Short Answer

Analyzing Intertemporal Choice

An individual's preferences for consumption today versus consumption in the future are represented by an indifference curve that is 'bowed-in' toward the origin. Analyze this shape. What does it imply about the individual's willingness to give up future consumption to gain one more unit of present consumption as their level of present consumption increases?

0

1

Updated 2025-07-29

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

CORE Econ

Economics

Social Science

Empirical Science

Science

Economy

Introduction to Microeconomics Course

The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ

Related