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Encyclopedia > Marginal rate of substitution

In economics, the marginal rate of substitution (MRS for short) is the rate at which consumers are willing to give up units of one good in exchange for more units of another good. Put another way, the MRS of good X for good Y is the amount of good Y that a person is willing to give up to obtain one additional unit of good X. The MRS measures the value that the consumer places on one extra unit of a good, where the opportunity cost is quantified by amount of another good sacrificed. Mathematically, the MRS is the negative slope or derivative (evaluated at a point) of the indifference curve. Therefore, the MRS at any point on an indifference curve is equal in magnitude to the slope of that indifference curve. The marginal rate of substitution of good X for good Y (MRSxy) is also equivalent to the marginal utility of X over the marginal utility of Y. Formally, Economics (deriving from the Greek words οίκω [oeko], house, and νέμω [nemo], distribute) is the social science that studies the allocation of scarce resources through measurable variables. ... Opportunity cost is a term used in economics, to mean the cost of something in terms of an opportunity foregone (and the benefits that could be received from that opportunity), or the most valuable foregone alternative. ... In microeconomics, an indifference curve is a graph showing combinations of two goods to which an economic agent (such as a consumer or firm) is indifferent, that is, it has no preference for one combination over the other. ... In economics, marginal utility is the additional utility (satisfaction or benefit) that a consumer derives from an additional unit of a commodity or service. ...

For example, if the MRSxy = 2, the consumer will give up 2 units of good Y to obtain 1 additional unit of good X.


As you move down a convex indifference curve, the marginal rate of substitution decreases since the magnitude of the slope of the indifference curve is decreasing.


Since the indifference curve is convex with respect to the origin and we have defined the MRS as the negative slope of the indifference curve,

Mathematical analysis of the marginal rate of substitution

Assume the consumer utility function is defined as:

Where U is consumer utility, x and y are goods, and F is the utility function.


Also, note that:

Where MUx is the marginal utility with respect to good x and MUy is the marginal utility with respect to good y.


By differentiating the utility function equation, we obtain the following results:

Since dU = 0 for any indifference curve (because U = c, where c is a constant), it follows that:

and

Where F(x), or dU/dx, represents the marginal utility of good x (MUx), and F(y), or dU/dy, represents the marginal utility of good y (MUy). Also, −dy/dx = MRSxy, so MRSxy equals minus the slope of the indifference curve. Therefore:


When consumers maximize utility with respect to a budget constraint, the indifference curve is tangent to the budget line, therefore, with m representing slope: Given an allocation of two goods, the budget line through that allocation is the set of all other allocations of the two goods that someone in a market could arrive at by selling one of the goods for the other. ...

Therefore, when the consumer is choosing his utility maximized market basket on his budget line,

This important result tells us that utility is maximized when the consumer's budget is allocated so that the marginal utility to price ratio is equal for each good.


References

Microeconomics is the study of the economic behaviour of individual consumers, firms, and industries and the distribution of production and income among them. ... 2005 is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ...

See also

In economics, marginal concepts refer to the effect of producing or consuming one more of a good, i. ... In microeconomics, an indifference curve is a graph showing combinations of two goods to which an economic agent (such as a consumer or firm) is indifferent, that is, it has no preference for one combination over the other. ... Consumer theory relates preferences, indifference curves and budget constraints to consumer demand curves. ...

  Results from FactBites:
 
Production theory basics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2112 words)
The marginal physical product of a variable input is the change in total output due to a one unit change in the variable input (called the discrete marginal product) or alternatively the rate of change in total output due to an infinitesimally small change in the variable input (called the continuous marginal product).
The marginal rate of technical substitution of labour for capital is equivalent to the absolute slope of the isoquant at that point (change in capital divided by change in labour).
In this case we are looking at the marginal rate of technical substitution capital for labour (which is the reciprocal of the marginal rate of technical substitution labour for capital).
Marginal concepts - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (176 words)
Marginal benefit is the extra utility accrued from one additional unit of a good.
Similarly marginal utility is the additional utility (satisfaction or benefit) that a consumer derives from an additional unit of a commodity or service.
It is assumed that marginal utility generally falls as consumption increases, so that one's 10th doughnut in a day is less satisfying than the first or second.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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