Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Example indiff curve u = 1 indiff curve u = 2 indiff curve u = 3

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Example indiff curve u = 1 indiff curve u = 2 indiff curve u = 3"— Presentation transcript:

1 Example indiff curve u = 1 indiff curve u = 2 indiff curve u = 3
From the equation Equation of IC is x2 Check against the example in lecture 1 Transformed utility function x1 8 Oct 2015

2 8 Oct 2015

3 Example Indifference curve (as before) does not touch either axis
Constraint set for given u Cost minimisation must have interior solution x2 x1 8 Oct 2015

4 Example x* Lagrangian for cost minimisation For a minimum:
Evaluate first-order conditions x2 x* x1 8 Oct 2015

5 Example First-order conditions for cost-min:
Rearrange the first two of these: Substitute back into the third FOC: Rearrange to get the optimised Lagrange multiplier 8 Oct 2015

6 Example From first-order conditions: Rearrange to get cost-min inputs:
By definition minimised cost is: So cost function is 8 Oct 2015

7 Example x* Lagrangean for utility maximisation
Evaluate first-order conditions x2 x* x1 8 Oct 2015

8 Example Optimal demands are So at the optimum x2 x* x1 8 Oct 2015

9 8 Oct 2015

10 Example Results from cost minimisation:
Differentiate to get compensated demand: Results from utility maximisation: 8 Oct 2015

11 Example Ordinary and compensated demand for good 1:
Response to changes in y and p1: Use cost function to write last term in y rather than u: Slutsky equation: In this case: Features of demand functions Homogeneous of degree zero Satisfy the “adding-up” constraint Symmetric substitution effects Negative own-price substitution effects Income effects could be positive or negative: in fact they are nearly always a pain 8 Oct 2015

12 Example in fact they are nearly always a pain
Take a case where income is endogenous: Ordinary demand for good 1: Response to changes in y and p1: Modified Slutsky equation: In this case: Features of demand functions Homogeneous of degree zero Satisfy the “adding-up” constraint Symmetric substitution effects Negative own-price substitution effects Income effects could be positive or negative: in fact they are nearly always a pain 8 Oct 2015

13 8 Oct 2015

14 Example Cost function: Indirect utility function:
If p1 falls to tp1 (where t < 1) then utility rises from u to u′: So CV of change is: And the EV is: 8 Oct 2015


Download ppt "Example indiff curve u = 1 indiff curve u = 2 indiff curve u = 3"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google