In an economic model where individuals' marginal willingness to pay for a good is influenced by their income, there is not a single efficient quantity of the good. Instead, each possible distribution of welfare between the individuals corresponds to a different efficient outcome, collectively forming a ________ of Pareto-efficient allocations.
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The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Two individuals are negotiating the quantity (Q) of a shared project and a monetary transfer (τ) to fund it. Their preferences are such that their marginal willingness to pay for the project changes with their level of income. They identify a set of potential agreements that are Pareto-efficient. If an external shock doubles the income of one individual but leaves the other's unchanged, how would this affect the set of Pareto-efficient quantities (Q) for the project?
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In a two-person economy where both individuals have preferences such that their marginal willingness to pay for a good changes with their income, any Pareto-efficient allocation will involve the same quantity of that good, although the monetary transfers between the individuals might differ.
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In an economic model where individuals' marginal willingness to pay for a good is influenced by their income, there is not a single efficient quantity of the good. Instead, each possible distribution of welfare between the individuals corresponds to a different efficient outcome, collectively forming a ________ of Pareto-efficient allocations.
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