Deck 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice

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Question
If a consumer experiences a decrease in income, the new budget constraint will have the same slope as the old budget constraint.
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Question
The slope of the budget constraint reveals the relative price of good X compared to good Y.
Question
For a typical consumer, indifference curves can intersect if they satisfy the property of transitivity.
Question
The marginal rate of substitution is the slope of the budget constraint.
Question
The slope at any point on an indifference curve equals the absolute price at which a consumer is willing to substitute one good for the other.
Question
For a typical consumer, most indifference curves are bowed inward.
Question
A consumer's budget constraint for goods X and Y is determined by how much the consumer likes good X relative to good Y.
Question
If goods A and B are perfect substitutes, then the marginal rate of substitution of good A for good B is constant.
Question
For a typical consumer, most indifference curves are downward sloping.
Question
The indifference curves for perfect substitutes are straight lines.
Question
A budget constraint illustrates bundles that a consumer prefers equally, while an indifference curve illustrates bundles that are equally affordable to a consumer.
Question
The indifference curves for left gloves and right gloves are straight lines.
Question
The indifference curves for left shoes and right shoes are right angles.
Question
When two goods are perfect complements, the indifference curves are right angles.
Question
A typical indifference curve is upward sloping.
Question
The theory of consumer choice illustrates that people face tradeoffs, which is one of the Ten Principles of Economics.
Question
The indifference curves for perfect substitutes are right angles.
Question
The indifference curves for nickels and dimes are straight lines.
Question
The marginal rate of substitution between goods A and B measures the price of A relative to the price of B.
Question
The slope of a consumer's budget constraint is unaffected by a change in income.
Question
If a consumer purchases more of good A when her income falls, good A is an inferior good.
Question
A typical consumer consumes both coffee and donuts. After the consumer's income decreases, the consumer consumes more coffee but fewer donuts than before. For this consumer, coffee is a normal good, but donuts are an inferior good.
Question
Giffen goods are inferior goods for which the income effect dominates the substitution effect.
Question
At a consumer's optimal choice, the consumer chooses the combination of goods that equates the marginal rate of substitution and the price ratio.
Question
All points on a demand curve are optimal consumption points.
Question
When indifference curves are downward sloping, the marginal rate of substitution is usually constant.
Question
If consumers purchase more of a good when their income rises, the good is a normal good.
Question
The marginal rate of substitution is the slope of the indifference curve.
Question
The income effect of a price change is the change in consumption that results from the movement to a new indifference curve.
Question
The income effect of a price change is unaffected by whether the good is a normal or inferior good.
Question
A typical consumer consumes both coffee and donuts. After the consumer's income decreases, the consumer consumes more coffee but fewer donuts than before. For this consumer, donuts are a normal good, but coffee is an inferior good.
Question
If a consumer purchases more of good X and good Y after her income increases, then neither good X nor good Y is an inferior good for her.
Question
Economists have found evidence of a Giffen good when studying the consumption of rice in the Chinese province of Hunan.
Question
If a consumer purchases more of good B when his income rises, good B is an inferior good.
Question
The substitution effect of a price change is the change in consumption that results from the movement to a new indifference curve.
Question
The direction of the substitution effect is not influenced by whether the good is normal or inferior.
Question
Giffen goods violate the law of demand.
Question
At a consumer's optimal choice, the consumer chooses the combination of goods such that the ratio of the marginal utilities equals the ratio of the prices.
Question
When indifference curves are bowed inward, the marginal rate of substitution varies at each point on the indifference curve.
Question
A consumer's optimal choice is affected by income, prices of goods, and preferences.
Question
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a hamburger is $10 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a light bulb?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a hamburger is $10 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a light bulb?
Question
A rational person can have a negatively-sloped labor supply curve.
Question
Katie wins $3 million in her state's lottery. If Katie drastically reduces the number of hours she works after she wins the money, we can infer that the income effect is larger than the substitution effect for her.
Question
The theory of consumer choice is representative of how consumers make decisions but is not intended to be a literal account of the process.
Question
Consumers face tradeoffs except at the point where the indifference curve is tangent to the budget line.
Question
Susie wins $2 million in her state's lottery. If Susie keeps working after she wins the money, we can infer that the income effect is larger than the substitution effect for her.
Question
Consumer will always consume more of a good if their income increases.
Question
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the consumer's income is $90 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the price of a light bulb?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the consumer's income is $90 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the price of a light bulb?
Question
The substitution effect in the work-leisure model induces a person to work less in response to higher wages, which tends to make the labor-supply curve slope upward.
Question
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose Budget Constraint B applies. If the consumer's income is $90 and if he is buying 5 light bulbs, then how much money is he spending on hamburgers?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose Budget Constraint B applies. If the consumer's income is $90 and if he is buying 5 light bulbs, then how much money is he spending on hamburgers?
Question
An increase in the interest rate today leading to a decrease in consumption today violates the law of demand.​
Question
​A decrease in the price of the good on the horizontal axis rotates the budget constraint counterclockwise.
Question
The income effect in the work-leisure model induces a person to work less in response to higher wages, which tends to make the labor-supply curve slope backward.
Question
A rise in the interest rate will generally result in people consuming less when they are old if the substitution effect outweighs the income effect.
Question
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. What particular change would result in a rotation of the budget constraint from Budget Constraint A to Budget Constraint B?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-17. What particular change would result in a rotation of the budget constraint from Budget Constraint A to Budget Constraint B?
Question
A worker with a backward-bending labor supply curve responds to an increase in wages by working more hours.
Question
A consumer maximizes utility at a point where multiple indifference curves intersect the budget line.
Question
A rise in the interest rate will generally result in people consuming more when they are old if the substitution effect outweighs the income effect.
Question
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a light bulb is $3 and Budget Constraint B applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a hamburger?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a light bulb is $3 and Budget Constraint B applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a hamburger?
Question
Shelley wins $1 million in her state's lottery. If Shelley keeps working after she wins the money, we can infer that the substitution effect must exactly offset the income effect for her.
Question
What does the slope of a consumer's indifference curve represent?
Question
Figure 21-18
The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.
Figure 21-18 The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.   ​ Refer to Figure 21-18. If Kevin's income is $1,260, then what is the price of a sweater?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-18. If Kevin's income is $1,260, then what is the price of a sweater?
Question
A consumer's budget constraint is drawn on a graph with the number of sandwiches measured along the horizontal axis and the number of bowls of soup measured along the vertical axis. Hold the consumer's income and the price of a sandwich fixed, and increase the price of a bowl of soup. Describe the effect on the budget constraint.
Question
Teresa faces prices of $6.00 for a unit of good X and $1.50 for a unit of good Y. At her optimum, Teresa is willing to give up 1 unit of good X for __________ units of good Y.
Question
A consumer's budget constraint is drawn with the quantity of pizza measured along the horizontal axis and the price of Pepsi measured along the vertical axis. If the market is offering the consumer the trade-off of 3 pints of Pepsi for 1 pizza, then what is the slope of the consumer's budget constraint?
Question
Goods x and y are available to Jeff. At Jeff's optimum, the marginal utility per dollar spent on good x equals __________________.
Question
When we draw Katie's indifference curves to represent her preferences for books and movies, we find that her indifference curves are upward-sloping. What does this tell us about Katie's preferences?
Question
Using our model of consumer choice, is it possible for a consumer to buy less of a particular good when his income rises? Briefly explain.
Question
What does the slope of a budget constraint represent?
Question
A consumer's indifference curves are right angles when, for the consumer, the goods in question are __________.
Question
What is significant about a point on a graph at which an indifference curve is tangent to a budget constraint?
Question
A consumer's indifference curves are straight lines when, for the consumer, the goods in question are __________.
Question
In order to represent a consumer's choices on a graph, we draw her budget constraint as well as her __________ curves.
Question
Because people are more willing to trade away goods that they have in abundance and less willing to trade away goods of which they have little, indifference curves are ___________.
Question
The rate at which a consumer is willing to trade off one good for another is called the __________.
Question
Thomas faces prices of $6 for a unit of good X and $30 for a unit of good Y. At his optimum, Thomas is willing to give up 1 unit of good Y for __________ units of good X.
Question
If the market is offering consumers the trade-off of 3 pints of Pepsi for 1 pizza, and if the price of a pizza is $9, then what is the price of a pint of Pepsi?
Question
Figure 21-18
The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.
Figure 21-18 The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.   ​ Refer to Figure 21-18. Suppose point A was Kevin's optimum last week, and point B is his optimum this week. What happened between last week and this week?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-18. Suppose point A was Kevin's optimum last week, and point B is his optimum this week. What happened between last week and this week?
Question
If goods X and Y are both normal goods for Brenda, then an increase in Brenda's income will lead her to __________.
Question
Figure 21-18
The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.
Figure 21-18 The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.   ​ Refer to Figure 21-18. If point A is Kevin's optimum, then at that optimum, what is his opportunity cost of a shirt in terms of sweaters?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 21-18. If point A is Kevin's optimum, then at that optimum, what is his opportunity cost of a shirt in terms of sweaters?
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Deck 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice
1
If a consumer experiences a decrease in income, the new budget constraint will have the same slope as the old budget constraint.
True
2
The slope of the budget constraint reveals the relative price of good X compared to good Y.
True
3
For a typical consumer, indifference curves can intersect if they satisfy the property of transitivity.
False
4
The marginal rate of substitution is the slope of the budget constraint.
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5
The slope at any point on an indifference curve equals the absolute price at which a consumer is willing to substitute one good for the other.
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6
For a typical consumer, most indifference curves are bowed inward.
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7
A consumer's budget constraint for goods X and Y is determined by how much the consumer likes good X relative to good Y.
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8
If goods A and B are perfect substitutes, then the marginal rate of substitution of good A for good B is constant.
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9
For a typical consumer, most indifference curves are downward sloping.
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10
The indifference curves for perfect substitutes are straight lines.
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11
A budget constraint illustrates bundles that a consumer prefers equally, while an indifference curve illustrates bundles that are equally affordable to a consumer.
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12
The indifference curves for left gloves and right gloves are straight lines.
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13
The indifference curves for left shoes and right shoes are right angles.
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14
When two goods are perfect complements, the indifference curves are right angles.
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15
A typical indifference curve is upward sloping.
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16
The theory of consumer choice illustrates that people face tradeoffs, which is one of the Ten Principles of Economics.
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17
The indifference curves for perfect substitutes are right angles.
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18
The indifference curves for nickels and dimes are straight lines.
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19
The marginal rate of substitution between goods A and B measures the price of A relative to the price of B.
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20
The slope of a consumer's budget constraint is unaffected by a change in income.
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21
If a consumer purchases more of good A when her income falls, good A is an inferior good.
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22
A typical consumer consumes both coffee and donuts. After the consumer's income decreases, the consumer consumes more coffee but fewer donuts than before. For this consumer, coffee is a normal good, but donuts are an inferior good.
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23
Giffen goods are inferior goods for which the income effect dominates the substitution effect.
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24
At a consumer's optimal choice, the consumer chooses the combination of goods that equates the marginal rate of substitution and the price ratio.
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25
All points on a demand curve are optimal consumption points.
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26
When indifference curves are downward sloping, the marginal rate of substitution is usually constant.
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27
If consumers purchase more of a good when their income rises, the good is a normal good.
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28
The marginal rate of substitution is the slope of the indifference curve.
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29
The income effect of a price change is the change in consumption that results from the movement to a new indifference curve.
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30
The income effect of a price change is unaffected by whether the good is a normal or inferior good.
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31
A typical consumer consumes both coffee and donuts. After the consumer's income decreases, the consumer consumes more coffee but fewer donuts than before. For this consumer, donuts are a normal good, but coffee is an inferior good.
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32
If a consumer purchases more of good X and good Y after her income increases, then neither good X nor good Y is an inferior good for her.
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33
Economists have found evidence of a Giffen good when studying the consumption of rice in the Chinese province of Hunan.
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34
If a consumer purchases more of good B when his income rises, good B is an inferior good.
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35
The substitution effect of a price change is the change in consumption that results from the movement to a new indifference curve.
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36
The direction of the substitution effect is not influenced by whether the good is normal or inferior.
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37
Giffen goods violate the law of demand.
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38
At a consumer's optimal choice, the consumer chooses the combination of goods such that the ratio of the marginal utilities equals the ratio of the prices.
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39
When indifference curves are bowed inward, the marginal rate of substitution varies at each point on the indifference curve.
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40
A consumer's optimal choice is affected by income, prices of goods, and preferences.
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41
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a hamburger is $10 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a light bulb?
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a hamburger is $10 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a light bulb?
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42
A rational person can have a negatively-sloped labor supply curve.
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43
Katie wins $3 million in her state's lottery. If Katie drastically reduces the number of hours she works after she wins the money, we can infer that the income effect is larger than the substitution effect for her.
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44
The theory of consumer choice is representative of how consumers make decisions but is not intended to be a literal account of the process.
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45
Consumers face tradeoffs except at the point where the indifference curve is tangent to the budget line.
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46
Susie wins $2 million in her state's lottery. If Susie keeps working after she wins the money, we can infer that the income effect is larger than the substitution effect for her.
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47
Consumer will always consume more of a good if their income increases.
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48
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the consumer's income is $90 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the price of a light bulb?
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the consumer's income is $90 and Budget Constraint A applies. What is the price of a light bulb?
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49
The substitution effect in the work-leisure model induces a person to work less in response to higher wages, which tends to make the labor-supply curve slope upward.
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50
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose Budget Constraint B applies. If the consumer's income is $90 and if he is buying 5 light bulbs, then how much money is he spending on hamburgers?
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose Budget Constraint B applies. If the consumer's income is $90 and if he is buying 5 light bulbs, then how much money is he spending on hamburgers?
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51
An increase in the interest rate today leading to a decrease in consumption today violates the law of demand.​
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52
​A decrease in the price of the good on the horizontal axis rotates the budget constraint counterclockwise.
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53
The income effect in the work-leisure model induces a person to work less in response to higher wages, which tends to make the labor-supply curve slope backward.
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54
A rise in the interest rate will generally result in people consuming less when they are old if the substitution effect outweighs the income effect.
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55
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. What particular change would result in a rotation of the budget constraint from Budget Constraint A to Budget Constraint B?
Refer to Figure 21-17. What particular change would result in a rotation of the budget constraint from Budget Constraint A to Budget Constraint B?
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56
A worker with a backward-bending labor supply curve responds to an increase in wages by working more hours.
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57
A consumer maximizes utility at a point where multiple indifference curves intersect the budget line.
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58
A rise in the interest rate will generally result in people consuming more when they are old if the substitution effect outweighs the income effect.
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59
Figure 21-17
The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer.

Figure 21-17 The graph shows two budget constraints for a consumer. ​   ​ Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a light bulb is $3 and Budget Constraint B applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a hamburger?
Refer to Figure 21-17. Suppose the price of a light bulb is $3 and Budget Constraint B applies. What is the consumer's income? What is the price of a hamburger?
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60
Shelley wins $1 million in her state's lottery. If Shelley keeps working after she wins the money, we can infer that the substitution effect must exactly offset the income effect for her.
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61
What does the slope of a consumer's indifference curve represent?
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62
Figure 21-18
The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.
Figure 21-18 The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.   ​ Refer to Figure 21-18. If Kevin's income is $1,260, then what is the price of a sweater?
Refer to Figure 21-18. If Kevin's income is $1,260, then what is the price of a sweater?
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63
A consumer's budget constraint is drawn on a graph with the number of sandwiches measured along the horizontal axis and the number of bowls of soup measured along the vertical axis. Hold the consumer's income and the price of a sandwich fixed, and increase the price of a bowl of soup. Describe the effect on the budget constraint.
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64
Teresa faces prices of $6.00 for a unit of good X and $1.50 for a unit of good Y. At her optimum, Teresa is willing to give up 1 unit of good X for __________ units of good Y.
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65
A consumer's budget constraint is drawn with the quantity of pizza measured along the horizontal axis and the price of Pepsi measured along the vertical axis. If the market is offering the consumer the trade-off of 3 pints of Pepsi for 1 pizza, then what is the slope of the consumer's budget constraint?
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66
Goods x and y are available to Jeff. At Jeff's optimum, the marginal utility per dollar spent on good x equals __________________.
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67
When we draw Katie's indifference curves to represent her preferences for books and movies, we find that her indifference curves are upward-sloping. What does this tell us about Katie's preferences?
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68
Using our model of consumer choice, is it possible for a consumer to buy less of a particular good when his income rises? Briefly explain.
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69
What does the slope of a budget constraint represent?
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70
A consumer's indifference curves are right angles when, for the consumer, the goods in question are __________.
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71
What is significant about a point on a graph at which an indifference curve is tangent to a budget constraint?
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72
A consumer's indifference curves are straight lines when, for the consumer, the goods in question are __________.
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73
In order to represent a consumer's choices on a graph, we draw her budget constraint as well as her __________ curves.
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74
Because people are more willing to trade away goods that they have in abundance and less willing to trade away goods of which they have little, indifference curves are ___________.
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75
The rate at which a consumer is willing to trade off one good for another is called the __________.
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76
Thomas faces prices of $6 for a unit of good X and $30 for a unit of good Y. At his optimum, Thomas is willing to give up 1 unit of good Y for __________ units of good X.
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77
If the market is offering consumers the trade-off of 3 pints of Pepsi for 1 pizza, and if the price of a pizza is $9, then what is the price of a pint of Pepsi?
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78
Figure 21-18
The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.
Figure 21-18 The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.   ​ Refer to Figure 21-18. Suppose point A was Kevin's optimum last week, and point B is his optimum this week. What happened between last week and this week?
Refer to Figure 21-18. Suppose point A was Kevin's optimum last week, and point B is his optimum this week. What happened between last week and this week?
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79
If goods X and Y are both normal goods for Brenda, then an increase in Brenda's income will lead her to __________.
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80
Figure 21-18
The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.
Figure 21-18 The figure shows two indifference curves and two budget constraints for a consumer named Kevin.   ​ Refer to Figure 21-18. If point A is Kevin's optimum, then at that optimum, what is his opportunity cost of a shirt in terms of sweaters?
Refer to Figure 21-18. If point A is Kevin's optimum, then at that optimum, what is his opportunity cost of a shirt in terms of sweaters?
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 209 flashcards in this deck.