Multiple Choice

A consumer's preferences for goods X (a specific product) and M (money) have a special property: for any given quantity of good X, their willingness to trade money for an additional unit of X is the same, regardless of how much money they have. We know this consumer is indifferent between Bundle A (10 units of X, $50 of M) and Bundle B (20 units of X, $20 of M), as they provide the same level of satisfaction. Now, consider a different bundle, Bundle C (10 units of X, $65 of M), which the consumer prefers over A and B. Given this information, what amount of money (M) must be in a Bundle D, which contains 20 units of X, for it to provide the same level of satisfaction as Bundle C?

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Updated 2025-08-08

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