MRT for a Straight-Line Feasible Frontier (Budget Constraint)
When a feasible frontier is a straight line, its slope is constant. Consequently, the Marginal Rate of Transformation (MRT)—the absolute value of the slope—is the same at every point along the frontier. This signifies that the trade-off an individual faces remains unchanged regardless of their position on the frontier. Karim's model in Unit 3 provides a clear example, as his straight-line feasible frontier results in a constant MRT.
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MRT for a Straight-Line Feasible Frontier (Budget Constraint)
A graph is constructed to show the different combinations of two goods, 'Streaming Hours' (on the vertical axis) and 'Study Hours' (on the horizontal axis), that a student can choose given a total of 24 hours in a day. A downward-sloping straight line on this graph represents the boundary of all possible combinations. What does a point located on this line signify?
Impact of a Price Change on a Budget Graph
Effect of an Income Change on the Budget Graph
Consider a graph representing the different combinations of two products, Product A (on the vertical axis) and Product B (on the horizontal axis), that a consumer can purchase with a fixed amount of money. A point located inside (or below) the downward-sloping line on this graph signifies a combination of the two products that the consumer can afford, but which would not use their entire budget.
Calculating and Interpreting Budget Line Intercepts
A student has a weekly budget of $120 to spend on two items: digital movie rentals (at $6 each) and paperback books (at $15 each). Which of the following graphs correctly represents this student's budget constraint, with movie rentals on the vertical axis and books on the horizontal axis?
Explaining the Shape of the Budget Line
Analyzing a Non-Linear Budget Constraint
Analyzing Affordability with a Budget Constraint
The graph below shows the possible combinations of two goods, 'Coffee' (on the vertical axis) and 'Croissants' (on the horizontal axis), that a person can buy with a fixed budget. The downward-sloping line represents the boundary of all affordable combinations. Match each labeled point with its correct economic description.
The Budget Constraint Slope as the Negative Wage Rate and Opportunity Cost
Figure 3.6: Karim's Budget Constraint and Feasible Set
The Feasible Set in a Budget Constraint Model
Marginal Rate of Transformation (MRT)
Non-Linear Feasible Frontiers
MRT for a Straight-Line Feasible Frontier (Budget Constraint)
Figure 4.11 (reproduced as E4.1) - Zoë's Optimal Altruistic Choice
Julia's Optimal and Suboptimal Choices on the Feasible Frontier
Diagram of Julia's Feasible Frontier with an X-Intercept of $83
An individual has a total of 8 hours available to allocate between two activities: studying and leisure. For every hour spent studying, they can complete 10 practice problems. For every hour spent on leisure, they gain 5 units of satisfaction. Which of the following outcomes represents a point on this individual's feasible frontier?
Analyzing Study Time Allocation
Interpreting Production Possibilities
A farmer has a plot of land and can grow either wheat or corn. The downward-sloping line in a graph represents all the possible combinations of wheat and corn bushels the farmer can produce in a season if all resources (land, water, labor) are used with maximum efficiency. If the farmer's current production level is represented by a point located inside this line (not on the line itself), what can be concluded?
A feasible frontier represents all possible combinations of two goods that an individual can produce or consume, given their constraints.
Calculating a Point on the Feasible Frontier
A student has a total of 20 hours to allocate between two tasks: writing summary papers and completing practice question sets. Each summary paper requires 5 hours to complete, and each practice question set requires 2 hours. Based on this information, which of the following statements provides an accurate analysis of the student's production possibilities?
Analyzing a Shift in Consumption Possibilities
A company can produce two goods, Gadgets and Widgets. A downward-sloping line on a graph represents all the combinations of these two goods that the company can produce if it uses all of its resources and technology with maximum efficiency. Match each described production point with its correct economic interpretation.
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Budget Constraint
Figure 9.3: Comparing Julia's Feasible Frontiers at 10% and 78% Interest Rates
Learn After
Calculating MRT for a Linear Feasible Frontier (y + z = 200)
An individual's feasible set of choices between two goods, 'leisure hours' and 'consumption units', is represented by a straight, downward-sloping line on a graph. Point A on this line represents a combination of many leisure hours and few consumption units. Point B, also on this line, represents a combination of few leisure hours and many consumption units. How does the number of consumption units the individual must sacrifice to gain one additional hour of leisure compare at Point A versus Point B?
Production Trade-Off Analysis
Interpreting a Constant Trade-Off
A producer's feasible combinations of producing two goods, widgets and gadgets, are represented by a straight, downward-sloping line. Two possible production points on this line are (100 widgets, 50 gadgets) and (120 widgets, 40 gadgets). What is the opportunity cost of producing one additional widget, in terms of gadgets?
A student has a fixed amount of time to allocate between two activities: studying and exercising. The relationship representing all possible combinations of hours spent on these activities is a straight, downward-sloping line. Suppose the student finds that giving up 1 hour of studying allows them to gain exactly 30 minutes of exercise. If they are already exercising a lot and decide to give up another hour of studying, how much additional exercise time will they gain?
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A decision-maker must choose between combinations of two items, 'Item X' and 'Item Y'. Match each graphical representation of their possible choices (their feasible frontier) with the correct description of the trade-off they face.
The Economic Significance of a Linear Feasible Frontier
A producer's feasible combinations for producing two products, Product A and Product B, are represented by the equation
5A + 2B = 200. To produce one additional unit of Product A, how many units of Product B must the producer forgo, assuming they remain on the frontier?Equivalence of MRT and Opportunity Cost on the Feasible Frontier
Wage Rate as the Determinant of the Marginal Rate of Transformation (MRT)
Wage as the Opportunity Cost of Free Time