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Evaluating a Policy Proposal Using Consumer Preferences
A city planner is analyzing a resident's preferences for two public goods: acres of park space and thousands of new library books. The resident's satisfaction is represented by a standard indifference curve that is downward-sloping and convex to the origin. At their current allocation of 10 acres of park space and 5,000 library books, the resident is willing to give up a maximum of 500 library books to gain 1 additional acre of park space and remain equally satisfied.
The city council proposes a new plan that would reduce the library's budget, resulting in a loss of 400 books for this resident, but use the funds to expand park space by 1 acre. Based only on the information provided, would this resident approve of the proposed plan? Explain your reasoning.
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Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
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CORE Econ
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Activity: Identifying Pareto-Efficient Allocations That Benefit Angela
An individual's preferences for two goods, free time and grain, are represented by a downward-sloping, convex indifference curve. Any combination of the two goods on this curve provides the same level of satisfaction (utility). Combinations lying on a curve further from the origin are preferred over combinations on a curve closer to the origin. This individual's current indifference curve passes through 'Allocation N', which consists of 19.5 hours of free time and 23 bushels of grain. Based on this information, which of the following allocations would the individual definitively prefer over Allocation N?
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?
Analyzing a Proposed Trade-Off
Interpreting the Shape of an Indifference Curve
An individual's preferences are represented by a standard downward-sloping indifference curve, which shows combinations of 'free time' and 'grain' that provide the same level of satisfaction. If this individual is currently at a point on the curve corresponding to 20 hours of free time and 10 bushels of grain, they would be equally satisfied with an alternative allocation of 22 hours of free time and 10 bushels of grain.
An indifference curve shows all combinations of two goods that provide an individual with the same level of satisfaction or utility. Consider a standard downward-sloping, convex indifference curve on a graph. Match each graphical feature with its correct interpretation in terms of consumer preference.
An individual's preferences for two goods, 'leisure hours' and 'consumption units', are represented by a standard downward-sloping, convex curve where all points yield the same level of satisfaction. At point A, the individual has a small amount of leisure time and a large number of consumption units. At this point, they are willing to sacrifice exactly 10 consumption units to gain one additional hour of leisure. Consider point B, which is on the same curve but represents a combination with significantly more leisure time and fewer consumption units. To gain one more hour of leisure starting from point B, the individual would be willing to sacrifice a quantity of consumption units that is ________ than 10.
Evaluating an Argument about Consumer Preferences
Evaluating a Policy Proposal Using Consumer Preferences
Critique of an Unconventional Preference Model
Graphical Representation of the Negotiation Space for Maximum Joint Surplus (Figure 5.19)