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For any two alternative consumption points x and x' that are both within the consumer's budget set, a choice of x rather than x' indicates a preference for x relative to x', which is written x x'. Since x and x' may be equally good from the perspective of this consumer,
x x' means that "the consumer likes x at least as much as she likes x'." |
There are several properties of preferences that together imply that a consumer's choices will be consistent. |
P.1 Preferences are complete |
Preferences are complete if for any two consumption points x and x', either
x x' (x is at least as good as x') or x' x (x' is at least as good as x), or both.
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P.2 Preferences are reflexive |
Preferences are reflexive if for all x,
x x (x is at least as good as itself). |
P.3 Preferences are transitive |
Preferences are transitive if x x' and x' x'' implies that
x x''.
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P.4 Preferences are strongly monotonic |
Preferences are strongly monotonic if for any
two commodity points x = (x1, x2) and x' = (x'1, x'2) if x1 x'1, x2 x'2, and x x', then x' is preferred to x.
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Go to Derived Properties of Preferences. |
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Page source: http://www.econport.org/econport/request?page=man_consumer_choice_preferences
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