English

Explain the following: What will be the shape of an indifference curve when Marginal rate of substitution between two goods is constant? - Economics

Advertisements
Advertisements

Question

Explain the following:

What will be the shape of an indifference curve when Marginal rate of substitution between two goods is constant?

Very Long Answer
Advertisements

Solution

When the Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS) between two goods is constant, the indifference curve is a straight line that slopes downward from left to right.

The Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS) is the rate at which a consumer is willing to give up one good in exchange for an additional unit of another good, while keeping the level of satisfaction (utility) constant.

MRS = `(ΔY)/(ΔX)`

Constant MRS means the consumer is willing to substitute the two goods at a fixed rate, regardless of how much they already have of each. For example, if MRS = 1, the consumer is always willing to give up 1 unit of Good Y to get 1 unit of Good X, no matter the quantity they possess.

The indifference curve becomes a straight line because the rate of trade-off between the two goods does not change.

The slope of this straight line = constant MRS

Indifference Curve: Straight Line with Slope = −MRS

This occurs when two goods are perfect substitutes. Example: A consumer treats 1 bottle of Coke and 1 bottle of Pepsi as equally satisfying at all times.

shaalaa.com
  Is there an error in this question or solution?
Chapter 3: Theory of Consumer Behaviour: Marginal Utility and Indifference Curve Analysis - TEST YOURSELF QUESTIONS [Page 51]

APPEARS IN

Frank Economics [English] Class 12 ISC
Chapter 3 Theory of Consumer Behaviour: Marginal Utility and Indifference Curve Analysis
TEST YOURSELF QUESTIONS | Q 2. (i) (a) | Page 51
Share
Notifications

Englishहिंदीमराठी


      Forgot password?
Use app×