Preferences - What The Consumer Wants
Preferences - What The Consumer Wants
Preferences - What The Consumer Wants
The consumers preferences allow him to choose among different bundles of cola and pizza. If
you offer the consumer two different bundles, he chooses the bundle that best suits his tastes. If
the two bundles suit his tastes equally well, we say that the consumer is indifferent between the
two bundles. Just as we have represented the consumers budget constraint graphically, we can
also represent his preferences graphically. We do this with indifference curves. An indifference
curve shows the bundles of consumption that make the consumer equally happy. In this case, the
indifference curves show the combinations of cola and pizza with which the consumer is equally
satisfied.
Figure 7.2 shows two of the consumers many indifference curves. The consumer is indifferent
among combinations A, B and C, because they are all on the same curve. Not surprisingly, if the
consumers consumption of pizza is reduced, say from point A to point B, consumption of cola
must increase to keep him equally happy. If consumption of pizza is reduced again, from point B
to point C, the amount of cola consumed must increase yet again.