Shapes of Indifference Curves under Different Utility Conditions
(Consumer Theory Notes for Competitive Exams – JKSSB, SSC, Accounts | Home Academy)
In consumer theory, the shape of the indifference curve (IC) depends on the nature of goods and the consumer’s preferences. Normally, indifference curves are convex to the origin, but under special situations they may become straight lines, L-shaped, horizontal, or other forms.
1. Normal Indifference Curve (Convex Shape)
Shape
Convex to the origin.
Reason
This happens due to Diminishing Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS).
Diagram
Good Y
|
| )
| )
| )
| )
|____________________
Good X
Explanation
As a consumer gets more of Good X, he sacrifices less of Good Y to maintain the same satisfaction.
Example
Tea and coffee consumption.
Important Point
This is the most common indifference curve used in economic analysis.
2. Straight Line Indifference Curve
Shape
Downward sloping straight line.
Reason
Constant Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS).
Diagram
Good Y
|
|\
| \
| \
| \
|____\_______________
Good X
Explanation
The consumer is willing to substitute goods at a constant rate.
Example
Two identical goods like two brands of mineral water.
3. L-Shaped Indifference Curve (Perfect Complements)
Shape
Right angle or L-shaped curve.
Diagram
Good Y
|
| |
| |
| |
|______|___________
Good X
Explanation
Goods are used together in fixed proportion.
Example
| Good X | Good Y |
|---|---|
| Left shoe | Right shoe |
| Car | Petrol |
| Pen | Ink |
Increasing one good alone does not increase satisfaction.
4. Horizontal Indifference Curve
Shape
Straight horizontal line.
Diagram
Good Y
|
|__________________
|
|
|
|____________________
Good X
Explanation
Consumer derives satisfaction only from Good Y, while Good X gives no utility.
Example
A person interested only in books but not magazines.
5. Vertical Indifference Curve
Shape
Straight vertical line.
Diagram
Good Y
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
|____|_______________
Good X
Explanation
Consumer derives satisfaction only from Good X, and Good Y provides no utility.
6. U-Shaped Indifference Curve
Normally indifference curves are not U-shaped in standard theory.
However, they may appear U-shaped when:
Utility initially increases
Then decreases due to excess consumptionExample
Consumption of medicine or salt.
Economists such as John Hicks explained that such shapes rarely occur in standard consumer equilibrium analysis.
Summary Table (Important for Exams)
| Shape of IC | Type of Goods | MRS | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Convex | Normal goods | Diminishing | Tea and coffee |
| Straight line | Perfect substitutes | Constant | Two brands of water |
| L-shaped | Perfect complements | Zero after fixed ratio | Left and right shoes |
| Horizontal | Utility only from Y | Infinite | Only Y matters |
| Vertical | Utility only from X | Zero | Only X matters |
Important Points for Competitive Exams
Most questions in JKSSB, SSC, and Accounts exams come from:
Convex IC → Diminishing MRS
Straight line IC → Perfect substitutesL-shaped IC → Perfect complements
Higher IC → Higher satisfaction
MCQ Questions
1 The normal indifference curve is
A Concave
B Convex
C Straight
D Circular
✅ Answer: B Convex
2 L-shaped indifference curve represents
A Perfect substitutes
B Perfect complements
C Inferior goods
D Luxury goods
✅ Answer: B Perfect complements
3 Straight line indifference curve represents
A Perfect substitutes
B Perfect complements
C Normal goods
D Inferior goods
✅ Answer: A Perfect substitutes
4 Convex shape of indifference curve is due to
A Increasing MRS
B Constant MRS
C Diminishing MRS
D Zero MRS
✅ Answer: C Diminishing MRS
5 The indifference curve approach was developed by
A John Hicks
B Adam Smith
C Ricardo
D Keynes
✅ Answer: A John Hicks