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Multiple Choice

A decision-maker is choosing a combination of two goods to maximize their satisfaction, subject to a constraint. Consider four possible combinations:

  • Point A: A combination where the decision-maker can afford more of both goods without exceeding their constraint.
  • Point B: A combination on the boundary of what is affordable, but where the personal value the decision-maker places on one more unit of the first good (in terms of the second good) is greater than its market trade-off rate.
  • Point C: A combination on the boundary of what is affordable, where the personal value the decision-maker places on one more unit of the first good (in terms of the second good) is exactly equal to its market trade-off rate.
  • Point D: A combination that would provide higher satisfaction than any affordable combination, but is not affordable.

At which point is the first-order condition for an optimal choice satisfied?

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Updated 2025-08-15

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