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1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Page 1: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production

Possibilities

International EconomicsProfessor Dalton

ECON 317 – Fall 2014

Page 2: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

2

Indifference Curves

Characteristics

1. Fixed preferences2. Negatively-sloped3. Higher indifference curve represents greater utility 4. Convex5. Non-intersecting6. Slope = Marginal Rate of

Substitution (MRSxy)

Y/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

Page 3: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Indifference CurvesThe Marginal Rate of Substitution

represents a trade-off ratio; the marginal benefit from a unit of one good in terms of another.

Y/time

X/time

U2

If the individual is at point A, an additional unit of X is worth 2Y.

A11

9

3 4

B

11 12

3.2

3 If the individual is at B, an additional X is worth 0.2 Y.

Page 4: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Budget Constraint

A budget constraint is negatively-sloped, reflecting the notion of opportunity cost - one must give up one good to get more of another.

The slope of a budget constraint measures the opportunity cost of one additional unit of a good in terms of the foregone units of the other good.

Page 5: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Budget Constraint

In consumer choice, the budget constraint usually consists of an income constraint reflecting relative prices of the two goods.

The budget constraint can also consist of a PPF.• In either case, the slope of a budget constraint

measures the opportunity cost of one additional unit of a good in terms of the foregone units of the other good.

Page 6: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Y/time

X/time

What is the slope of the budget constraint?

I

Py

I

Px

0A

C

Budget Constraint

Slope equals rise over run.

For an income constraint, slope

equals I/Py divided by I/Px. (where I is income and Pj is

the price of good j)

I/Py/I/Px =

Px/Py

The slope of the budget constraint equals the price

ratio

Px/Py

Page 7: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Y/time

X/time

What is the slope of the individual production possibility frontier?

Y

X0A

C

Budget Constraint

Slope equals rise over run.

For an PPF, slope equals Y divided by

X, and is the Marginal Rate of Transformation,

MRTx,y.

The slope of the budget constraint

equals MRTx,y

Page 8: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Individual Production Possibilities

Y/time

X/time

An individual’s production possibilities frontier shows the quantities of goods, X and Y, that can be produced within a given time period while efficiently using the resources at hand.

30

15

Page 9: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Individual Production Possibilities

Y/time

X/time

The slope equals ΔY/ΔX.

Y = MPLY (L) and X

=MPLX (L),

so ΔY/ΔX = MPLY

(L)/MPLX (L),

or simply MPL

Y/MPLX.

30

15

Begin with simple case of constant productivity. Suppose that L = 10, and MPL

Y = 3 and MPLX = 1.5.

At maximum, individual can produce Y = (10)(3) = 30 units of Y and X =

(10)(1.5) = 15 units of X.

Page 10: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Individual to Social Production Possibilities

Y/time

X/time

30

15

Slope is called the marginal rate of transformation between X and Y, abbreviated MRTx,y, and it representahow much it costs in Y to produce an X

Slope is 30/15 = 2

The marginal cost of X = 2Y

The marginal cost of Y = 1/2 X

Page 11: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Three Individual PPFsY Y Y

XX X

Which individual is the best producer of X?

Which individual is the best producer of Y?

It depends upon what is meant by “best”!

30

30

100

150

180

120

Joe Sam Bill

Page 12: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Comparative and Absolute Advantage

A person is said to have an absolute advantage in producing a good if he can produce more of the good than can another.

A person is said to have a comparative advantage in producing a good if he can produce the good at a lower cost than another.

Page 13: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Three Individual PPFsAbsolute Advantage

Y Y Y

XX X

30

30

100

150

180

120

Absolute Advantage: Good X

Sam (150)

Bill (120)

Joe (30)

Joe Sam Bill

Absolute Advantage: Good Y

Bill (180)

Sam (100)

Joe (30)

Page 14: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Three Individual PPFsComparative Advantage

Y Y Y

XX X

30

30

100

150

180

120

Comparative Advantage: Good X

Sam: 2/3 Y

Joe: 1 Y

Bill: 3/2 Y

Joe Sam Bill

Comparative Advantage: Good Y

Bill: 2/3 X

Joe: 1 X

Sam: 3/2 X

Page 15: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Building the Social PPFY

Y

Y

X

X X

30

30

100

150

180

120

Joe

Sam

Bill

Y

X

310

300

Comparative Advantage: Good X

Sam: 2/3 Y

Joe: 1 Y

Bill: 3/2 Y

Page 16: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

Building the Social PPF

The Social PPF is the “summation” of all the individual agents’ PPFs in the economy, constructed by applying the principle of comparative advantage.

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Page 17: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Many Person Social PPF

Y/timeSlope is flat at A. Low opportunity cost of X.

Slope is steep at B. High opportunity cost of X.

X/timeB

A

Page 18: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Choice: Combining Indifference Curves with Production

Possibilities

Here, MRSx,y > Px/Py (or MRTx,y). The individual can buy an additional X for less than the additional unit is valued.

Y/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

1 2

Here, MRSx,y < Px/Py (or MRTx,y). The individual would have to pay more than the additional unit of X is valued.

MBMC

Page 19: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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ChoiceY/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

1 3

1Y

When the MRSx,y > Px/Py

(or MRSx,y > MRTx,y) , the individual can make himself better off by selling a unit of Y to purchase additional units of X, since a unit of X is valued more highly than a unit of Y at the going prices.

So long as this remains true, the individual continues to move “down” his budget constraint.

Page 20: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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ChoiceY/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

When MRSx,y = Px/Py (or MRSx,y = MRTx,y), the individual will have reached a point where he can make himself no better off by a rearrangement of resources in X and Y consumption.

Y*

X*

He will have maximized his utility!

Page 21: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inthe Budget Constraint

Y/time

X/time

Starting from an original budget constraint …

Suppose that theprice of X falls…

The consumer can now buy more X if all income is spent on X…

But can buy no more Y if all income is spent on Y…The budget constraint rotates outward

“around” the original Y-intercept

Page 22: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inthe Budget Constraint

Y/time

X/time

Starting from an original budget constraint …

Suppose that theprice of X increases…

The consumer can now buy less X if all income is spent on X…

But can buy no more Y if all income is spent on Y…The budget constraint rotates inward

“around” the original Y-intercept

Page 23: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inthe Budget Constraint

Y/time

X/time

Starting from an original budget constraint …

Suppose that theprice of Y falls…

The consumer can now buy more Y if all income is spent on Y…

But can buy no more X if all income is spent on X…The budget constraint rotates outward

“around” the original X-intercept

Page 24: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inthe Budget Constraint

Y/time

X/time

Starting from an original budget constraint …

Suppose that theprice of Y increases…

The consumer can now buy less Y if all income is spent on Y…

But can buy no more X if all income is spent on X…The budget constraint rotates inward

“around” the original X-intercept

Page 25: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inthe Budget Constraint

Y/time

X/time

Starting from an original budget constraint …

Suppose that money income I increases…

The consumer can now buy more Y if all income is spent on Y…

and can buy more X if all income is spent on X…The budget constraint shifts outward.

Does the slope change? NO.

Page 26: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inthe Budget Constraint

Y/time

X/time

Starting from an original budget constraint …

Suppose that money income I decreases…

The consumer can now buy less Y if all income is spent on Y…

and can buy less X if all income is spent on X…

The budget constraint shifts inward.Does the slope change? NO.

Page 27: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inIndifference Curves

Start from an original set of Indifference Curves (only one of which is shown).

Y/time

X/time

U2

If the individual is at point A, an additional unit of X is worth 2Y.

A11

9

3 4

Suppose that the individual’s preferences change so that X is now valued more highly (he prefers X relatively more)…

Now the individual will value an additional unit of X at more than 2Y, say 5Y…

6

The set of indifference curves will become steeper…

Page 28: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes inIndifference Curves

Start from an original set of Indifference Curves (only one of which is shown).

Y/time

X/time

U2

If the individual is at point A, an additional unit of X is worth 2Y.

A11

10

3 4 11 12

Suppose that the individual’s preferences change so that Y is now valued more highly (he prefers X relatively less)…

Now the individual will value an additional unit of X at less than 2Y, say 1Y…

The set of indifference curves will become flatter…

Page 29: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes in Behavior: Price

Y/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

Beginning from equilibrium,

Y*

X*

The budget constraint rotates outward around the Y-intercept…

The consumer chooses a new X, Y combination: X**, Y**X**

Y**

suppose that Px falls.

Page 30: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes in Behavior: Price

Y/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

Beginning from equilibrium,

Y*

X*

The budget constraint rotates outward around the Y-intercept…

The consumer chooses a new X, Y combination: X’, Y’X’

Y’

suppose that Px rises.

Page 31: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes in Behavior: Income

Y/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

Beginning from equilibrium, suppose that Income rises.

Y*

X*

The budget constraint shifts outward and the slope doesn’t change (why?)

The consumer chooses a new X, Y combination: X**, Y**

X**

Y**

Page 32: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes in Behavior: Income

Y/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

As this graph what kind of goods are X and Y?

Y*

X* X**

Y** Both are normal goods.

Page 33: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes in Behavior: Income

Y/time

X/time

U3

U2

U1

Suppose, that instead, money income had fallen. Again that means a new equilibrium, and a new equilibrium combination of X’ and Y’.

Y*

X*X’

Y’

Page 34: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

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Changes in Behavior: Preferences

Start from an original equilibrium, A.

Y/time

X/time

Suppose preferences become more favorable to X…the IC steepen.

AY*

X* X**

Y** The individual now moves to a bundle favoring more X and Less Y, at B.

B

Page 35: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

Social Indifference Curves?

Can we sum up the preferences of individuals into a social indifference curve?• We could if we could measure the intensity of preferences

independent of income levels, or measure utility directly.• But we can’t.

Further, Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem shows that there exists no rule that allows us to combine preferences without giving some one person in society totalitarian power over the resulting choice.

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Page 36: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

TANSTAASIC

There ain’t no such thing as a Social Indifference Curve…(sometimes called

a Social Welfare Function).But BEWARE, textbooks and journal

articles often present graphs that pretend that we can aggregate

individual preferences into a Social Preference Ordering – a Social

Indifference Curve.

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Page 37: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

TANSTAASIC

For a two good world, we can employ the fiction that the indifference

curve represents the preferences of the marginal or representative

individual in society.When we move to more than two

goods, however, this fiction becomes untenable.

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Page 38: 1 Indifference Curves and Individual and Social Production Possibilities International Economics Professor Dalton ECON 317 – Fall 2014

TANSTAASIC

Why use graphs that show Country PPFs and Country ICs? (that violate TANSTAASIC!)

As a short-hand for the more complicated process of actual price formation…that’s all.

Don’t commit the fallacy of misplaced concreteness.

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