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notes week 2 - Microeconomics

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notes lecture week 2 - Microeconomics, institutions and welfare

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Lecture 2
You cannot determine which decision will be made from a production function on its own, as it
depends on individual preferences.



Indifference curves represent the preference(s), a higher curve corresponds to a higher level of utility.
Indifference curves slope downward due to trade-offs, also the slope gets flatter along the curve.

Marginal Rate of Substitution: the Trade-off

->the trade-off that a person is willing to make between 2 goods, at a given point on the indifference
curve.

MRS = change in good 1 (final grade) / change in good 2 (hours of free time) = slope of isocost curve.

Perfect substitutes: goods that are indistinguishable in use from another. The indifference curve will
be a straight line, the MRS is the slope of this curve (line).

Perfect complements: goods that only provide utility when they are consumed together. The
indifference curve is L-shaped and there is no MRS for these goods.



The feasible frontier is the mirror image of the production function (the ‘input’ on the x-axis changes)




All combinations under the production function are also possible but would be inefficient.

Feasible set: a collection of combinations that can be produced.

Feasible frontier: the maximum achievable output, it represents the opportunity cost (in this case of
free time, -> the trade-off between grade and free time). It is a constraint of the possibilities/choices.

Opportunity cost = Marginal Rate of Transformation (coming from production function; the ability)

The slope of the tangent line becomes steeper along the feasible frontier (the other way around for
the production function) because of a diminishing marginal product of labour.



To determine the optimal choice; put indifference curves together with the feasible frontier.
R60,71
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