Chapter 21. The Theory of Consumer Choice. Gregory Mankiw. Principles of Economics. 7th edition.
The Budget Constraint: What the Consumer Can Afford.
Preferences: What the Consumer Wants-Representing Preferences with Indifference Curves
Preferences: What the Consumer Wants-Representing Preferences with Indifference Curves
Preferences: What the Consumer Wants-Four Properties of Indifference Curves
Preferences: What the Consumer Wants-Four Properties of Indifference Curves
Preferences: What the Consumer Wants-Two Extreme Examples of Indifference Curves
Preferences: What the Consumer Wants-Two Extreme Examples of Indifference Curves
Optimization: What the Consumer Chooses - 21-3a The Consumer’s Optimal Choices
Optimization: What the Consumer Chooses - 21-3a The Consumer’s Optimal Choices
FYI-Utility An Alternative Way toDescribe Preferences and Optimization
FYI-Utility An Alternative Way toDescribe Preferences and Optimization
Optimization: What the Consumer Chooses - How Changes in Income Affect the Consumer’s Choices
Optimization: What the Consumer Chooses - How Changes in Prices Affect the Consumer’s Choices
Optimization: What the Consumer Chooses – Income and Substitution Effects.
Income and Substitution Effects When the Priceof Pepsi Falls
Optimization: What the Consumer Chooses – Income and Substitution Effects.
Optimization: What the Consumer Chooses – Deriving the Demand Curve
Three Applications -Do All Demand Curves Slope Downward?
Case study-The search for Giffen Goods
Three Applications -How Do Wages Affect Labor Supply?
Case Study - Income Effects on Labor Supply: Historical Trends, Lottery Winners, and the Carnegie Conjecture
Three Applications -How Do Interest Rates Affect Household Saving?
Three Applications -How Do Interest Rates Affect Household Saving?
Conclusion: Do People Really ThinkThis Way?
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