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Key issues. 1. deriving demand curves 2. income effect 3. effects of a price change 4. CPI bias 5. labor supply curve. trace out the demand curve by holding income and the price of wine constant, and varying the price of beer
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Key issues 1. deriving demand curves 2. income effect 3. effects of a price change 4. CPI bias 5. labor supply curve
trace out the demand curve by holding income and the price of wine constant, and varying the price of beer example: estimated set of indifference curves for the typical American consumer are bowed away from origin, so beer and wine are imperfect substitutions Deriving Demand Curves
Price-consumption curve shows how the optimal pairs of beer and wine vary as the relative price varies
How income changes shift demand curves • hold prices fixed and vary income • increase in income causes • shift of the demand curve • movement along income-consumption curve • movement along the Engel curve
Income elasticities • income elasticity: • normal good: EI> 0 • inferior good: EI 0
Mimi's income elasticities • beer: Eb = 0.88 • wine: Ew = 1.38 • both are normal goods
Are children inferior? • mother with relative little education: EI = -0.18 • mother relatively well educated: EI = 0.044
Income-consumption curves and income elasticities • shape of income-consumption curve for 2 goods tells us sign of income elasticities • some goods must be normal: not all goods can be inferior
Income elasticities may vary with income Gail may view hamburger as • a normal good at a low income • an inferior good at a high income
Quality and income elasticities • when their incomes rise, some people buy higher quality goods rather than more of what they’re currently buying • examples: • fancier cars • fancier foods • designer clothing
Effects of a price change as price of one good goes up (all else the same), there are two effects: • a substitution effect • an income effect
Substitution effect • consumers substitute other, now relatively cheaper, goods for the one whose price rose • direction of the effect is unambiguous
Income effect • price increase consumers' buying power falls, reducing “income” (opportunity set) • so consumer buys less of at least some goods • direction of income effect depends on income elasticity of each good
Income and substitution effect with an inferior good • substitution effect: opposite of price movement • income effect: same direction as price movement • Giffen good: good for which a decrease in its price causes the quantity demanded to fall • potatoes in Ireland? • quinine water for lab rats
Inflation • because of inflation, prices today are not directly comparable to past prices • inflation harms people on fixed incomes, net lenders, and others
Cost-of-living adjustments many long-term contracts include cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs): • general business contracts • rental • alimony payments • salaries • pensions
Consumer Price Index (CPI) • many governments report a cost-of-living measure: CPI • measure of inflation: overall rise in prices over time • CPI overestimates how true cost-of-living changes over time • overestimate hurts you if your landlord increases rent on your apartment using CPI
Real vs. nominal prices • nominal price = “current dollars” price • real price = “constant dollar” price (adjusted for inflation) • real price = nominal price divided by CPI
Government collects prices on 364 individual goods and services, such as: • housing • dental services • watch and jewelry repairs • college tuition fees • taxi fares • women's hair pieces and wigs • hearing aids • slip covers and decorative pillows • bananas • funeral expenses
Summary statistics • if government reports all price increases separately, information is overwhelming • instead use a single summary statistic, CPI: how prices rose on average
Averaging • one way to average price increases: weight the good equally • but do we really want to weight price increase of skateboards as much as that of automobiles?
CPI approach • give a larger weight to price change of a good, the larger its budget share • example: suppose CPI consists of only clothing (C) and food (F)
CPI adjustment • we assume price of clothing rose more rapidly than that of food • CPI overcompensates (upward bias) • utility rises because consumer substitutes toward the relatively cheaper good
Total CPI bias CPI Commission concluded that CPI has a total upward bias of about 1.1 percentage points per year: • substitution bias: 0.4 percentage points per year • failure to take proper account of spread of discount stores: 0.1 percentage point • failure to account fully for quality improvements and new products (drugs, computers): 0.6 percentage point
USPS • in 2002, a typical union employee earned $59,900 (including benefits) • Substitution bias of 0.5% a year costs USPS $300 extra per employee • multiplied by 860,000 employees: substitution bias costs USPS over $257 million per year (and benefits its employees by same amount)
Federal Government • CPI Commission concluded CPI is fourth largest "federal program" after Social Security, health care, defense • $634 billion of national debt would be eliminated in 5 years if CPI rose 1% less rapidly per year • gain to government would largely be at expense of Social Security recipients
How rich are developing countries? • commonly used measure of income understates third-world country incomes relative to those of industrial nations • problem: ignores substitution effects (as with CPI)
International Monetary Fund • IMF used to report country’s income by converting native currency into dollars at market exchange rate • IMF switched to using purchasing-power parities (PPP), which take account of international differences in prices • used to report how much Chinese could buy at high US prices, now use lower Chinese prices
Result IMF now reports that third world's share of world's income went from • 18% to 34% for developing countries • 9% to 11% for Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union • 7% to 18% for Asia • 73% to 54% for industrialized countries
More plausible • old system: China's total income < Canada's; its income per person only slightly > India • improbable • China has a high daily food consumption • 70% of Chinese urban households have color TVs • 81% have washing machines • new Chinese av. income is $1,950 • China's share of the world income rose from 2% to 6%, making it third-biggest economy behind U.S. (22.5%) and Japan (7.6%)
1999 U.S. income distribution (solid) 2001 China income distribution (dashes)
Deriving labor supply curves • use consumer-theory model to derive supply curve of labor by deriving demand curve for time spent not working • time constraint: H = 24 - N • H = hours of work in a day • N = hours of leisure or nonwork in a day
Price of leisure foregone earnings are greater for a lawyer who earns $500 an hour than for someone who works for minimum wage