1
$\begingroup$

Recall that the slutsky equation is:

$$\frac{\partial x_i}{\partial p_i}=\frac{\partial h_i}{\partial p_i}-\frac{\partial x_i}{\partial m}x_i$$

I know $\frac{\partial h_i}{\partial p_i}$ defined as the substitution effect, the second part of the equation is the income effect.

My Question: is the income effect defined as $-\frac{\partial x_i}{\partial m}x_i$ or $\frac{\partial x_i}{\partial m}x_i$ (is the negative sign a defining characteristic?)

$\endgroup$
0

1 Answer 1

3
$\begingroup$

The income effect is defined as $\mathbf{-\frac{\partial x_i}{\partial m}x_i}$.

Let $x_i$ be a normal good; that is, a good whose Marshallian demand increases with an increase in income $\left(\frac{\partial x_i}{\partial m} > 0\right)$. Even if there was no substitution effect $\left(\frac{\partial h_i}{\partial p_i} = 0\right)$ from an increase in own-price, the amount of $x_i$ consumed would still be reduced as the consumer is effectively poorer. Hence the net income effect in this case is negative, which necessitates the negative sign since $x_i$ is non-negative. Analogous logic holds if $x_i$ is an inferior good instead.

This interpretation is consistent with Nicholson & Snyder (p. 156).

$\endgroup$

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.