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  2. Substitution effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitution_effect

    The effect of the relative price change is called the substitution effect, while the effect due to income having been freed up is called the income effect. If income is altered in response to the price change such that a new budget line is drawn passing through the old consumption bundle but with the slope determined by the new prices and the ...

  3. Slutsky equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slutsky_equation

    The first term on the right-hand side represents the substitution effect, and the second term represents the income effect. [1] Note that since utility is not observable, the substitution effect is not directly observable. Still, it can be calculated by referencing the other two observable terms in the Slutsky equation.

  4. Hicksian demand function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicksian_demand_function

    The substitution effect always is to buy less of that good. The income effect is the change in quantity demanded due to the effect of the price change on the consumer's total buying power. Since for the Marshallian demand function the consumer's nominal income is held constant, when a price rises his real income falls and he is poorer.

  5. Inferior good - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferior_good

    The shift in consumer demand for an inferior good can be explained by two natural economic phenomena: The substitution effect and the income effect. These effects describe and validate the movement of the demand curve in (independent) response to increasing income and relative cost of other goods. [9]

  6. Indifference curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indifference_curve

    The substitution effect is reinforced through the income effect of lower real income (Beattie-LaFrance). An example of a utility function that generates indifference curves of this kind is the Cobb–Douglas function U ( x , y ) = x α y 1 − α , 0 ≤ α ≤ 1 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle U\left(x,y\right)=x^{\alpha }y^{1-\alpha },0\leq ...

  7. Income–consumption curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income–consumption_curve

    The effect of the former type of change in available income is depicted by the income-consumption curve discussed in the remainder of this article, while the effect of the freeing-up of existing income by a price drop is discussed along with its companion effect, the substitution effect, in the article on the latter. For example, if a consumer ...

  8. Marginal rate of substitution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marginal_rate_of_substitution

    Under the standard assumption of neoclassical economics that goods and services are continuously divisible, the marginal rates of substitution will be the same regardless of the direction of exchange, and will correspond to the slope of an indifference curve (more precisely, to the slope multiplied by −1) passing through the consumption bundle in question, at that point: mathematically, it ...

  9. Consumer choice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_choice

    Every price change can be decomposed into an income effect and a substitution effect; the price effect is the sum of substitution and income effects. The substitution effect is the change in demands resulting from a price change that alters the slope of the budget constraint but leaves the consumer on the same indifference curve.