A consumer's preferences for consumption (c) and environmental quality (e) are represented by the utility function U(c, e) = c + ln(e). True or False: When the level of environmental quality is 10 units, the consumer's marginal rate of substitution (the rate at which they are willing to give up consumption for an additional unit of environmental quality) is 10.
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Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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The Optimality Condition (MRS = MRT)
A student's satisfaction from their final grade (g) and hours of free time per day (t) is represented by the utility function U(g, t) = g + 10√t. The final grade is measured on a 100-point scale. What is the student's marginal rate of substitution, representing the rate at which they are willing to trade points on their final grade for one additional hour of free time, when they currently have 16 hours of free time?
Analyzing Preferences for Environmental Quality
Deriving and Interpreting the Marginal Rate of Substitution
A consumer's preferences for consumption (c) and environmental quality (e) are represented by the utility function U(c, e) = c + ln(e). True or False: When the level of environmental quality is 10 units, the consumer's marginal rate of substitution (the rate at which they are willing to give up consumption for an additional unit of environmental quality) is 10.
Comparing Willingness to Substitute Across Different Preference Structures
A consumer's preferences are represented by a utility function, U(x, y), where the utility is separable in one of the goods. Match each utility function with its corresponding Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS), which represents the rate at which the consumer is willing to trade good y for an additional unit of good x.
A person's satisfaction is described by the utility function U(c, h) = c + 8√h, where 'c' represents units of a consumption good and 'h' represents hours of leisure. If this person currently has 4 hours of leisure, they would be willing to give up ______ units of the consumption good to gain one additional hour of leisure.
A consumer's preferences for two goods, a composite consumption good (c) and hours of leisure (t), are represented by a utility function that is separable in leisure time: U(c, t) = c + v(t). Arrange the steps below in the correct logical sequence to determine the consumer's marginal rate of substitution, which is the amount of the consumption good they are willing to give up for one more hour of leisure.
A consumer's preferences for a consumption good (c) and hours of free time (t) are represented by a utility function of the form U(c, t) = c + v(t). The consumer's marginal rate of substitution (MRS), which measures their willingness to give up units of consumption for an additional hour of free time, is given by the expression MRS = 15/t. Which of the following functions for v(t) is consistent with this MRS?
Evaluating Public Project Proposals