Short Answer

Explaining the Marginal Rate of Substitution at Different Consumption Levels

On a graph with consumption on the vertical axis and free time on the horizontal axis, consider two bundles of goods, Bundle X and Bundle Y. Both bundles offer the exact same amount of free time, but Bundle Y offers a much higher level of consumption than Bundle X. Explain why an individual's willingness to trade consumption for an additional hour of free time (their Marginal Rate of Substitution) would be different at these two points. Specifically, at which bundle would the MRS be higher, and what is the economic reasoning for this difference?

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Updated 2025-08-12

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