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Microeconomic theory

preferences properties

1) completeness
2) transitivity

3) continuity

4) nonsatiation

5) convexity

completeness

an individual can always rank

transitivity

the individuals choices are internally consistent

continuity

if a is preferred to b then situations "close to" a must be preferred to b

no-satiation

more is always better in terms of economic goods

convexity

a consumers indifference curves are bowed inwards (concave to the origin)

MRS(21)

MRS(21)=-dx2/dx1

what does Cobb-douglas, CES and linear preferences have in common?

all are homothetic functions

optimization principle

to max utility, given fixed income to spend, an individual will buy goods/services that exhaust his total income for which the MRS is equal to the rate at which goods can be traded for one another in the marketplace.

slope of budget constraint

=-p1/p2

the feasible set

all combinations of goods that the consumer can afford

slope of indifference curves

=-MRS=dx2/dx1

utility maximization

utility is maximized where indifference churve js tangent to the budget line. at optimum: u1/u2=p1/p2

what is a corner solution?

a corner solution is when the individuals preference js to only consume one good

homothetic functions

a function is homothetic if it can be written as a monotonic transformation of a homogeneous function, i.e. scaling all inputs by a constant factor leads to proportional changes in the function's value, after applying monotonic transformation.

net demand

the difference between a consumer's gross demand and initial endowment. i.e the amound the consumer want to buy/sell in the marker after accounting for what they already have. net demand = gross demand - initial endowment. positive net demand = consumer wants to buy more (net buyer

slutsky equation (own price effect)

what happens with demand of x1 when price of x1 changes?

dxi/dpi=dx̄i/dpi - dxi/dI*xi

slutsky equation (cross price effect)

what happens with demand of x1 when price of x2 changes?

dxi/dpj=dx̄i/dpj - dxi/dI*xj

gross substitutes

marshallian demand and slutsky equation:

if dDi(p,M)/dpj > 0 i and j are gross complements

gross complements

marshallian demand and slutsky equation:

if dDi(p,M)/dpj < 0 i and j are fross complements

net substitutes

hicksian demand and slutsky equation

if dHi(p,M)/dpi >0 i and j are net substitutes

net complements

hicksian demand and slutsky equation

if dHi(p,M)/dpj < 0 i and j are net complements

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