1 / 18

Intermediate Microeconomics

Intermediate Microeconomics. Choice. Optimal Choice. We can now put together our theory of preferences with our budget constraint apparatus and talk about “optimal choice”.

eileen
Télécharger la présentation

Intermediate Microeconomics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Intermediate Microeconomics Choice

  2. Optimal Choice • We can now put together our theory of preferences with our budget constraint apparatus and talk about “optimal choice”. • Unlike psychology, which often attempts to understand why particular individuals make particular choices, economic theory is trying to develop a model of what individuals as a whole generally do. • Therefore, at its most basic, economic theory simply assumes individuals choose their most preferred bundle, or equivalently the bundle that gives them the most utility, that is in their budget set.

  3. Optimal Choice • Consider an individual with a $1000 and spends it on lbs. of food and sq. ft. of housing, where pf = $5/lb and ph = $10/sq. ft. • Budget Constraint depicted to the right. What are intercepts? What is slope? • If his preferences are captured by the indifference curves depicted here, what will be his optimal bundle? Why? Lbs food A C E D sq. ft. B

  4. Optimal Choice * Why is A not “optimal”? * Why is B not “optimal”? * Why is C not “optimal”? * Why is D not “optimal”? * So what all is true at E? * What happens if price of food falls? food A C E D sq. ft. B

  5. Optimal Choice • Does tangency condition always have to hold for optimum bundle? • Consider goods that are perfect substitutes. • e.g. Suppose you are working for Doctors without Borders. • You have 20 beds, malaria patients take a week to treat, TB patients take two weeks. What does your budget constraint look like? • Your preferences are such that you want to treat as many patients as you can. What do your indifference curves look like? • So how would you optimally allocate your bed slots per month? • What if each Tuberculosis treatment cost took only one week?

  6. Optimal Choice • Now consider two goods that are perfect complements (i.e. must be consumed in fixed proportions). • E.g. I only like coffee if it is 1/2 coffee 1/2 milk. • What will my indifference curves look like? • Suppose I had $6, coffee costs $0.50/oz and cream costs $1.00/oz. • What will my budget constraint look like? • What will be my optimal choice? • What if prices were $1/oz for each?

  7. Demand Function • Demand Function for a given consumer for each good i - the amount consumer chooses to consume of that good given any set of prices and her endowment qi(p1, p2, m) • In general, demand function will tell how a consumer reacts to changes in prices and endowment. • How would we derive a demand function graphically?

  8. Optimal Choice Analytically • While graphs are informative, they can be cumbersome, so we often want to solve things analytically. • For a two-good analysis, for each good i, we will want to find a function qi(p1, p2, m) that maps prices and endowment into an amount of that good. • How do we find one of these? Where should we start?

  9. Optimal Choice Analytically • Consider again an individual who finds q1 and q2 perfect substitutes, or U(q1,q2) = q1 + q2. • So if he has $20 and p1 = 7and p2 = 5, how much q1 will he buy? (hint: think about graph) • If he has $20 and p1 = 6and p2 = 5, how much q1 will he buy? • If he has $20 and p1 = 4and p2 = 5, how much q1 will he buy? • If he has $20 and p1 = 2and p2 = 5, how much q1 will he buy? • How would things change if he had $40? • So what is general form of demand function for q1 and q2 given linear utility function?

  10. Optimal Choice Analytically • Demand functions for Quasi-linear utility U(q1,q2) = aq10.5 + q2, endowment $m, prices p1 and p2 • Finding demand function is more complicated, but still helps to think about graphically. • What two conditions must be true at optimum bundle given Quasi-linear utility? • How can we use these conditions to find demand functions?

  11. Optimal Choice Analytically • Demand functions for quasi-linear utility are given by: • Do these demand functions make intuitive sense? * What happens when p1 rises? Falls? How about a? * What do these demand functions reveal about why quasi-linear utility functions are not always appropriate for modeling preferences?

  12. Optimal Choice Analytically • Now consider again an individual who has Cobb-Douglas utility U(q1,q2) = q1aq2b, who has $m, and faces prices p1 and p2. • What two conditions must be true at optimum bundle given Cobb-Douglas utility? • How can we use these conditions to find demand functions?

  13. Optimal Choice Analytically • So with Cobb-Douglas preferences, demand functions will be given by: • Do these demand functions make intuitive sense? • What happens when p1 rises? Falls? • What happens when m rises? • Why is it convenient to choose as specification such that a + b = 1?

  14. Optimal Choice Analytically • Example: • Consider an individual whose preferences are captured by U(q1,q2) = q10.4q20.6 • p1 = $2, p2 = $4, m = $20 • What is optimal bundle? • How would we sketch this graphically? • If p1 changed to $1, how would optimal bundle change? How would graph change?

  15. Application: Government Funding of Religious Institutions • Suppose government is considering giving grants to religious institutions with the restriction that these funds are used for non-religious purposes only. • Why might advocates for separation of church and state still find this proposal troubling?

  16. Application: Government Funding of Religious Institutions • Assume: • Gov’t grant equals $4,000/yr • A religious institution has an annual budget of $20,000. • Institution’s preferences are captured by U(qr,qn) = qr0.75qn0.25 • What will be institution’s spending on religious and non-religious activity without grant? • How will grant change budget constraint? • What will be institution’s spending on religious and non-religious activity with grant?

  17. Application: Government Funding of Religious Institutions • What will this problem look like graphically?

  18. Application: Social Security Indexing for Inflation • This framework can help us think about issues involved in indexing payments such as social security. • Adjustments in Social Security are currently determined by changes in Consumer Price Index (CPI). CPI is essentially determined by calculating the price of a “basket” of goods. • Some argue that this makes SS increasingly generous over time and therefore should be reformed. Why would they say this? food A housing

More Related