/2)x2 = 6,the constraint for p1=1, p2=3/2, m=6.

Setting p1=1 makes commodity 1 the numeraire and defines all prices relative to p1.

For example, 3/2 is the price of commodity 2 relative to the price of commodity 1.

Page 49: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Budget Constraints - Relative Prices Multiplying all prices and income by any

constant k does not change the budget constraint:

kp1x1 +kp2x2 =km. Any commodity can be chosen as the

numeraire without changing the budget set or the budget constraint.

It is also clear from the graph that, only the ratios p1/p2, m/p1 and m/p2 are relevant to the budget line and budget set.

Page 50: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints Q: What makes a budget constraint a

straight line? A: A straight line must have a

constant slope. The constraint is p1x1 + p2x2 = m.So if prices are constants, the constraint is a straight line.

Page 51: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints But what if prices are not constants?

For example, bulk buying discounts, or price penalties for buying “too much”.

Then constraints will be curved or have kinks.

Page 52: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints - Quantity Discounts Suppose p2 is constant at $1 but that

p1=$2 for 0 x1 20 and p1=$1 for x1>20.

Page 53: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints - Quantity Discounts Suppose p2 is constant at $1 but that

p1=$2 for 0 x1 20 and p1=$1 for x1>20.

Then the constraint’s slope is - 2, for 0 x1 20-p1/p2 = - 1, for x1 > 20

Also assume m=100.

{

Page 54: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Discount

m = $100

50

100

20

Slope = - 2 / 1 = - 2 (p1=2, p2=1)

Slope = - 1/ 1 = - 1 (p1=1, p2=1)

80

x2

x1

Page 55: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Discount

m = $100

50

100

20

Slope = - 2 / 1 = - 2 (p1=2, p2=1)

Slope = - 1/ 1 = - 1 (p1=1, p2=1)

80

x2

x1

Page 56: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Discount

m = $100

50

100

20

80

x2

x1

Budget Set

Budget Constraint

Page 57: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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Shapes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Penaltyx2

x1

Budget Set

Budget Constraint

Page 58: Chapter 2 Budget Constraint. 2 Consumption Theory Economists assume that consumers choose the best bundle of goods they can afford. In this chapter, we.

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What’s Next? The budget set describes what consumption

bundles are affordable to the consumers. The next chapter will introduce preference,

which describes the ordering of what a consumer likes among the consumption bundles.

Then we can combine both preference and budget constraint to analyze consumer’s choice.