Jim Whitney Economics 250

The Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS)

(1) The geometry of the MRS

    In the diagram to the right, consider two points on Uo:

Point Milk Donuts
A 1 10
B 2 5

    How much has each of the following changed in the move from A to B?

Milk consumption? DM =
Donut consumption? DD =
Utility? DU =

    The slope of an indifference curve is called the marginal rate of substitution (MRS).
    It tells us the rate at which good X can substitute for good Y without affecting utility.

    The MRS = the maximum amount of Y which a consumer is willing to give up to get another unit of X

(2) the mathematics of the MRS

    Even though we can’t directly measure MUs, we can show that they do determine the slope of Uo:

    DU = MUx.DX + MUy.DY

    Along Uo, DU = 0 =>

    -MUy.DY = MUx.DX =>

    |-DY/DX| = MUx/MUy

(3) the logic of the MRS

whitespace.gif (816 bytes)  whitespace.gif (816 bytes) General case: | Example here:
MUx = the utility gained from an extra X | MUx = 10 utils
MUy = the rate that utility falls when giving up Y | MUy = 2 utils
whitespace.gif (816 bytes) |
=> MUx/MUy | 10u/(2u per Y)
= total Y you can give up for 1X without losing any utility | 5Y for 1X
= |-DY/DX| (the size of the slope of Uo) |