Introduction to Economic Analysis Chapter 12 Consumer Theory

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Chapter 12 Consumer Theory Consumer theory is to demand as producer theory is to supply . The major difference is that producer theory assumes that sellers are motivated by profit , and is something that one can usually directly measure . Moreover , the costs that enter into profit arise from physical properties of the production many coffee cups come from the manufacturing plant ?

In contrast , consumer theory is based on what people like , so it begins with something that we can directly measure but must infer . That is , consumer theory is based on the premise that we can infer what people like from the choices they make . Now , inferring what people like from the choices they make does not rule out mistakes . But our starting point is to consider the implications of a theory in which consumers don make mistakes , but make choices that give them the most satisfaction . Economists think of this approach as analogous to studying gravitation in a vacuum before thinking about the effects of air friction . There is a practical consideration that dictates ignoring mistakes . There are many kinds of example , I meant to buy toothpaste , but forgot and bought a toothbrush ( a memory problem ) I thought this toothpaste was better , but it is actually worse ( a learning issue ) and I meant to buy toothpaste , but I bought crack instead ( a issue ) All of these kinds of mistakes lead to distinct theories . Moreover , we can understand these alternative theories by understanding the basic theory , and then we can see where the changes to these theories lead . Utility Maximization URL books 278

LEARNING OBJECTIVE . How do economists model consumer choice ?

Economists use the term utility in a peculiar and idiosyncratic way . Utility refers not to usefulness but to the of pleasure or happiness that a person measure of the satisfaction a person experiences . Usefulness might contribute to utility , but so does style , fashion , or even whimsy . The term utility is unfortunate , not just because it suggests usefulness but because it makes the economic approach to behavior appear more limited than it actually is . We will make very few assumptions about the form of utility that a consumer might have . That is , we will attempt to avoid making value judgments about the preferences a consumer he or she likes to smoke cigarettes or eat only carrots , watch Arnold movies , or spend time with a . Consumers like whatever it is that they like the economic assumption is that they attempt to obtain the goods that they enjoy . It is the consequences of the pursuit of happiness that comprise the core of consumer theory . In this chapter , we will focus on two goods . In many cases , the generalization to an arbitrary number of goods is straightforward . Moreover , in most applications it won matter because we can view one of the goods as a composite good , consumption of a bunch of other goods . As a starting point , suppose there are two goods , and . To distinguish the quantity of the good from the good itself , we use capital letters to indicate the good , and lowercase letters to indicate the quantity of that good that is consumed . If is , a consumer who ate three of them would have . How can we represent preferences for this consumer ?

To fix ideas , suppose the consumer is both hungry and thirsty , and the goods are pizza and beer . The consumer would like more of both , in greater pleasure for URL books 279 greater consumption . Items that one might consume are generally known as bundles , as in bundles of goods and services , and less frequently as , a short form for the , meaning a list of quantities . Since we will focus on two goods , both of these terms are strained in the bundle because a bundle of two things isn much of a bundle , and a because what we have here is a , also known as a pair . But part of the job of studying economics is to learn the language of economics , so bundles it is . One might naturally consider measuring utility on some kind of physical basis ( production of dopamine in the brain , for example ) but it turns out that the actual quantities of utility don matter for the theory we develop . What matters is whether a bundle produces more than another , less , or the same . Let ( represent the utility that a consumer gets from consuming units of beer and units of pizza . The guides the consumer choice in the sense that , if the consumer can choose either ( or ( we expect him to choose ( if ( But notice that a doubling of would lead to the same choices because ( if and only if ( Thus , doubling the utility doesn change the preferences of the consumer . But the situation is more extreme than this . Even the utility doesn change the consumer preferences because ( ya ) if and only if eu ( eu ( In other words , there are no natural units for utility , at least until such time as we are able to measure pleasure in the brain . It is possible to develop the theory of consumer choice without supposing that a utility function exists at all . However , it is expedient to begin with utility in order to simplify the analysis for introductory purposes . URL books 280

KEY TAKEAWAYS Consumer theory is to demand as producer theory is to supply . Consumer theory is based on the premise that we can infer what people like from the choices they make . Utility refers not to usefulness but to the flow of pleasure or happiness that a person measure of the satisfaction a person experiences . There are no natural units for utility any increasing transformation is acceptable . Budget or Feasible Set LEARNING OBJECTIVE . How does income limit choice ?

Suppose that a consumer has a amount of money to spend , There are two goods and , with associated prices and . The feasible choices that the consumer can make satisfy . In addition , we will focus on consumption and rule out negative consumption , so and . This gives a budget set or feasible set , as illustrated in Figure Budget set . The budget set is the set of goods 21 consumer can afford to purchase . The budget line is the boundary of the budget set , and it consists of the goods that just exhaust the consumer budget . Figure Budget set URL books 281

In Figure Budget set , the feasible set of purchases that satisfies the budget constraint is illustrated with shading . If the consumer spends all of her money on , she can consume the quantity . Similarly , if she spends all of her money on , she consumes units of . The straight line between them , known as the budget line , represents the most of the goods that she can consume . The slope of the budget line is . An increase in the price of one good pivots or rotates the budget line . Thus , if the price of increases , the remains the same , but . This is illustrated in Figure Effect of an increase in price on the budget . Figure ( the budget URL books 282

The effect of increasing the available money is to increase both and proportionately . This means that an increase in shifts the budget line out ( away from the origin ) in a parallel fashion , as shown in Figure An increase in income . Figure Budget Line shifts out as rises URL books 283

An increase in both prices by the same proportional factor has an effect identical to a decrease in income . Thus , one of the three financial two prices and redundant . That is , we can trace out all of the possible budget lines with any two of the three parameters . This can prove useful . We can arbitrarily set to be the number one without affecting the generality of the analysis . When setting a price to one , that related good is called the , and essentially all prices are with respect to that one good . A example of a occurred when the currency used was based on gold , so that the prices of other goods were in terms of the value of gold . Money is not necessarily the only constraint on the consumption of goods that a consumer faces . Time can be equally important . One can own all of the compact disks in the world , but they are useless if one doesn actually have time to listen to them . Indeed , when we consider the supply of labor , time will be a major labor ( working ) uses up time that could be used to consume goods . In this case , there will be two kinds of budget one and a temporal one . At a fixed wage , time and money translate directly into one another , and the existence of the time constraint won present challenges to the theory . The conventional way to handle the time constraint is to use , as a baseline , working full out , and then to view leisure as a good that is purchased at a price equal to the wage . Thus , if you earn 20 an hour , we would set your budget at 480 a day , 24 hours of work but we would then permit you to buy leisure time , during which eating , sleeping , brushing your teeth , and every other activity could be accomplished at a price equal to 20 per hour . URL books ( 909 284

KEY TAKEAWAYS The budget set or feasible set is the set of goods that the consumer can afford to purchase . The budget line is the pair of goods that exactly spend the budget . The budget line shifts out when income rises and pivots when the price of one good changes . Increasing prices and income by the same multiplicative factor leaves the feasible set unchanged . EXERCISES . Graph the budget line for apples and oranges with prices of and 53 , respectively , and 60 to spend . Now increase the price of apples from to , and draw the budget line . Suppose that apples cost each . Water can be purchased for 50 cents per gallon up to gallons , and 10 cents per gallon for each gallon beyond gallons . Draw the budget constraint for a consumer who spends 200 on apples and water . Graph the budget line for apples and oranges with prices of and 53 , respectively , and 60 to spend . Now increase the expenditure to 90 , and draw the budget line . LEARNING OBJECTIVES . What is an ?

Why does it help to analyze consumer choice ?

With two goods , we can graphically represent utility by considering the contour map of utility . Utility contours are known as , meaning equal quantity , and are also known as indifference curves , since the URL books 285 consumer is indifferent between points on the line . In other words an indifference curve , also known as an curve , is the set of goods that produce equal utility . We have encountered this idea already in the description of production functions , where the curves represented input mixes that produced a given output . The only difference here is that the output being produced is consumer utility instead of a single good or service . Figure Utility ( Figure Utility provides an illustration of , or indifference curves . Each curve represents one level of utility . Higher utilities occur to the northeast , farther away from the origin . As with production , the slope of the indifference curves has the interpretation of the between the two goods . The amount of the consumer is willing to give up , in order to obtain an extra bit of , is the slope of the indifference curve . Formally , the equation ( an indifference curve for the reference utility uo . Differentiating in such a way as to preserve the equality , we obtain the slope of the indifference curve URL books 286

or . This slope is known as the marginal rate of substitution and the off , from the consumer perspective , between the goods . That is to say , the marginal rate of substitution ( of ) is the amount of the consumer is willing to lose in order to obtain an extra unit of . An important assumption concerning is in the figure are preferred to extreme Suppose that the consumer is indifferent between ( xi , yi ) and ( that is , xi , yi ) Then we can say that preferences are convex if any point on the line segment connecting ( xi , yi ) and ( is at least as good as the extremes . Formally , a point on the line segment connecting ( xi , yi ) and ( comes in the form ( a ) a ) for a between zero and one . This is also known as a convex combination between the two points . When a is zero , the segment starts at ( and proceeds in a linear fashion to ( xi , yi ) at a . Preferences are convex if , for any a between and , xi , yi ) implies ( a ) yi ( a ) xi , yi ) This property is illustrated in Figure Convex preferences . The line segment that connects two points on the indifference curve lies to the northeast of the indifference curve , which means that the line segment involves strictly more consumption of both goods than some points on the indifference curve . In other words , it is preferred to the indifference curve . Convex preferences mean that a consumer prefers a mix to any two equally valuable extremes . Thus , if the consumer likes black coffee and also likes drinking milk , then the consumer prefers some of necessarily only drinking coffee or only drinking milk . This sounds more reasonable if you think of the consumer choices on a monthly basis . If you like drinking 60 cups of coffee and no milk per month as much as you like URL books ( 909 287

drinking 30 glasses of milk and no coffee , convex preferences entail preferring 30 cups of coffee and 15 glasses of milk to either extreme . Figure ' How does a consumer choose which bundle to select ?

The consumer is faced with the problem of maximizing ( subject to . We can derive the solution to the consumer problem as follows . First , solve the budget constraint , to obtain . If Yis a good , this constraint will be satisfied with equality , and all of the money will be spent . Thus , we can write the consumer utility as ( The condition for this problem , maximizing it over , has ( This can be rearranged to obtain the marginal rate of substitution ( URL , org books 288

The marginal rate of substitution ( is the extra amount of one good needed to make up for a decrease in another good , staying on an indifference curve The condition requires that the slope of the indifference curve equals the slope of the budget line that is , there is a tangency between the indifference curve and the budget line . This is illustrated in Figure Graphical utility maximization . Three indifference curves are drawn , two of which intersect the budget line but are not tangent . At these intersections , it is possible to increase utility by moving toward the center , until the highest of the three indifference curves is reached . At this point , further increases in utility are not feasible , because there is no intersection between the set of bundles that produce a strictly higher utility and the budget set . Thus , the large black dot is the bundle that produces the highest utility for the consumer . It will later prove useful to also state the condition , although we won use this condition now ( Note that the Vector ( is the gradient of , and the gradient points in the direction of steepest ascent of the function . Second , the equation that characterizes the optimum , where is the dot product that multiplies the components of vectors and then adds them , says that the vectors ( ug ) and ( are perpendicular and , hence , that the rate of steepest ascent of the utility function is perpendicular to the budget line . When does this tangency approach fail to solve the consumer problem ?

There are three ways that it can fail . First , the utility might not be differentiable . We will set aside this kind of failure with the remark that URL books ( 999 289 points of is mathematically challenging but doesn lead to alterations in the theory . The second failure is that a tangency doesn maximize utility . Figure Concave preferences Prefer boundaries illustrates this case . Here there is a tangency , but it doesn maximize utility . In Figure Concave preferences Prefer boundaries , the dotted indifference curve maximizes utility given the budget constraint ( straight line ) This is exactly the kind of failure that is ruled out by convex preferences . In Figure Concave preferences Prefer boundaries , preferences are not convex because , if we connect two points on the indifference curves and look at a convex combination , we get something less preferred , with lower more preferred as convex preferences would require . Figure . Prefer I ) The third failure is more fundamental The derivative might fail to be zero because we ve hit the boundary of or . This is a fundamental problem because , in fact , there are many goods that we do buy zero of , so zeros for some goods are not uncommon solutions to the problem of maximizing utility . We will take this problem up in a separate section , but we already have a major tool to deal with it convex preferences . As we shall see , convex preferences ensure that the consumer maximization problem is well URL books 290

KEY TAKEAWAYS , meaning equal quantity , are also known as indifference curves and represent sets of points holding utility constant . They are analogous to production . Preferences are said to be convex if any point on the line segment connecting a pair of points with equal utility is preferred to the . This means that whenever the consumer is indifferent between two points , he or she prefers a mix of the two . The conditions for the maximizing utility involve equating the marginal rate of substitution and the price ratio . At the maximum , the rate of steepest ascent of the utility function is perpendicular to the budget line . There are two main ways that the conditions fail to characterize the optimum the consumer does have convex preferences , or the optimum involves a zero consumption of one or more goods . Examples LEARNING OBJECTIVE . Are there any convenient functional forms for analyzing consumer choice ?

The utility function comes in the form ( Since utility is zero if either of the goods is zero , we see that a consumer with URL books 291 Douglas preferences will always buy some of each good . The marginal rate of substitution for utility is ( Thus , the consumer utility maximization problem yields ( Thus , using the budget constraint , This yields , The utility results in constant expenditure shares . No matter what the price of or , the expenditure on is oLM . Similarly , the expenditure on Yis ( This makes the utility very useful for computing examples and homework exercises . When two goods are perfect complements , they are consumed proportionately . The utility that gives rise to perfect complements is in the form ( min , for some constant ( the Greek letter beta ) First observe that , with perfect complements , consumers will buy in such a way that . The reason is that , if , some expenditure on is a waste since it brings in no additional utility and the consumer gets higher utility by decreasing and increasing . This lets us define a composite good that involves buying some amount of also buying By of . The price of this composite commodity is , and it produces utility this way , perfect complements boil down to a single good problem . If the only two goods available in the world were pizza and beer , it is likely point at which increased consumption does not increase set in at some point . How many pizzas can you eat per month ?

How much beer can you drink ?

Don answer that . Figure Is ( I ) URL books 292 What does satiation mean for ?

It means there is a point that maximizes utility , which economists call a bliss point . An example is illustrated in Figure for a bliss point . Near the origin , the behave as before . However , as one gets full of pizza and beer , a point of maximum value is reached , illustrated by a large black dot . What does satiation mean for the theory ?

First , if the bliss point isn within reach , the theory behaves as before . With a bliss point within reach , consumption will stop at the bliss point . A feasible bliss point entails having a zero value of money . There may be people with a zero value of money , but even very wealthy people , who reach satiation in goods that they personally consume , often like to do other things with the wealth and appear not to have reached satiation overall . KEY TAKEAWAYS The utility results in constant expenditure shares . URL books 293

When two goods are perfect complements , they are consumed proportionately . Perfect complements boil down to a single good problem . A bliss point , or satiation , is a point at which further increases in consumption reduce utility . EXERCISES . Consider a consumer with utility ( If the consumer has 100 to spend , and the price is and the price of is , graph the budget line and then find the point that maximizes the consumer utility given the budget . Draw the utility through this point . What are the expenditure shares ?

Consider a consumer with utility ( Calculate the slope of the directly by solving ( for as a function and the utility level uo . What is the slope ?

Verify that it satisfies the formula given above . Consider a consumer with utility ( xy ) Calculate the slope of the directly by solving ( for as a function and the utility level uo . What is the slope ?

Verify that the result is the same as in the previous exercise . Why is it the same ?

The case of perfect substitutes arises when all that matters to the consumer is the sum of the example , red shirts and green shirts for a colorblind consumer . In this case , Graph the for perfect substitutes . Show that the consumer maximizes utility by spending his or her entire income on whichever product is cheaper . Suppose ( for oz . Show that ( a ) and ( URL books 294

. Suppose that one consumer has the utility function ( which is always a positive number ) and a second consumer has utility Suppose , in addition , that for , that is , the second utility is the square of the first person . Show that these consumers make the same is , ya ) if and only if ( ya ) Substitution Effects LEARNING OBJECTIVE . When prices change , how do consumers change their behavior ?

It would be a simpler world if an increase in the price of a good always entailed buying less of it . Alas , it isn so , as Figure Substitution with an increase in price illustrates . In this figure , an increase in the price of the budget line to pivot around the intersection on the , since the amount of that can be purchased hasn changed . In this case , the quantity of rises . Figure SuI ) with an i ) I ( URL books 295

At first glance , this increase in the consumption of a good in response to a price increase sounds implausible , but there are examples where it makes sense . The primary example is leisure . As wages rise , the cost of leisure ( forgone wages ) rises . But as people feel wealthier , they choose to work fewer hours . The other examples given , which are hotly debated in the tempest in a teapot kind of way , involve people subsisting on a good like potatoes but occasionally buying meat . When the price of potatoes rises , they can no longer afford meat and buy even more potatoes than before . Thus , the logical starting point on happens to the demand for a good when the price of that good not lead to a useful theory . As a result , economists have devised an alternative approach based on the following logic . An increase in the price of a good is really a composition of two effects an increase in the relative price of the good and a decrease in the purchasing power of money . As a result , it is useful to examine these two effects separately . The substitution effect considers the change in the relative price , with a sufficient change in income to keep the consumer on the same utility . The income effect changes only income . Figure ) Demand I Compensated URL books 296

To graphically illustrate the substitution effect , consider Figure Substitution effect . The starting point is the tangency between the and the budget line , denoted with a diamond shape and labeled Initial The price of , pivoting the budget line inward . The new budget line is illustrated with a heavy , dashed line . To find the substitution effect , increase income from the dashed line until the original is reached . Increases in income shift the budget line out in a fashion parallel to the original . We reach the original at a point labeled with a small circle , a point sometimes called the compensated demand because we have compensated the consumer for the price increase by increasing income just enough to leave her unharmed , on the same . The substitution effect is just the difference between these substitution in response to the price change , holding constant the utility of the consumer . We can readily see that the substitution effect of a price increase in Yis to decrease the consumption of increase the consumption of . The income effect is the change in consumption resulting from the change in income . The effect of any change in price can be decomposed into the substitution effect , which holds utility constant while changing and the income effect , which adjusts for the loss of purchasing power arising from the price increase . Example ( Recall that the utility comes in the form ( Solving for , we obtain , and ( Thus , consider a multiplicative increase A in is , multiplying A . In order to leave the utility constant , must rise by . Thus , rises by the factor ' and falls by the factor . This is the substitution effect . URL books 297

What is the substitution effect of a small change in the price any given utility function , not necessarily ?

To address this question , it is helpful to introduce some notation . We will subscript the utility to indicate partial derivative that is , Note that , by the of the substitution effect , we are holding the utility constant , so ( is being held constant . This means , locally , that dy . In addition , we have , so . Finally , we have the condition , which is convenient to write as . Differentiating this equation , and letting ( we have ( For a given , we now have three equations in three unknowns , dy , and . However , only appears in one of the three . Thus , the effect of a price change on can be solved by solving two equations dy ( fo the two unknowns , and dy . This is straightforward and yields . These equations imply that rises and falls . We immediately see that . Thus , the change in ( follows the budget line locally . This is purely a consequence of holding utility constant . To complete the thought while we are embroiled in these derivatives , note that implies that . URL books 298

Thus , the amount of money necessary to compensate the consumer for the price increase , keeping utility constant , can be calculated from our third equation The amount of income necessary to ensure that the consumer makes no losses from a price increase in Yis the amount that lets him or her buy the bundle that he or she originally purchased that is , the increase in the amount of money is precisely the amount needed to cover the increased price of . This shows that locally there is no difference between a substitution effect that keeps utility constant ( which is what we explored ) and one that provides sufficient income to permit purchasing the previously purchased consumption bundle , at least when small changes in prices are contemplated . KEY TAKEAWAYS An increase in the price of a good is really a composition of two effects an increase in the relative price of the good and a decrease in the purchasing power of money . It is useful to examine these two effects separately . The substitution effect considers the change in the relative price , with a sufficient change in income to keep the consumer on the same utility . The income effect changes only income . The substitution effect is the change in consumption resulting from a price change keeping utility constant . The substitution effect always involves a reduction in the good whose price increased . The amount of money required to keep the consumer utility constant from an infinitesimal price increase is precisely the amount required to let him or her buy his or her old bundle at the new prices . Income Effects URL books 299

LEARNING OBJECTIVE . How do consumers change their purchases when their income rises or falls ?

Wealthy people buy more caviar than poor people . Wealthier people buy more land , medical services , cars , telephones , and computers than poorer people because they have more money to spend on goods and services and , overall , buy more of them . But wealthier people also buy fewer of some goods , too . Rich people buy fewer cigarettes and processed cheese foods . You don see billionaires waiting in line at , and that probably isn because they have an assistant to wait in line for them . For most goods , at a sufficiently high income , the purchase tends to trail off as income rises . When an increase in income causes a consumer to buy more of a good , that good is called a normal good for that consumer . When the consumer buys less , the good is called an inferior good , which is an example of sensible jargon that is rare in any discipline . That is , an inferior good is any good whose quantity demanded falls as income rises . At a sufficiently low income , almost all goods are normal goods , while at a sufficiently high income , most goods become inferior . Even a Ferrari is an inferior good against some alternatives , such as Lear jets . The curve that shows the path of consumption as income changes , holding prices constant , is known as an curve . An curve graphs ( as , where ( is the amount of chosen with income , and similarly ( is the amount of . An example of an curve is illustrated in Figure curve . Figure ' URL books 300

Example ( Since the equations , define the optimal consumption , the curve is a straight line through the origin with slope ( An inferior good will see the quantity fall as income rises . Note that , with two goods , at least one is a normal can both be inferior goods because otherwise , when income rises , less of both would be purchased . An example of an inferior good is illustrated in Figure Backward good . Here , as income rises , the consumption of rises , reaches a maximum , and then begins to decline . In the declining portion , is an inferior good . The of the substitution effect now permits us to decompose the effect of a price change into a substitution effect and an income effect . This is illustrated in Figure Income and substitution effects . What is the mathematical form of the income effect ?

This is actually more straightforward to compute than the substitution effect computed above . As with the substitution effect , we differentiate the conditions and , and constant , to obtain and ( URL books ( 909 301 Figure Figure Substitution Effect The second condition can also be written as . This equation alone defines the slope of the curve without determining how large a change arises from a given change in The two conditions URL books 302 together can be solved for the effects of on and . The curve is given by and . Note ( from the condition ) that good Yis inferior if , or , or is increasing in . Since is locally constant when increases , equaling the price ratio , and an increase in increases ( thanks to the condition ) the only way to keep equal to the price ratio is for to fall . This property characterizes an inferior increase in the quantity of the good increases the marginal rate of substitution of that good for another good . KEY TAKEAWAYS When an increase in income causes a consumer to buy more of a good , that good is called a normal good for that consumer . When the consumer buys less , the good is called an inferior good . At a sufficiently high income , most goods become inferior . The curve that shows the path of consumption as income rises is known as an curve . For the utility , curves are straight lines through the origin . Not all goods can be inferior . The effect of a price increase decomposes into two effects a decrease in real income and a substitution effect from the change in the price ratio . For normal goods , a price increase decreases quantity . For inferior goods , a price increase decreases quantity only if the substitution effect is larger than the income effect . URL books 303

EXERCISES . Show that , in the case of perfect complements , the curve does not depend on prices . Compute the substitution effect and income effect associated with a multiplicative price increase A in is , multiplying by A for the case of the utility ( Mathematical Cleanup LEARNING OBJECTIVES . Are there important details that have been addressed in the presentation of utility maximization ?

What happens when consumers buy none of a good ?

Let us revisit the maximization problem considered in this chapter to provide conditions under which local maximization is global . The consumer can spend on either or both of two goods . This yields a payoff of ( When is this problem well behaved ?

First , if is a concave function of , which implies ( any solution to the order condition is , in fact , a maximum . To see this , note that ( entails ' is decreasing . Moreover , if the point satisfies ' then for , 20 and for , because ' gets smaller as gets larger , and ' Now consider . Since ' 20 , is increasing as gets larger . Similarly , for , which means that gets smaller as gets larger . Thus , is concave and ' means that is maximized at . URL , org books 304

Thus , a sufficient condition for the condition to characterize the maximum of utility is that ( 50 for all , and Letting , this is equivalent for all . In turn , we can see that this requires ( i ) un ( ii ) and ( iii ) In addition , since ( i ) ii ) and ( iii ) are for . Therefore , if ( i ) um , ii ) and ( iii ) a solution to the conditions characterizes utility maximization for the consumer . When will a consumer specialize and consume zero of a good ?

A necessary condition for the choice of to be zero is that the consumer doesn benefit from consuming a very small that is , This means that ' OI ( Moreover , if the concavity of is met , as assumed above , then this condition is sufficient to guarantee that the solution is zero . To see this , note that concavity of is decreasing . Combined with ' 50 , this entails that is maximized at . An important class of examples of this behavior is utility . utility comes in the form ( where is a concave function ( for all ) That is , utility is utility that is additively separable . Figure ( rI ' URL books 305

The procedure for dealing with corners is generally this . First , check concavity of the function . If is concave , we have a procedure to solve the problem when is not concave , an alternative strategy must be devised . There are known strategies for some cases that are beyond the scope of this text . Given concave , the next step is to check the and verify that ' for otherwise maximizes the consumer utility ) and ' for otherwise maximizes the consumer utility ) Finally , at this point we seek the interior solution ' this procedure , we can ensure that we find the actual maximum for the consumer rather than a solution to the conditions that don maximize the consumer utility . KEY TAKEAWAYS Conditions are available that ensure that the conditions produce a utility maximum . With convex preferences , zero consumption of one good arises when utility is decreasing in the consumption of one good , spending the rest of income on the other good . URL books 305

EXERCISE . Demonstrate that the consumer will consume zero if and only if ( and that the consumer instead consumes zero if ( The utility , for ( are illustrated in Figure . Note that , even though the curve , they are nonetheless parallel to each other . URL books 307