Multiple Choice

A consumer's preferences are defined over two goods: Good X (on the horizontal axis) and Good Y (on the vertical axis). At a specific bundle of goods, the consumer's marginal utility for Good X is MU_X and for Good Y is MU_Y. If a change in the consumer's tastes causes the value of MU_Y to increase while the value of MU_X remains constant, how does this affect the marginal rate of substitution (the amount of Good Y the consumer is willing to give up for one more unit of Good X) at that bundle?

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Updated 2025-08-16

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