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Principles of Microeconomics Lecture 5 – Demand

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these lecture notes cover the economics of demand. Income offer curves and Engel curves are discussed aswell as giffin goods









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November 22, 2023
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Written in
2023/2024
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Cecilia testa
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Principles of Microeconomics Lecture 5 – Demand

 If the price of one of the goods in the bundle were to increase the budget constraints slope would change.
Rotating around the point of the good whose price is unchanged
 A change in the budget constraint would result in the consumer moving to a new indifference curve,
resulting in a new budget (depending on whether price has increased or decreased will effect whether we
move up or down an indifference curve)
 The price offer curve is the curve taken through all the optimal bundles points as the price of ONE of the
goods in the bundle changes and new indifference reached
 Best to go through the slide to gain a better understanding
 In the case of perfect compliments the consumer wants to the consume one unit of good x, with one unit of
good y
 For perfect complements the ordinary demand function for commodities 1 and 2 are:
y
o X1* (p1,p2,y) = X2* (p1,p2,y) =
p 1+ p2
 With p2 and y fixed higher p1 causes smaller x1 and x2
 Inverse demand
o Instead of expressing quantity as function of own price, you can express own price as a function of
quantity
 A perfect-complements example:



o
o is the ordinary demand function and




o
o Is the inverse demand function
 The collection of all bundles as the income changes (hence the budget constraint shifts out parallel to itself)
is called the income offer curve
 A normal good has an positively sloped Engel curve because, quantity demanded rises with income
 Conversely an inferior good has a negatively sloped Engel curve
 A good is called an ordinary if the quantity demanded of it always increases as its own price decreases
 If, for some values of its own price, the quantity demanded of a good rises as its own-price increases then
the good is called Giffen.
 If an increase in p2
o increases demand for commodity 1 then commodity 1 is a gross substitute for commodity 2.
o Reduces demand for commodity 1 then commodity 1 is a gross complement for commodity 2.
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