Example

Application of Quasi-Linear Preferences to Air Pollution and Its Limitations

An application of quasi-linear utility functions is modeling environmental 'bads' like air pollution. If all citizens in a town are assumed to have the same quasi-linear preferences, the marginal utility from pollution is negative, and crucially, the Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS) between income and pollution will depend only on the pollution level, not an individual's income. This implies both rich and poor citizens would trade the same income for better air quality. However, this is a questionable assumption, as it is plausible that wealthier individuals would be more willing to sacrifice income for environmental improvements.

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Updated 2026-05-02

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