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End of Consumer Theory Lecture 15
Dr. Jennifer P. Wissink ©2018 John M. Abowd and Jennifer P. Wissink, all rights reserved. March 19, 2018
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Announcements: micro Spring 2018
Please make sure you see the Bb message all about prelim 1. Reminder: last day to change grade option or to drop is March 21. Any requests for grading re-considerations must be given to me NO LATER than this Friday March 23, please use the form: Wissink added office hour for rest of semester: Wednesday 12-1pm MEL issue from the weekend was fixed Friday night. Please see Bb post. And remember to submit any attempts on Quiz#06 by tonight at 11pm! Interesting labor market story in the news this morning… John McEnroe paid more than Martina Navratilova by BBC CES EVENT. GO!!
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Seeing Total, Substitution & Income Effects on the Graph (The Hicks Way)
Total Effect: Substitution Effect: Income Effect: B
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Challenge Question to Try: TRUST ME
What would it look like if Beans were Giffen? Break it down into the Total Effect, the Substitution Effect and the Income Effect! Suppose O is the original optimal bundle. Suppose PB increases. If Beans are Giffen, where would the new bundle (N) have to be on the new green budget line? O BLO BLN B
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IC/BL Application #1: From Individual to Market Demand
DemandMC DemandK BMC BK BTot Maryclaire Katie Aggregate Market
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Market Demand Blast From the Past
How does our scratch demand compare to the one we bought off the shelf? Recall the demand function for X (mini speakers): QXD = f(PX, Ps, Pc, I, T&P, Pop) Where: PX = price of the mini speakers Ps = the price of substitutes for mini speakers Pc = the price of complements used with mini speakers I=income T&P=tastes and preferences Pop=population in market or market size
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IC/BL Application #2: Effect of a Gas Tax with Rebate
From The NYT (via Cornell) February 16, 2006, Economic Scene A Way to Cut Fuel Consumption That Everyone Likes, Except the Politicians By ROBERT H. FRANK, Cornell University
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IC/BL Application #2: Effect of a Gas Tax w/Rebate
$aog or $mlo Slutsky’s TE/SE/IE Method: Use a bundle as the anchor– let us say, the original bundle. gallons of gas
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IC/BL Application #3: “In Kind” vs. Cash – The Biggs
$mlo BLcash BLfs BLo food
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IC/BL Application #3: “In Kind” vs. Cash – The Littles
$mlo BLfs BLo BLcash food
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IC/BL Application #4: Two-Part Tariffs (Sam’s Club Example)
Consider Sam (who owns Sam’s Club and sells only X) and Abe (a shopper) and suppose: IAbe = $2,000 PX = $10 and PY = $10 Initially for Abe: Xo* =100 and Yo* =100 Perfectly competitive firms sell Y Sam’s Club has a monopoly on X Sam’s total cost to make X is total cost = $5X Sam’s idea: Offer Abe the following deal Abe pays $200 to join Sam’s Club and then... Sam lowers price of X to PX = $8 Note: PY is still $10 and IAbe is still $2,000 Question: Is this a good idea? If so, for whom?
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O N IAbe = $2000 Entry Fee to Sam’s = $200; PX = $8 and PY = $10
Note: By taking the deal Abe could still afford the original bundle Original bundle: Xo*=100 and Yo*= 100 Budget: $200 (to join) + $800 (spent on X) + $1,000 (spent on Y) = 2,000 IAbe = $2,000 PX = $10 and PY = $10 Initially for Abe: Xo* =100 and Yo* =100 Sam’s total cost: tc=5X Sam’s profit is $500 = $10∙10 – $5∙10 Y 200 IC0 ICnew 180 O N BLN BL0 225 Xold Xnew 200 X
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