Theory of Consumer Demand using Indifference Curve Technique
(Notes for Competitive Exams – JKSSB, Accounts, SSC | Home Academy)
1. Introduction
The Indifference Curve Approach is a modern theory of consumer behavior that explains how consumers make choices between different combinations of goods.
This theory was developed by economists John Hicks and Roy G. D. Allen in the 1930s as an improvement over the cardinal utility theory.
The theory assumes that a consumer tries to maximize satisfaction with limited income.
Instead of measuring satisfaction in numbers, the indifference curve approach assumes that utility can only be ranked (ordinal measurement).
2. Meaning of Indifference Curve
An Indifference Curve (IC) represents different combinations of two goods that give the consumer the same level of satisfaction.
Since all combinations provide equal satisfaction, the consumer is indifferent between them.
Example:
Suppose a consumer consumes Tea and Coffee.
| Combination | Tea | Coffee |
|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | 10 |
| B | 2 | 7 |
| C | 3 | 5 |
| D | 4 | 3 |
All these combinations provide equal satisfaction, so they lie on the same indifference curve.
3. Basic Assumptions of Indifference Curve Theory
The indifference curve theory is based on several assumptions.
1 Rational Consumer
The consumer is rational and aims to maximize satisfaction.
2 Two Goods Assumption
The analysis assumes only two goods.
3 Ordinal Utility
Utility is measured in ranking order rather than numerical values.
4 Consistency of Choice
Consumer preferences remain consistent over time.
5 Diminishing Marginal Rate of Substitution
Consumers are willing to give up less and less of one good for another.
4. Indifference Schedule
An indifference schedule is a table showing different combinations of two goods giving the same satisfaction.
Example:
| Combination | Apples | Bananas |
|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | 12 |
| B | 2 | 8 |
| C | 3 | 5 |
| D | 4 | 3 |
Each combination gives the same level of satisfaction.
5. Indifference Curve Diagram
The indifference curve is drawn on a graph where:
X-axis = Quantity of Good X
Y-axis = Quantity of Good YSimple Indifference Curve Diagram
Good Y
|
| IC
| *
| *
| *
| *
|________________________
Good X
The curve slopes downward from left to right.
6. Properties of Indifference Curve
The indifference curve has several important properties.
1 Indifference Curve Slopes Downward
An indifference curve slopes downward from left to right because if the quantity of one good increases, the quantity of the other must decrease to maintain the same satisfaction.
Example
If a consumer gets more apples, he must sacrifice some bananas to keep the satisfaction constant.
2 Indifference Curves are Convex to the Origin
Indifference curves are convex (bowed inward) due to the diminishing marginal rate of substitution.
This means the consumer is willing to sacrifice less of one good as he gets more of the other good.
Good Y
|
| )
| )
| )
| )
|________________________
Good X
3 Indifference Curves Never Intersect
Two indifference curves cannot cross each other.
If they intersect, it would imply contradictory levels of satisfaction, which violates the theory of consumer preference.
4 Higher Indifference Curve Represents Higher Satisfaction
Curves farther from the origin indicate higher satisfaction because they represent more consumption of goods.
Good Y
|
| IC3
| IC2
| IC1
|
|________________________
Good X
IC3 represents higher satisfaction than IC2 and IC1.
5 Indifference Curves Do Not Touch Axes
Indifference curves usually do not touch the axes because consumers prefer both goods rather than only one good.
7. Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS)
The Marginal Rate of Substitution refers to the rate at which a consumer is willing to sacrifice one good to obtain another good while maintaining the same satisfaction.
Example:
If a consumer gives up 2 bananas to gain 1 apple, then
MRS = 2
The MRS diminishes as consumption increases.
8. Consumer Equilibrium using Indifference Curve
Consumer equilibrium occurs when the consumer maximizes satisfaction subject to income constraint.
This happens where:
Indifference Curve = Budget Line
At equilibrium:
MRS = Price of Good X / Price of Good Y
Graphically:
Good Y
|
| IC
| *
| * ← Equilibrium point
| *
|_____*_________________
Budget Line
Good X
At this point the consumer cannot increase satisfaction without increasing income.
9. Advantages of Indifference Curve Approach
The indifference curve method has several advantages.
More realistic than utility theory
Does not require measurement of utilityExplains consumer behavior more accurately
Considers substitution effect
10. Limitations of Indifference Curve Theory
Some limitations include:
Assumes rational consumer behavior
Difficult to measure preferences in real lifeOnly explains two goods at a time
Important Points for Competitive Exams
Most exam questions come from:
Definition of indifference curve
Properties of indifference curvesMarginal rate of substitution
Consumer equilibrium
Indifference curve assumptions
MCQ Questions for Competitive Exams
1 The indifference curve shows
A Same income level
B Same level of satisfaction
C Same price level
D Same production level
✅ Answer: B Same level of satisfaction
2 Indifference curve approach was developed by
A John Hicks
B Adam Smith
C Keynes
D Ricardo
✅ Answer: A John Hicks
3 Indifference curves slope
A Upward
B Downward
C Horizontal
D Vertical
✅ Answer: B Downward
4 Indifference curves are
A Concave
B Convex
C Straight
D Circular
✅ Answer: B Convex
5 Indifference curves cannot
A Be convex
B Slope downward
C Intersect each other
D Represent satisfaction
✅ Answer: C Intersect each other
6 Higher indifference curve represents
A Lower satisfaction
B Same satisfaction
C Higher satisfaction
D No satisfaction
✅ Answer: C Higher satisfaction
7 Marginal Rate of Substitution means
A Exchange rate between goods
B Price of goods
C Government policy
D Income change
✅ Answer: A Exchange rate between goods
8 Consumer equilibrium occurs when
A Income = expenditure
B IC touches budget line
C Price is constant
D Production is maximum
✅ Answer: B IC touches budget line
9 Indifference curve approach is based on
A Cardinal utility
B Ordinal utility
C Marginal utility
D Production theory
✅ Answer: B Ordinal utility
10 The curve representing combinations giving equal satisfaction is
A Demand curve
B Supply curve
C Indifference curve
D Cost curve
✅ Answer: C Indifference curve
