The slope of the budget constraint represents the rate at which a consumer can trade one product for another. For example, a student spends his weekly allowance of $100 on purchasing books and snacks. A book costs $20 and a snack costs $5. Earlier, the student bought three books and eight snacks. Now, he buys four books and four snacks. In doing so, the student trades four snacks for one book. This gives us a slope of four snacks for one book.
The slope of the budget constraint is determined by the relative prices of the two products. If the student wants to buy more books and stay within his budget, he has to buy fewer snacks. For instance, in buying one more book costing $20, he must give up four snacks priced at $5 each. This is because the relative price of books in terms of snacks is 4, or $20/$5.
For two goods X and Y, the slope of budget constraint is given as:
Slope of budget constraint = -(Px/Py)
Where,
Px is the price of product X
Py is the price of product Y
Из главы 5:
Now Playing
Consumer Behavior
36 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
212 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
233 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
433 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
125 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
130 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
142 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
83 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
88 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
315 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
99 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
158 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
55 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
51 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
41 Просмотры
See More
Авторские права © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Все права защищены