मराठी
Tamil Nadu Board of Secondary EducationHSC Arts Class 11

Properties of Indifference Curves

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Topics

  • Introduction
  • Key Properties
CISCE: Class 12

Introduction

An indifference curve shows all combinations of two goods that provide the same level of satisfaction to a consumer. The consumer does not prefer one combination over another if both lie on the same curve.

CISCE: Class 12

Key Properties

Property Key Point Real-Life Example Diagram
Downward Slope To get more of one good, one must give up some of the other to keep satisfaction the same. Trading more movie hours for fewer hours spent studying: you balance enjoyment and marks​.
Convex to the Origin Willingness to substitute one good for another decreases as you have less of it (diminishing marginal rate of substitution). Exchanging chocolates for chips: as chocolates become less, you offer less for chips each time​.
Higher Curve = Higher Satisfaction Curves further from the origin mean more goods and higher satisfaction. Having a bigger bowl of ice cream and more cake always feels better than having less of both​.
Curves Never Intersect Each curve shows a different satisfaction level, so they cannot cross. Two different cinema tickets for the same showtime can't be for the same seat—each ticket is unique​.
Never Touches Axes You always want some of both goods; curves don't touch axes. You wouldn’t want only burgers and no fries, or only fries and no burgers—the combo is what you prefer

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