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- Suppose you have an exponential utility function given by U(x) =1- exp(-x/R) where, for you, R = 1000. Further, suppose you have an investment with a 50/50 chance of returning either 0 or 2000 dollars. Note U(0) = 0 and U(2000) = 0.865, so the utility of the lottery is 0.432. What is the certain equivalent of that investment?A consumer has the following utility function: U(x.y)=x(y+1), where x and y are quantities of two consumption goods whose prices are Px and Py, respectively. The consumer also has a budget of B. Therefore, the Lagrangian for this consumer is x(y + 1) + X(B – Prx – Py) (a) Verify that this is a maximum by checking the second-order conditions. By substituting x* and y* into the utility function, find an expression for the indirect utility function U* = U(Pr, Py, B) and derive an expression for the expenditure function E = E(Pr, Py, U*) (b) This problem could be recast as the following dual problem Min Prx + Pyy Subject to æ(y + 1) = U* Find the values of x and y that solve this minimization problem and show that the values of x and y are equal to the partial derivatives of the expenditure function, ðE/ðP, and ðE/ðP, respectively.Assume that someone has inherited 2,000 bottles of wine from a rich uncle. He or she intends to drink these bottles over the next 40 years. Suppose that this person’s utility function for wine is given by u(c(t)) = (c(t))0.5, where c(t) is each instant t consumption of bottles. Assume also this person discounts future consumption at the rate δ = 0.05. Hence this person’s goal is to maximize 0ʃ40 e–0.05tu(c(t))dt = 0ʃ40 e–0.05t(c(t))0.5dt. Let x(t) represent the number of bottle of wine remaining at time t, constrained by x(0) = 2,000, x(40) = 0 and dx(t)/dt = – c(t): the stock of remaining bottles at each instant t is decreased by the consumption of bottles at instant t. The current value Hamiltonian expression yields: H = e–0.05t(c(t))0.5 + λ(– c(t)) + x(t)(dλ/dt). This person’s wine consumption decreases at a continuous rate of ??? percent per year. The number of bottles being consumed in the 30th year is approximately ???
- 6. Are the following utility functions consistent with the axioms of the expected utility theorem? Everything is in monetary terms. (a) u(x) = = -x. (b) u(x) = x² for a E (-10, 10]. (c) u(x) = 5. %3DProblem 1 Jane has the following utility function: u(w) w^.5 or the square root. function Which of the following prospects would she prefer? P1(.4, 3,000, 600) P2(.7, 1,200, 1,000) P3(.6, 2,000, 100)a) (3) Consider two investments X and Y, where X pays $0 and $10 with equal probability and Y pays 0 with probability 0.75 and $20 with probability 0.25. What investment would an investor choose if her utility function is u(x) = x? u(x) = x u(x) = 1-e 10 () (i) (ii)
- INV 1 5aiv Suppose that you have the following utility function: U=E(r) – ½ Aσ2 and A=3 Suppose that you have $10 million to invest for one year and you want to invest that money into ETFs tracking the S&P 500 (US) and S&P/TSX 60 (Canada) index, which are often used as proxies for the US and Canadian stock markets, respectively, and the Canadian one-year T-bill. Assume that the interest rate of the one-year T-bill is 0.35% per annum. You have found two ETFs that you are interested in. From a set of their historical data between 2001 and 2019, you have estimated the annual expected returns, standard deviations, and covariance as follows: ETFUS : E(r)= 0.070584 standard deviation = 0.173687 ETFCDA : E(r)= 0.073763 standard deviation = 0.16816 Covariance between ETFUS and ETFCDA = 0.02397 What is the standard deviation for ETFCDA?A consumer is maximising her utility function: U(r. y) = (r05 +y0.5)2, subject to the budget constraint 4x + 2y = 108. (a) Set up the Lagrangian function of this utility maximisation problem and first-order conditions. (b) What are the utility maximizing amounts of x and y? Also, calculate the multiplier. (c) What are the utility maximising amounts of x and y if the budget constrain to x+ 2y = 36? How would change? Explain your reasoning. (Hint: Yc need to calculate A, rather comment on how it would change and why.)Q2: Consider a person who is thinking about whether to engage in a life of crime. He knows that, if he gets caught, he will be in jail and his consumption will be low, xº, but if he does not get caught, he will be able to consume an amount x₁ that is considerably above Χρ· (a) Suppose that x₁ = 20; x₁ = 80 (where both are expressed in thousands of pounds) and suppose the probability of getting caught is 8 = 0.5. What is the expected consumption level if the life of crime is chosen? (b) Suppose the potential criminal's tastes over gambles can be expressed using the following utility function u(x) = In (x). Calculate the person's expected utility from a life of crime. How does it compare with the utility of the expected value of consumption? Based on your answer, explain this individual's attitude towards risk and draw the consumption/utility relationship. (c) Consider the level of consumption this person could attain by not engaging in a life of crime. What level of consumption from an…
- Suppose your utility function for money is a square-root function of its value in US dollars. So, for instance, $400 is worth 20 utils for you, $961 is worth 31 utils for you, and $62.5K is worth 250 utils for you. Now, let’s say your annual salary is $90K, although there is a small risk (p = 0.05) that something catastrophic will happen and reduce your income for the year to $14.4K. An insurance company comes along and offers to insure you against the loss of your salary. The cost of the insurance is $4,736. If you buy the policy and catastrophe strikes, the insurance company will pay out the $75,600 that you would otherwise have lost. From the standpoint of maximizing expected utility, would buying this insurance be a good deal for you? What would be the insurance company’s expected monetary value of selling you the policy?Suppose a household has the following lifetime utility function: U=c1/2 + ẞc¹/2 12tt+1 A) Find expressions for the partial derivatives of lifetime utility, U, with respect to period t and period t + 1 consumption. Is marginal utility of consumption in both periods always positive? B) Find expressions for the second derivatives of lifetime utility with respect to period t and t+1 consumption, i.e., 2U and a 20_Are these second derivatives always negative for ac²²+1 any positive values of period t and t+1 consumption? C) Derive an expression for the indifference curve associated with lifetime utility level Uo (i.e., derive an expression for C++₁ as a function of U₁ and c). What is the slope of the indifference curve? How does the magnitude of the slope vary with the value of c?Consider a consumer who can borrow or lend freely at an interest rate of 100% per period of time (think of the period as being, say, 30 years, a bit like with a mortgage). So r = 1.0, or 100%. The consumer's two-period utility function is: U = In(ct) + (1/2)In(Ct+1) The consumer earn Y=100 each period, so Y₁=100 and Yt+1 also equals 100. If this consumer is behaving optimally, trying to maximize her lifetime utility subject to the IBC, what's her consumption in period t?