3. Budget Constraints and Constrained Choice

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2020
  • MIT 14.01 Principles of Microeconomics, Fall 2018
    Instructor: Prof. Jonathan Gruber
    View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu/14-01F18
    CZcams Playlist: • MIT 14.01 Principles o...
    This lecture continues the discussion about consumer choice and what happens when budget constraints are introduced.
    License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
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Komentáře • 200

  • @yeahwhat6363
    @yeahwhat6363 Před 3 lety +555

    If I don't have budget constraints I would attend MIT after high school.

    • @yeahwhat6363
      @yeahwhat6363 Před 3 lety +33

      @@arrowmouse this ratio seems low, here in India top stem universities (IITs) have 2,000,000 + aspirants and only 10k get in 😂

    • @actualideas8078
      @actualideas8078 Před 3 lety +2

      Their faculty vacations on Epstein’s island. I would never give them my money

    • @hainamtran2232
      @hainamtran2232 Před 3 lety +19

      @@yeahwhat6363 The quality of the Applicants are not the same lol

    • @gouravtada
      @gouravtada Před 3 lety +1

      @@hainamtran2232 well said

    • @yusufyakub9068
      @yusufyakub9068 Před 3 lety

      You’re correct

  • @gilgamarsh
    @gilgamarsh Před rokem +103

    Jonathan Gruber is such an incredible instructor, he and MIT should be immensely proud of these lectures.

    • @SakshiSingh-xq1ze
      @SakshiSingh-xq1ze Před rokem +2

      Can u recommend this type of lec for macroeconomics? Pls

    • @bazingapuzza
      @bazingapuzza Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@SakshiSingh-xq1ze there is one on CZcams from another big American school.

  • @tarafahey6217
    @tarafahey6217 Před 3 lety +190

    00:00 Setting Up Budget Constraints
    05:25 - - > Marginal Rate of Transformation
    07:16 - - > Weight Watchers Example
    12:16 Opportunity Set
    19:15 Tangency
    22:10 The Maths
    31:00 Food Stamps Example
    38:39 - - > Imposing Preferences
    44:13 - - > Effective? (vs money injection)

    • @THEPBFELIPE
      @THEPBFELIPE Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you so much :) Very nice of you!

  • @alita181
    @alita181 Před 2 lety +52

    Thank you so so much for publishing this. I'm an adult student finishing my degree with an online university and I cannot, for the love of God, understand a single word of the crappy tutorials that my university provides. These videos not only make everything a lot easier to understand but it also makes it so much fun and engaging. Thank you MIT and thank you Professor Gruber.

  • @mauriciobemfica
    @mauriciobemfica Před 3 lety +123

    Mr. Gruber makes microecon Waaayyyyyyyyy more interesting than my classes in my Masters!!! Thanks MIT!!!!

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Před 2 lety

      Lies again? Bet Clic Acura

    • @SakshiSingh-xq1ze
      @SakshiSingh-xq1ze Před rokem

      Can u recommend any macroeconomics lecture series?

    • @crisronaldo8365
      @crisronaldo8365 Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@@SakshiSingh-xq1ze Principle of macroeconomics by Missouri State University

    • @suindude8149
      @suindude8149 Před 3 měsíci

      Really in case of the previous lectures also so inculcating that generates so many models in my mind solving the crude level industrial problems.

  • @esosesos9743
    @esosesos9743 Před 11 měsíci +11

    Thanks also to the video editors for showing all the diagrams.

  • @nycbankers1427
    @nycbankers1427 Před rokem +21

    I told my mom I was attending MIT she was so happy but little does she know my budget constraint only allows me to go to CZcams University

  • @ShyamSunder-se3tq
    @ShyamSunder-se3tq Před 3 lety +71

    let's assume that your parents have given you some amount of income, we'll call it "WHY"

  • @thequickreviewer7956
    @thequickreviewer7956 Před 2 lety +16

    Absolutely love the way he explain things with ease and also with great examples with which you can relate.

  • @sebastianlastname1986
    @sebastianlastname1986 Před rokem +13

    This is going hand-in-hand with my online microeconomics class. Thank you so much for posting these lectures, I wish I took this class in person, but this makes up for it!

  • @RaylinRecords
    @RaylinRecords Před 3 lety +49

    Where are the black and red dots for the opportunity set?

  • @debunklies9124
    @debunklies9124 Před 3 lety +37

    A good idea would be to download the transcript, play the video at 1.75 speed and look at the transcript and the graphs (could been found in the handouts section). If you don't get something you could play the video at lower speed.

  • @hongyo122
    @hongyo122 Před 2 lety +2

    Given my buget, 최상의 선택을 하는 것(=further indifferent curve)= tangency 를 구하면 됨, 그 bundle=optimal choice(AC)

  • @louisechristiansen3877
    @louisechristiansen3877 Před 3 lety +28

    Thank you so much for this excellent free education.

    • @mohdluqman1336
      @mohdluqman1336 Před 3 lety

      Are you on Facebook

    • @jayangli
      @jayangli Před 2 lety +3

      Same. Really like these free lectures from MIT. Thankyou. They don't grant certification on MITopencourseware, but the free learning for anyone that wants to and get education from MIT is just fantastic.

  • @muchbuild
    @muchbuild Před rokem +3

    I am not even economics students yet videos are bingeable it's really good

  • @hannahurmoneit2218
    @hannahurmoneit2218 Před 5 měsíci

    Professor Gruber is single handily saving my economics exam!!

  • @lebeccthecomputer6158
    @lebeccthecomputer6158 Před 2 lety +4

    This guy is an awesome professor

  • @brainstormingsharing1309
    @brainstormingsharing1309 Před 3 lety +3

    Absolutely well done and definitely keep it up!!! 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @h.i.sjoevall4213
    @h.i.sjoevall4213 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for publishing these!

  • @sauravsatyadarshiray
    @sauravsatyadarshiray Před rokem

    Bingeing on Prof. Gruber's lectures.

  • @elkyelkyelky
    @elkyelkyelky Před rokem

    Finished, thanks for sharing

  • @WorthlessWinner
    @WorthlessWinner Před 3 lety +5

    40:00 i was getting really mad at Jon saying he was just doing positive economics when the choice of "shelter" as good B rather than "drugs" has obvious normative implications..... so i'm glad he addresses this, i should've had more faith in him :)

  • @AsadAliShah89
    @AsadAliShah89 Před 3 lety +12

    I hadn't budget, so I am attending MIT on youtube after graduation in my private Master degree programme

  • @anshuaditya5665
    @anshuaditya5665 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This lectures are so good it's feel it's made by some mit instructor

  • @zardi9083
    @zardi9083 Před 3 lety +22

    How to shut a student up: "That is a really good question and we will come back to that later"

  • @obaadelusi
    @obaadelusi Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this.

  • @arielsong1289
    @arielsong1289 Před 10 měsíci +1

    One point I wanna make to the "food/shelter" case, if most people living below the poverty line do prefer shelter, it is better to not give them cash but other life essentials. Because if everybody spend more money on shelter, they would just drive up the low-end housing price. Because they are the target group of that market anyways, so if all of them are capable of/willing to pay more money, the competition'd make price goes up and money goes to the landlords.

  • @arubhardwaj4733
    @arubhardwaj4733 Před 3 lety +27

    I already passed my UG: why I am watching this?
    It's an addiction, lol

    • @anudarib
      @anudarib Před 2 lety +1

      Yo I am addicted to isekai mangas and webtoons and been using all my concentration skill to focus on this class
      Yours is good addiction

  • @Charismatic8482
    @Charismatic8482 Před 5 měsíci

    This just made life in college a whole lot easier.

  • @Manuel-vz3cu
    @Manuel-vz3cu Před 3 lety

    Thank you MIT

  • @shivakumarv301
    @shivakumarv301 Před 2 lety +1

    Can a person compare more than two variable at a time? Is his focus of attention not limited to two things? What's the point of creating three dimensional plane that represents some models of economics?

  • @gnc9400
    @gnc9400 Před 2 lety +3

    In lesson 2 professor Gruber mentioned addictive behaviour, like smoking, can change your utility function over time. So I think an idealized perfectly rational agent should take this into account, but in practice doesn't look so simple. In these cases, are economists more amenable to some form of paternalism?

    • @pickyraccoon
      @pickyraccoon Před 2 lety +3

      Look for Richard Thaler and Cass Sustein. They coined the term "libertarian paternalism" and it's well used in behavioral economics as a whole. 😊

    • @suindude8149
      @suindude8149 Před 3 měsíci

      In case of the optimization of life's own temporal value,the most optimistic way in the risk dissoluted scenario of the macroeconomic behaviour,it's really the inverse utility of paternalism if we don't accept the indifference to the smoking habit,the utility of other habits like overeating or any kind of portion that affects the micro temporality creates a long difference in the human behaviour.
      In that context one indifference of temporality comes in my way of thought as the technical improvement in the world of cheap and sustainable technical imposition to increase the micro utility to support the entire product mix would be a great strategy concentric in case of the product generation.Hence a complete inversion of inverted utility to the actual utility function hence,the same is here the increase in marginal utility by relinquishing the smoking habit would be far more better replacement of everything having high utility function including a saviour in the irrational behaviour to the human being the high penetratiin of sustainability.

  • @minthuta726
    @minthuta726 Před rokem +1

    These free courses are very useful for students from a third world country like me.

  • @jamesdhuorchiengkueu3417
    @jamesdhuorchiengkueu3417 Před 2 měsíci

    I love this lecture. I'm economist who want to learn more.

  • @gunha8288
    @gunha8288 Před 3 lety +11

    27:41 I don't understand the part "du/dp = 0.5xc / root (pxc)" why 0.5? Can any one help me?

    • @shivanshsubramanian5525
      @shivanshsubramanian5525 Před 3 lety +2

      dU/dP = d(root(PC))/dP = 0.5*C/root(PC)
      Its just differentiation

    • @user-ze1tc1ur9p
      @user-ze1tc1ur9p Před 3 lety

      @@shivanshsubramanian5525 where's the 0.5 from? and why 0.5*c/root(pc)....thanks..

    • @davidbarroso8523
      @davidbarroso8523 Před 3 lety +18

      @@user-ze1tc1ur9p The derivative of a function (ax)^n is a*n*(ax)^(n-1) where a is a constant. The square root of PC is equivalent to saying (PC)^(1/2) or (PC)^0.5, so if you're deriving with respect to P, P is your x, C is a, and 0.5 is n, so the derivative would be C*0.5*(PC)^(0.5-1) or 0.5*C*(PC)^(-0.5). x^-n is equivalent to 1/(x^n), a negative power just means you move it to the denominator, so you get 0.5*C/(PC)^0.5, and again, x^0.5 is the same as square root of x, so finally you're left with 0.5*C/squareroot(PC). If you do it with respect to C, C is your x instead, you get 0.5*P/squareroot(PC). dU/dP means derivative of U w/ respect to P, dU/dC means derivative of U w/ respect to C.

    • @ahmettayyipaydin6925
      @ahmettayyipaydin6925 Před 3 lety

      @@davidbarroso8523 thank you so much. I was confused but I see now

    • @Adityakumar-is2ke
      @Adityakumar-is2ke Před rokem +1

      @@ahmettayyipaydin6925 thank you so much broo
      i just wasnt thinking of taking c as constant and your explaination cleared it up

  • @yutikasingh5443
    @yutikasingh5443 Před rokem +6

    POV: you're searching for the notes.

  • @nahasco
    @nahasco Před 2 lety +1

    Where can I watch the math courses guys? The ones he says are on friday...

  • @chhandamachhangte655
    @chhandamachhangte655 Před 3 lety

    Thanks MIT

  • @aliasjon8320
    @aliasjon8320 Před 2 lety

    Drafts : 36:00

  • @nataliabishop5482
    @nataliabishop5482 Před rokem

    What if I found a place that sold $5 cookies and not $6 so I could buy more for less? How would this effect the equation after the fact? I see how it’d stay if the $5 cookie was the original price but let’s say it’s not..? That or like.. what if there’s a sale?

  • @suindude8149
    @suindude8149 Před 3 měsíci

    In the post Covid days the budget constratint has its niche to identify the inflationary rate in case of buying the inventory in case of Economic quantity demanded with the revised assumptions.
    Hence,its most pivotal for the downward slope in the production curve of the industrial phenomenon.
    Hence,all the subsidirat affecting the quantity demanded will be the hardest portion which needs the utmost discussion often.
    Thus marginal replacement of goods may be a hugh value in case of diminishing of marginal returns in case of managers.

  • @ardythe14
    @ardythe14 Před 7 měsíci

    Very nice! Also this showed that 4Ps (in the Philippines) is not a good aide to alleviate poverty.

  • @pushtysuri6373
    @pushtysuri6373 Před 2 lety +2

    Can someone explain why A offers more utility on less budget?? I mean-- MUc/MUp > Pc/Pp??

    • @suindude8149
      @suindude8149 Před 3 měsíci

      it might be arising out of the budgetary notion in case of planning or strategizing for the optimal output or utility in sense of personal micro Economics to derive the high value of constrained budget of the whole in case of the value generation of the industrial output.

  • @user-dx7ox3uo4d
    @user-dx7ox3uo4d Před rokem +5

    Does anyone know where 0.5 comes from in 26:50 ?
    Thanks a lot!!

    • @fevengetachew1035
      @fevengetachew1035 Před rokem +4

      It is from derivation of the squareroot like the derivation of squareroot of xy is (1\2 times square root of xy )times the derivation of xy itself.....i am not sure if I explained it in understandable way but I suggest you to derivate the function by yourself first and crosscheck it

    • @anudeike
      @anudeike Před 8 měsíci +1

      I think it comes from the fact that the Pizza is worth twice as much as the cookies so P_c/Pp = 0.5. Not sure exactly but that's what it seems.

  • @UnTipoAnziUnTopo
    @UnTipoAnziUnTopo Před 5 dny

    Excellent lecture, I'm finding this course very useful.
    However, I have a doubt about the last example, regarding the SNAP program and the effectiveness of so-defined "paternalism": Prof. Gruber said that, since giving poor people food stamps instead of cash made them buy 15% more food, that choice would not be that good because that constraint would make those people less happy, so it is better to just give cash and make them do the choice.
    But if, for example, the goal of the government was to fight malnutrition, wouldn't then be better to force poor people to consume that 15% more food? I feel like the topic was not treated deeply enough to cover these (in my opinion, relevant) cases

  • @jela1277
    @jela1277 Před 3 lety +5

    12:54 Where are these black and red dots he is talking about?

    • @heya-fq2nb
      @heya-fq2nb Před 3 lety +3

      Here maybe he's talking about the attainable and non attainable combinations where initially the dots were up to previous budget line but now they are within new budget line(black ones) and the remaining between new and previous budget line (red) are not attainable.

  • @lucayan7982
    @lucayan7982 Před 3 lety +5

    where can i find the "math" part of the course. 19:15 he said they will do more mathmatically on friday

    • @rm2kmidi
      @rm2kmidi Před 2 lety

      I didn't go to MIT, but when I took Microeconomics we did all the math in our quiz sections and not during the lecture.

    • @lucayan7982
      @lucayan7982 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rm2kmidi do you know how can I get quiz that they did?

    • @rm2kmidi
      @rm2kmidi Před 2 lety

      @@lucayan7982 not a quiz. Quiz sections are smaller class groups you attend, usually lead by a TA. So the students would be learning this on non-lecture days.

    • @rm2kmidi
      @rm2kmidi Před 2 lety +1

      @@lucayan7982 "Quiz Section" is what we call the smaller breakout classes in large lecture classes at universities in the US. It doesn't have anything to do with quizzes or taking tests. Typically you attend lecture three times a week and attend quiz section twice a week. I was just explaining that the math-oriented parts of this class were likely all discussed in smaller groups with the teaching assistant and probably wont be on video. At least that's how it was when I was in school.

    • @lucayan7982
      @lucayan7982 Před 2 lety

      @@rm2kmidi thank you for the clarification

  • @dennis7928
    @dennis7928 Před rokem

    QUESTION:
    minute 28.48 > " you're willing to give up 2.5 p for 1 c" is incorrect right? Looking at the graph (minute 29.18) the indifference curve looks like that you're willing to give up 2.5 p for 2 c as the interval on the x axis is not 1 but 2. Can someone either tell me that I am right, but more likely explain why I am wrong?

    • @7amseel
      @7amseel Před rokem +1

      "You're willing to give up 2.5 P for 1 C" is correct. If you look at the graph (29:18) more closely, you will see that at point A, the value at x axis is 2, but also the value of y axis is 5. So basically, you are willing to give up 5 pizzas for 2 cookies which is same us giving up 2.5 pizzas for 1 cookie.

  • @kloud1174
    @kloud1174 Před rokem +2

    I'm just a small successful business owner just soaking up this information. Don't mind me....

  • @bhavikaborawat8323
    @bhavikaborawat8323 Před rokem

    Shouldn't the decrease in budget constraint (imposed by parents) lead the students to opt the cookies more because they are cheaper and hence the slope of curve to change (increase -vely) thus creating a fractional MRT?

    • @7amseel
      @7amseel Před rokem

      MRT is the ratio of market prices of two goods. It is independent of your income or budget constraints. The decrease in income will in some combination lower both the amount of cookies and the amount of pizza. However, the exact combination by which pizza slices and cookies get lowered depend upon your utility function which ultimately makes your indifference curve.

  • @nox5282
    @nox5282 Před rokem

    Budget constrained is key to happiness

  • @uditabhattacharya2824
    @uditabhattacharya2824 Před 5 měsíci

    26:12 watch continue to see food stamps and cash transfer

  • @sumanchowdhury6162
    @sumanchowdhury6162 Před 2 lety +4

    As someone who came from Architecture to economics, know things different.
    In architecture it's said - less s more
    In economics - more s better than less

    • @SakshiSingh-xq1ze
      @SakshiSingh-xq1ze Před rokem

      Can u recommend series lecture of intermediate macroeconomics ?

    • @jat1339
      @jat1339 Před rokem

      @@SakshiSingh-xq1ze macroeconomics k liye nptel k kaafi ache hai lecture

    • @vishnukanhan8809
      @vishnukanhan8809 Před rokem

      Wow if I can ask what made you switch from architecture to economics?

  • @yanneschen179
    @yanneschen179 Před 3 lety +1

    I don’t understand 16:00 the question :
    Changing slope does not affect if one buy more cookies than pizza and overall decrease in income affect all.
    Please help me thanks

    • @jela1277
      @jela1277 Před 3 lety

      Your question is hard to understand, but I can explain that because the slope is the ratio of the quantity of cookies to pizza, changing the slope means you change the quantity of cookies or pizza or both (see algebra)

    • @tianshuzhao6966
      @tianshuzhao6966 Před 3 lety

      he is saying that the budget changes (since your disposable income decreases) but the proportion of trade-off between two products remains (since the price of each type remains and the value of each type for you is the same. i.e. the marginal substitution for you is the same). you see the parallel shift of the budget lines but the slope remains.

  • @bloodcarnage8285
    @bloodcarnage8285 Před 2 lety

    Nice..

  • @deletedaccount2580
    @deletedaccount2580 Před 2 lety +3

    I was searching for guy who post notes of lecture in comment . But sadly didn't find .

  • @oluwagbamila
    @oluwagbamila Před 4 měsíci

    I got lost with the optimum constraints calculation, any help here please

  • @miltonfriedman5833
    @miltonfriedman5833 Před 2 lety +2

    Does anyone know how to access the recitation for the course, or if its available.

    • @mitocw
      @mitocw  Před 2 lety +5

      Recitations are not available for the course. To see what we do have, visit MIT OpenCourseWare at: ocw.mit.edu/14-01F18. Best wishes on your studies!

    • @miltonfriedman5833
      @miltonfriedman5833 Před 2 lety

      @@mitocw tnx.

    • @dennis7928
      @dennis7928 Před rokem

      ​@@mitocw QUESTION:
      minute 28.48 > " you're willing to give up 2.5 p for 1 c" is incorrect right? Looking at the graph (minute 29.18) the indifference curve looks like that you're willing to give up 2.5 p for 2 c as the interval on the x axis is not 1 but 2. Can someone either tell me that I am right, but more likely explain why I am wrong?

  • @frostylunetta
    @frostylunetta Před 2 lety +7

    If I were a Math/IT/Science student back at high school, and without budget constraints, I would have applied for MIT

    • @mitocw
      @mitocw  Před 2 lety +39

      If you were that high school student, we would tell you to ignore the budget constraints and recommended you apply anyways. 🙂 MIT is need-blind and full-need. If you were accepted, MIT would make sure you could afford MIT tuition... even if they had to fully cover it. Visit sfs.mit.edu/undergraduate-students/the-cost-of-attendance/making-mit-affordable/ for more info.

    • @economics5595
      @economics5595 Před rokem +2

      @@mitocw this comment made my day today! :)

  • @user-hj2td8qs7j
    @user-hj2td8qs7j Před rokem

    My marginal utility is very high so i intend to attend mit

  • @user-kl7mu7rz1n
    @user-kl7mu7rz1n Před 8 měsíci +1

    anyone care to help me on 27:59 why MuP=dU/dP has a equation of 0.5xC?? where does the C comes from? I am totally fine with the derivative part, I know where the 0.5 comes from, but C?? why Mu of Pizza has anthing to do with cookies?

    • @user-kl7mu7rz1n
      @user-kl7mu7rz1n Před 8 měsíci

      the question actually translate into how to calculate dP... I forgot all my learning on derivatives of that part.

    • @celinesajee6121
      @celinesajee6121 Před dnem

      C is a constant there. Consider the derivative of (ax)^n=na(ax)^(n-1). Therefore, derivative of (PC)^(.5)=.5C(PC)^(-.5), which is .5C/(PC)^(.5)

  • @defyingfinance9882
    @defyingfinance9882 Před 8 měsíci

    What you described at the end really is the saying, you can’t make a poor man rich. The concept of wisdom over dolllars. Teach a man to fish type of thing. People who get money quick don’t know how to manage it unless they have earned the wisdom prior.

  • @sahilnegi4326
    @sahilnegi4326 Před měsícem +1

    Explaing these concepts without calculus must be difficult for him. And its actually very confusing for the math folks too.

  • @codisordelet8380
    @codisordelet8380 Před rokem

    This course would be considered an intermediate microeconomics course at most universities.

    • @Andalusian_
      @Andalusian_ Před 11 měsíci

      Think so too. They probably do the multivariable calculus in the side-lectures

  • @elkyelkyelky
    @elkyelkyelky Před rokem

    27:00

  • @tvvt005
    @tvvt005 Před 8 měsíci

    38:42 I still don’t get why there is a horizontal line from 5000 to x2, could someone explain?

    • @Michelle_Matchahan
      @Michelle_Matchahan Před 8 měsíci

      hey hey. Because government gave the poors the debit card which can be only used for food, the people cannot use this money for shelters. Therefore, people cannot spend any money to shelters and now it has restricted in that 5000

  • @user-ff1tv2ie2w
    @user-ff1tv2ie2w Před 8 měsíci

    where did 0.5 come from when doing MUp and MUc?

    • @suindude8149
      @suindude8149 Před 3 měsíci

      These equation is quite tricky to make the indifference in the buying behaviour of the product in case of obtaining diligence of his entire family.
      It seems the Economics is tremendously the unitasking.

  • @gytoser801
    @gytoser801 Před rokem

    19:36

  • @sanajjang96
    @sanajjang96 Před 2 lety

    27:27, where did the 0.5 come from??

    • @chaitanyasharma3921
      @chaitanyasharma3921 Před 2 lety +1

      He differentiated root p*c, which is equal to 0.5 *C or P( depends on what is taken constant)/root of P*C

  • @elkyelkyelky
    @elkyelkyelky Před rokem

    2:00

  • @rajeshmishra7157
    @rajeshmishra7157 Před 5 měsíci

    At
    29:05 how is market telling that we can trade a cookie for only half slice of pizza?

    • @celinesajee6121
      @celinesajee6121 Před dnem

      Because the price of one cookie is $6 and price of one pizza is $12. So you can trade 2 cookies for one slice of pizza (essentially one cookie for half slice of pizza)

  • @oris2723
    @oris2723 Před 2 lety

    Can y'all tell me why that cash given to Africans boosted their income in short run and the effect got nullified in long run?

    • @yellowusbrickus4821
      @yellowusbrickus4821 Před 2 lety +2

      Probably something to do with structural inequality issues, for example an insurance firm may offer insurance to rich people, R or poor people, P. When P takes out insurance on their cheaper car, the risk of it breaking down are higher and therefore their insurance costs will be higher as a proportion of their income. This could take away P's ability to increase their wealth because the insurance costs eventually wear away their initial endowment. If the group used their money to buy cars to double their wages, they would not be able to afford good cars and thus they would be subject to high insurance costs, leading them back to a point of not being able to afford insurance or a car.
      This example is obviously not what happened but in built mechanisms can lead to greater wealth inequality over the longer term.

  • @shoaibmalik2231
    @shoaibmalik2231 Před 2 lety

    I am late but at perfect place

  • @hish3098
    @hish3098 Před rokem

    3:30 they are delicious and equally expensive

  • @gunnarjensen5910
    @gunnarjensen5910 Před 3 lety

    λ*, Mv = Mp ? The best deal. ? P = MR = MC ?

    • @suindude8149
      @suindude8149 Před 3 měsíci

      While price goes for Marginal revenue then there comes the law of diminishing returns in the case with Marginal cost equating price as well.

  • @shantanukhandkar
    @shantanukhandkar Před 2 lety

    Is this an undergraduate or graduate course?

    • @mitocw
      @mitocw  Před 2 lety

      This is an undergraduate course. See ocw.mit.edu/14-01F18 for more info and materials. Best wishes on your studies!

  • @bulbulddd8
    @bulbulddd8 Před 3 lety +2

    what is du/dp? 26:54 ?????????????????????????????????????????????????

    • @user-js4ez2yz9b
      @user-js4ez2yz9b Před 3 lety +1

      Derivative

    • @davidbarroso8523
      @davidbarroso8523 Před 3 lety +1

      The derivative of a function (ax)^n is a*n*(ax)^(n-1) where a is a constant. The square root of PC is equivalent to saying (PC)^(1/2) or (PC)^0.5, so if you're deriving with respect to P, P is your x, C is a, and 0.5 is n, so the derivative would be C*0.5*(PC)^(0.5-1) or 0.5*C*(PC)^(-0.5). x^-n is equivalent to 1/(x^n), a negative power just means you move it to the denominator, so you get 0.5*C/(PC)^0.5, and again, x^0.5 is the same as square root of x, so finally you're left with 0.5*C/squareroot(PC). If you do it with respect to C, C is your x instead, you get 0.5*P/squareroot(PC). dU/dP means derivative of U w/ respect to P, dU/dC means derivative of U w/ respect to C.

    • @tianshuzhao6966
      @tianshuzhao6966 Před 3 lety

      marginal utility of one unit of product A divided by that of product B. this indicating the marginal substitution between these two products to remain the same level of utility.

    • @oris2723
      @oris2723 Před 2 lety

      Can y'all tell me why that cash given to Africans boosted their income in short run and the effect got nullified in long run?

  • @user-re1su6el4l
    @user-re1su6el4l Před rokem

    👍👍

  • @Auriga4
    @Auriga4 Před 7 měsíci

    Summary:
    sometimes we just have to tangent our Pp more often, it's called marginal utility.

  • @primozbenedicto3501
    @primozbenedicto3501 Před rokem +2

    Interesting college professor

    • @robbyosborne9708
      @robbyosborne9708 Před 6 měsíci

      He definitely makes the subject of microeconomics interesting.

  • @tammy6452
    @tammy6452 Před 2 lety

    Move in with someone and give them your food stamps for shelter, go to the food bank for food.

  • @siqihe7806
    @siqihe7806 Před 2 lety +2

    Never thought of SNAP as paternalistic, make me think of universal income, maybe cash to everyone is not a bad thing.

    • @rm2kmidi
      @rm2kmidi Před 2 lety

      I feel like people shouldn't think of it as an entitlement but that their friends and neighbors that pay taxes want to help them, but want some say on how that money is spent. Also, wouldn't person y still be better off because it frees up $300 for more shelter. They're not $500 better, but they're not worse off.

    • @6and1
      @6and1 Před 4 měsíci

      AI push will eventually lead to a more universal income approach due to job losses but if you create a linear equation they haven't quite perfected the income but it's around $1250 a month.
      You would most likely need a a wide adoption of the digital dollar to track spending on illicit things

  • @spankyrodriguez007
    @spankyrodriguez007 Před 3 lety +1

    MIT budget restraints why they use chalk boards? I'm so distracted by this poor guy struggling through the series and hung up thinking of the opportunity costs.

  • @muhammad-amiindhimbiil6066

    We are forcing them on Food Stamps, because Someone who is below poverty line will use Cash for other purposes.

  • @sethkohn5517
    @sethkohn5517 Před 2 lety

    I just gave this video it's 1k like, because I like pizza and cookies

  • @GiorgiBochikashvili
    @GiorgiBochikashvili Před 5 měsíci

    its 20 under the root, not 10.

  • @martingenet8799
    @martingenet8799 Před 3 lety

    46 min in

  • @aasemahsan
    @aasemahsan Před 7 měsíci

    Simplying assumption: Budget=Income
    5:25 MRT
    Shocking the System
    17:05 *Constrained Choices*
    30:58 Example of food stamps

  • @tyranmcgrath6871
    @tyranmcgrath6871 Před 3 lety

    Funny how $12 for pizza is expensive in america

  • @d2nd21st
    @d2nd21st Před 2 lety

    yup UBI everyone, its actually better than government subsidize programs and such😆

  • @keki4578
    @keki4578 Před 3 lety

    23:06 BIG PP

  • @jsealejandro06
    @jsealejandro06 Před měsícem

    vox being a good policy website? That just makes me misstrust completly the opinion of this Professor.

  • @Regular_guy798
    @Regular_guy798 Před 2 lety +1

    Славяне на месте?

  • @williammuka2290
    @williammuka2290 Před 2 lety

    So, what are cookies ?

  • @afbdreds
    @afbdreds Před 3 lety

    Food stamps don't buy diapers

  • @arunsinghmehra7728
    @arunsinghmehra7728 Před 3 lety +2

    Nptel lectures are way better than mit courses but i thank mit for the free courses though...

    • @rakkhnaka
      @rakkhnaka Před 2 lety +4

      lol

    • @SakshiSingh-xq1ze
      @SakshiSingh-xq1ze Před rokem

      Not way better but both r comparable nd good for students like us(budget constraints)

    • @jat1339
      @jat1339 Před rokem

      Are bhai chup chap pdh le na , dono ache hai

  • @mirshahid4966
    @mirshahid4966 Před rokem

    Me watching at 0.25 speed

  • @crisronaldo8365
    @crisronaldo8365 Před 9 měsíci

    If they need cash people in my country (BD) will sell their food for money 😂

  • @tasnimealami7846
    @tasnimealami7846 Před 3 lety +2

    Please add Arabic subtitles

  • @pulkityogi-jf1xk
    @pulkityogi-jf1xk Před rokem

    ab itne gandiwade me rhne ka koi matlab nhi h