Multiple Choice

An individual's preferences for free time and grain are represented by a standard downward-sloping, convex indifference curve. At allocation P (20 hours of free time, 15 bushels of grain), the individual is willing to trade exactly one hour of free time for an additional 2 bushels of grain and remain equally satisfied. Consider another allocation, Q, which is on the same indifference curve but has only 12 hours of free time. Based on the properties of this curve, what can be concluded about the trade-off the individual would be willing to make at allocation Q?

0

1

Updated 2025-07-29

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

Library Science

Economics

Economy

Introduction to Microeconomics Course

Social Science

Empirical Science

Science

CORE Econ

Related