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Chapter 9 / Income and Substitution Effects of a Price Change

9.1 Decomposing the Effects of a Price Change


In this part of the course, we’ve been analyzing the effects of changes in the prices of goods, or in income. We’ve talked at length about how the optimal quantity changes; for example, we showed that if two goods are complements, a consumer will buy more of both or less of both in response to a change in the price of either. But we haven’t talked about why that’s the case.

One way of understanding the overall effect of a price change is to break it down into its component parts. An economist thinks about a price change in much the same way a physicist thinks about the path a cannonball takes through the air: the velocity vector $t$ seconds after being fired may be decomposed into its horizontal and vertical components, as shown in the diagram below.

[ See interactive graph online at https://www.econgraphs.org/graphs/consumer/income_substitution/cannonball ]

(If you’re concerned about air resistance, click here for a more detailed explanation.)

Let’s think about one specific change: an increase in the price of good 1. (We could, of course, perform such a decomposition analyzing any kind of price change; the general approach would be the same.) When this occurs, there are two effects on a consumer’s budget set:

In order to split the overall effect into these two effects, we need to make an important modeling choice. In particular, we would like the substitution effect to measure just the effect of the change in relative prices; and for the income effect to measure just the effect of the change in real income. We’ll do this by choosing an intermediate point, or “decomposition bundle,” that represents what the consumer would choose if the relative prices changed, but her “real income” was unaffected.

It’s important to note that there is no one decomposition bundle that we have to use; different textbooks use different methodologies. We’re going to follow the methodology known as the “Hicks decomposition,” after the Nobel Prize-winning British economist John Hicks. In this method, we will go through the following “thought experiment:”

In order to help Jordan’s mom do this, though, we need to figure out what bundle $B$ would be the lowest-cost way to achieve utility $U$, given the new, higher price of good 1. To solve this problem, we need to develop a new mathematical technique: cost minimization.

Next: Cost Minimization
Copyright (c) Christopher Makler / econgraphs.org