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Chapter 8 SLUTSKY EQUATION
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Substitution Effect and Income Effect
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8.1 The Substitution Effect Substitution effect: change in demand when the purchasing power remains constant.
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8.2 The Income Effect Income effect: Change in demand resulting from the change in the purchasing power.
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8.3 Sign of the Substitution Effect The income effect can be positive or negative: Normal good: negative; Inferior good: positive. The substitution effect is negative: The consumer will choose a point on the pivoted budget line; The point must lie above the original budget line; Demand for good 1 increased.
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8.4 The Total Change in Demand The Slutsky equation
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8.4 The Total Change in Demand Normal good Substitution and income effects are both negative Inferior, but non-Giffen good Substitution effect dominates Giffen good Income effect dominates
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Inferior goods
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8.5 Rates of Change
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8.6 The Law of Demand If the demand for a good increases when income increases, then the demand for that good must decrease when its price increases.
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8.7 Examples of Income and Substitution Effects Perfect complements the entire change in demand is due to the income effect.
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8.7 Examples of Income and Substitution Effects Perfect substitutes the entire change in demand is due to the substitution effect.
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8.7 Examples of Income and Substitution Effects Quasilinear preferences: the entire change in demand is due to the substitution effect.
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EXAMPLE: Rebating a Tax The original budget constraint: px+y=m The budget constraint in the presence of the tax-rebate plan: (p+t)x’+y’=m+tx’
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8.8 Another Substitution Effect
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Recalling revealed preference: p 1 x 1 +p 2 x 2 ≤p 1 y 1 +p 2 y 2 q 1 y 1 +q 2 y 2 ≤q 1 x 1 +q 2 x 2 it follows that (q 1 -p 1 )(y 1 -x 1 )+(q 2 -p 2 )(y 2 -x 2 )≤0 q 2 =p 2 since we are changing the price of good 1 only: (q 1 -p 1 )(y 1 -x 1 )≤0 The Hicksian substitution effect must be negative.
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