WEBVTT 00:00:00.884 --> 00:00:03.664 ♪ [music] ♪ 00:00:13.004 --> 00:00:15.935 To get a better understanding of how we make choices, 00:00:15.935 --> 00:00:18.866 we first need to understand the elements that go 00:00:18.866 --> 00:00:20.666 into making a decision. 00:00:20.666 --> 00:00:23.356 And not all of them are within our control. 00:00:23.356 --> 00:00:28.004 The world is constantly, invisibly determining the prices 00:00:28.004 --> 00:00:29.525 of goods and services. 00:00:29.648 --> 00:00:32.055 Take the price of a cup of coffee. 00:00:32.055 --> 00:00:34.951 It depends on so many variables. 00:00:34.951 --> 00:00:39.395 Think culture, demographics, the cost of beans, the weather, 00:00:39.395 --> 00:00:41.135 the supply and demand for oil, 00:00:41.135 --> 00:00:44.596 even the high rent at your hip neighborhood coffee shop. 00:00:44.823 --> 00:00:46.483 You get the idea. 00:00:46.924 --> 00:00:50.160 All of this economic activity is magically being simplified 00:00:50.160 --> 00:00:52.894 into a price for a cup of coffee. 00:00:52.894 --> 00:00:56.944 How about your salary -- the price of one hour of your labor? 00:00:57.197 --> 00:01:01.746 It depends on you, of course, on your skills and effort, 00:01:01.746 --> 00:01:04.308 but it also depends on many factors outside 00:01:04.308 --> 00:01:08.567 of your control -- for example, the demand for your services, 00:01:08.567 --> 00:01:12.938 nearby competition, even how fun your job is. 00:01:13.247 --> 00:01:18.837 Every day you make decision after decision about what to buy, 00:01:18.837 --> 00:01:22.410 comparing hundreds of different goods and services. 00:01:22.410 --> 00:01:25.257 There are so many choices. 00:01:25.257 --> 00:01:28.991 To simplify things, let's think about what you would do 00:01:28.991 --> 00:01:33.468 if you had a weekly budget of $50 to spend on just two goods, 00:01:33.468 --> 00:01:35.360 coffee and pizza. 00:01:35.849 --> 00:01:40.652 Coffee costs $5, and pizza cost $10. 00:01:40.652 --> 00:01:43.723 So pizza is twice as expensive as coffee. 00:01:44.406 --> 00:01:47.737 There are several different combinations of coffee and pizza 00:01:47.737 --> 00:01:49.654 you could buy with this money. 00:01:49.654 --> 00:01:52.551 Let's plot a few of your options on a graph. 00:01:53.050 --> 00:01:56.970 On the "x"-axis, we have the number of pizzas per week. 00:01:57.014 --> 00:02:00.995 And on the "y"-axis, we have the cups of coffee per week. 00:02:01.845 --> 00:02:05.165 You could buy two cups of coffee and four pizzas, 00:02:05.165 --> 00:02:08.304 four cups of coffee and three pizzas, 00:02:08.304 --> 00:02:11.397 five pizzas but no coffee, 00:02:11.397 --> 00:02:14.381 or 10 cups of coffee but no pizza. 00:02:14.381 --> 00:02:17.780 When you connect to different options that represent 00:02:17.780 --> 00:02:22.119 the ways you can spend your $50, you get a straight line. 00:02:22.283 --> 00:02:25.362 This is your budget constraint. 00:02:25.603 --> 00:02:29.883 And it represents all possible combinations of coffee and pizza 00:02:29.883 --> 00:02:35.475 you can buy, given your budget and the prices of coffee and pizza. 00:02:35.670 --> 00:02:39.200 This budget line also separates what you can afford 00:02:39.200 --> 00:02:41.854 from what you cannot afford. 00:02:42.036 --> 00:02:46.811 Maybe you wish you could buy two cups of coffee and six pizzas, 00:02:46.811 --> 00:02:49.398 or four cups of coffee and 10 pizzas. 00:02:49.398 --> 00:02:52.838 But these are not in your budget. 00:02:52.838 --> 00:02:54.008 Sorry. 00:02:54.008 --> 00:02:56.969 All these different combinations cost more than you have. 00:02:57.117 --> 00:02:59.408 So they're unaffordable, given your budget 00:02:59.408 --> 00:03:01.399 and the prices of these two goods. 00:03:01.757 --> 00:03:05.107 Combinations of coffee and pizza below the budget line, 00:03:05.107 --> 00:03:07.908 on the other hand, are within your means. 00:03:07.908 --> 00:03:09.420 So they're affordable, 00:03:09.434 --> 00:03:11.226 and you could buy them if you wanted. 00:03:11.528 --> 00:03:15.207 The budget constraint also reflects how the market substitutes 00:03:15.207 --> 00:03:16.989 between the two goods. 00:03:16.989 --> 00:03:21.128 Remember, pizzas are twice as expensive as coffee. 00:03:21.128 --> 00:03:23.507 And this simply means that the relative price 00:03:23.507 --> 00:03:27.517 of one pizza is two cups of coffee. 00:03:27.517 --> 00:03:30.727 You see this on the slope of the budget constraint, 00:03:30.727 --> 00:03:32.317 which is 2. 00:03:32.317 --> 00:03:36.068 Well, actually it's -2, but we're less concerned 00:03:36.068 --> 00:03:37.458 about the sign. 00:03:37.458 --> 00:03:41.198 Although, it does remind us that having more of one good 00:03:41.198 --> 00:03:44.388 requires giving up some of the other. 00:03:44.551 --> 00:03:49.240 When coffee costs $5, and pizzas cost $10, 00:03:49.240 --> 00:03:52.391 if you want an additional pizza, you have to give up 00:03:52.391 --> 00:03:54.581 two cups of coffee. 00:03:54.831 --> 00:03:58.939 If this made you think about opportunity cost, 00:03:58.939 --> 00:04:00.300 you're right! 00:04:00.300 --> 00:04:04.770 The slope of the budget constraint is the opportunity cost of pizza. 00:04:04.972 --> 00:04:08.651 Will this tradeoff change if your budget increases -- 00:04:08.651 --> 00:04:12.699 say, if you find a $20 bill in the pocket of your winter jacket 00:04:12.699 --> 00:04:16.160 and now have $70 to spend on these two goods? 00:04:16.480 --> 00:04:20.928 No -- the tradeoff is given by the market's prices. 00:04:21.079 --> 00:04:25.441 So changes in your income do not affect the relative price 00:04:25.441 --> 00:04:26.702 of goods. 00:04:27.044 --> 00:04:30.101 Sure -- you'll be able to afford and choose between 00:04:30.101 --> 00:04:34.481 all of the consumption combinations that total $70. 00:04:34.481 --> 00:04:37.152 And you can see how this makes your budget constraint 00:04:37.152 --> 00:04:38.399 shift outward. 00:04:38.457 --> 00:04:42.259 But, the two cups of coffee for one pizza tradeoff 00:04:42.259 --> 00:04:43.956 remains the same. 00:04:44.187 --> 00:04:47.509 And that is because the market still values these two goods 00:04:47.519 --> 00:04:51.026 relative to one another just like it did before. 00:04:51.318 --> 00:04:55.555 This tradeoff does change if the relative price 00:04:55.555 --> 00:04:57.476 of the two goods changes. 00:04:57.476 --> 00:05:00.236 Think of what will happen if maybe 00:05:00.236 --> 00:05:03.685 because of unusually good weather, the price of coffee falls 00:05:03.685 --> 00:05:05.830 from $5 to $2.50. 00:05:05.938 --> 00:05:09.697 Does the market tradeoff remain the same? 00:05:09.976 --> 00:05:11.059 No. 00:05:11.059 --> 00:05:15.117 Pizza's just became four times more expensive than coffee. 00:05:15.117 --> 00:05:19.019 So you're able to buy four cups of coffee when you give up 00:05:19.019 --> 00:05:20.521 eating one pizza. 00:05:20.770 --> 00:05:25.108 This will make your budget constraint rotate outward. 00:05:25.508 --> 00:05:29.570 Notice how because nothing happened to the price of pizza, 00:05:29.570 --> 00:05:32.998 the number of pizzas you can buy when you don't buy coffee 00:05:32.998 --> 00:05:34.699 hasn't changed. 00:05:34.699 --> 00:05:38.157 You can still only buy five pizzas. 00:05:38.157 --> 00:05:41.720 But, if you spend all of your budget on coffee, 00:05:41.720 --> 00:05:45.750 just look at how many more cups of coffee you can buy. 00:05:46.185 --> 00:05:49.979 You can now buy 20 cups of coffee per week. 00:05:49.979 --> 00:05:51.827 That's a lot of coffee. 00:05:52.018 --> 00:05:55.626 You see -- the new higher relative price of pizza, 00:05:55.626 --> 00:05:57.722 in terms of coffee, in the slope 00:05:57.722 --> 00:06:01.222 of the new budget constraint, which is now 4. 00:06:01.425 --> 00:06:06.885 We make choices every day -- the reality of what we can afford, 00:06:06.885 --> 00:06:09.936 given by our incomes and the prices of goods 00:06:09.936 --> 00:06:12.945 and services, are all very important elements 00:06:12.945 --> 00:06:14.573 that affect our decisions. 00:06:14.884 --> 00:06:18.365 But there are other elements equally important, 00:06:18.365 --> 00:06:20.459 and those are our preferences. 00:06:20.681 --> 00:06:22.546 We'll examine these next. 00:06:23.576 --> 00:06:26.217 - [Narrator] You're on your way to mastering economics. 00:06:26.217 --> 00:06:28.487 Make sure this video sticks by taking a few 00:06:28.487 --> 00:06:29.991 quick practice questions. 00:06:29.991 --> 00:06:32.195 Or, if you're ready for more Microeconomics, 00:06:32.195 --> 00:06:33.930 click for the next video. 00:06:35.019 --> 00:06:36.187 Still here? 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