Short Answer

Explaining Utility Measurement with Specific Preferences

A consumer's preferences for two goods, food baskets (good X) and money (good M), are such that for any given quantity of food baskets, the rate at which they are willing to trade money for an additional food basket is always the same, regardless of how much money they have. Explain why this specific characteristic allows an economist to say that one bundle of goods is preferred to another by a precise monetary value (e.g., '$15 more preferred').

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Updated 2025-08-08

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