Case Study

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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Updated 2025-07-29

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Library Science

Economics

Economy

Introduction to Microeconomics Course

Social Science

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