Short Answer

Analyzing Utility Gain Measurement

A student is analyzing a graph where the vertical axis represents 'Daily Consumption (units)' and the horizontal axis represents 'Hours of Free Time'. A new workplace policy allows a worker to move from an initial combination of consumption and free time to a new, preferred combination, placing them on a higher indifference curve. The student claims that the worker's gain in satisfaction, measured in units of consumption, is simply the vertical distance between the old and new indifference curves. Is this claim fully accurate? Explain your reasoning, describing the precise graphical measurement required to quantify the utility gain in terms of 'Daily Consumption'.

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Updated 2025-08-03

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