Suppose that there are only two goods, books and coffee. Wally gets utility from both books and

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Suppose that there are only two goods, books and coffee. Wally gets utility from both books and coffee, but his indifference curves between them are concave rather than convex to the origin.
a. Draw a set of indifference curves for Wally.
b. What do these particular indifference curves tell you about Wally's marginal rate of substitution between books and coffee?
c. What will Wally's utility‐maximizing bundle look like?
d. Compare your answer to (b) to real‐world behaviors. Does the comparison shed any light on why economists generally assume convex preferences?
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Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Microeconomics

ISBN: 9781464146978

1st Edition

Authors: Austan Goolsbee, Steven Levitt, Chad Syverson

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