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Analyzing a Suboptimal Consumption Choice
An individual has a future income of $100 and can borrow against it at a 10% interest rate. Their optimal plan is to consume $58 now. Consider an alternative feasible plan where they consume $70 now. At this alternative point, how does their personal willingness to substitute future consumption for present consumption compare to the market's rate of trade-off? Explain why this alternative plan is not optimal.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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Ch.9 Lenders and borrowers and differences in wealth - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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A person has an income of $100 in the future and can borrow against it today at an interest rate of 10%. Their optimal plan is to consume $58 now and $36 in the future. Consider an alternative feasible plan where they consume less now ($32) and more in the future ($64). Which of the following best explains why this alternative plan is not optimal?
Analyzing a Suboptimal Consumption Choice
A consumer faces an interest rate of 10% and chooses an optimal consumption plan of $58 today and $36 tomorrow. At this specific consumption bundle, the consumer would be willing to give up more than $1.10 of consumption tomorrow to gain an additional $1 today.
Optimizing Intertemporal Consumption
Optimizing Intertemporal Consumption
A consumer is deciding how to allocate their consumption between the present and the future. The market offers a fixed trade-off rate for exchanging present and future consumption. Match each scenario, which describes the relationship between the consumer's personal valuation of present consumption and the market's trade-off rate, to the action that would increase the consumer's overall satisfaction.
A consumer is making a decision about how much to consume today versus in the future. The market interest rate, which determines the trade-off between present and future consumption, is 10%. The consumer chooses a consumption plan that maximizes their satisfaction. At this optimal point, what is the value of their marginal rate of substitution (the amount of future consumption they are willing to trade for one additional unit of present consumption)?
Evaluating an Intertemporal Consumption Plan
An individual is choosing their optimal consumption plan between today and the future. The market interest rate is 10%. At their chosen optimal consumption bundle, their personal willingness to trade future consumption for one unit of present consumption (their Marginal Rate of Substitution) must be equal to ____.
An individual can borrow or lend at a 10% interest rate. Their optimal plan is to consume $58 today and $36 in the future. Suppose they are currently considering a different feasible plan: consuming only $32 today and $64 in the future. At this specific, non-optimal point ($32 today, $64 future), which of the following statements must be true about their personal valuation?