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Compensated (Hicksian) Demand Function

Defines the Hicksian demand for a good as the partial derivative of the expenditure function with respect to its price.

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This public page keeps the free explanation visible and leaves premium worked solving, advanced walkthroughs, and saved study tools inside the app.

Core idea

Overview

The Compensated (Hicksian) Demand Function, derived from Shephard's Lemma, describes the quantity of a good a consumer would demand to achieve a specific utility level, assuming their income is 'compensated' for price changes. Unlike Marshallian demand, Hicksian demand isolates the substitution effect by holding utility constant, making it a crucial concept in welfare economics for analyzing the true cost of living and the impact of price changes on consumer well-being, free from income effects.

When to use: This formula is used in microeconomics to derive the Hicksian demand function for a good when the expenditure function is known. It's essential for analyzing consumer behavior under the assumption of constant utility, particularly when separating substitution effects from income effects of price changes, or for welfare analysis.

Why it matters: Understanding Hicksian demand is fundamental for advanced consumer theory and welfare economics. It allows economists to precisely measure the welfare impact of price changes (e.g., using compensating variation or equivalent variation) and to construct true cost-of-living indices, providing a more accurate picture of consumer well-being than standard Marshallian demand.

Symbols

Variables

= Price Vector, u = Utility Level, e = Expenditure Function, = Price of Good i, = Hicksian Demand for Good i

Price Vector
currency/unit
Utility Level
utils
Expenditure Function
currency
Price of Good i
currency/unit
Hicksian Demand for Good i
units

Walkthrough

Derivation

Formula: Compensated (Hicksian) Demand Function (Shephard's Lemma)

The Hicksian demand for a good is found by taking the partial derivative of the expenditure function with respect to that good's price.

  • Consumer preferences are rational, complete, and transitive.
  • The expenditure function is differentiable with respect to prices.
  • The consumer minimizes expenditure to achieve a given utility level .
1

Define the Expenditure Function:

The expenditure function represents the minimum expenditure required to achieve a utility level given a vector of prices for goods . This is a constrained optimization problem.

2

Apply Envelope Theorem (Shephard's Lemma):

According to Shephard's Lemma, which is a direct application of the Envelope Theorem, the partial derivative of the expenditure function with respect to the price of good () yields the Hicksian (compensated) demand function for good , . This means that the quantity of good demanded to maintain a constant utility level is precisely the rate at which minimum expenditure changes with respect to .

Result

Source: Shephard, R. W. (1953). Cost and Production Functions. Princeton University Press. (Formal proof of Shephard's Lemma)

Free formulas

Rearrangements

Solve for

Hicksian Demand: Make the subject

Making (price vector) the subject of the Hicksian demand function is generally not possible through simple algebraic rearrangement, as it is embedded within a partial derivative and the expenditure function.

Difficulty: 4/5

Solve for

Hicksian Demand: Make the subject

Making (utility level) the subject of the Hicksian demand function is generally not possible through simple algebraic rearrangement, as it is an input to the expenditure function and the derivative.

Difficulty: 4/5

Solve for

Hicksian Demand: Make the subject

Making (expenditure function) the subject requires integrating the Hicksian demand function, which is the inverse operation of differentiation, not a simple algebraic rearrangement.

Difficulty: 4/5

Solve for

Hicksian Demand: Make the subject

Making (price of good i) the subject of the Hicksian demand function is generally not possible through simple algebraic rearrangement, as it is the variable of differentiation and an input to the expenditure function.

Difficulty: 4/5

The static page shows the finished rearrangements. The app keeps the full worked algebra walkthrough.

Visual intuition

Graph

Graph unavailable for this formula.

The graph displays a straight line passing through the origin with a slope of one, representing a direct one-to-one relationship where the Hicksian demand equals the value plotted on the horizontal axis. For an economics student, this linear shape indicates that as the calculated demand increases, the corresponding value on the axis grows at a constant, proportional rate. The most important feature is that the perfect symmetry of this line confirms that the output is always identical to the input variable.

Graph type: linear

Why it behaves this way

Intuition

Imagine a consumer trying to stay on a specific 'happiness contour line' (indifference curve) on a map of consumption choices. The Hicksian demand for a good shows how much of that good they would choose at different

The Hicksian (compensated) demand for good i, representing the quantity of good i a consumer would purchase to achieve a specific utility level u, given a vector of prices p
How much of good i you'd buy if your income was perfectly adjusted to keep your happiness (utility) exactly the same, no matter how prices change. It isolates the pure 'substitution effect' of a price change.
The expenditure function, which is the minimum total expenditure (cost) required for a consumer to achieve a specific utility level u when facing a given vector of prices p goods in the bundle.
The smallest amount of money you need to spend to reach a fixed level of satisfaction or well-being, considering all current prices.
The market price per unit of good i.
The cost of buying one unit of good i in the market.
A specific, fixed level of utility (satisfaction or well-being) that the consumer is assumed to maintain.
A constant 'happiness target' that the consumer aims to achieve, regardless of price changes.

Free study cues

Insight

Canonical usage

This equation is used to ensure dimensional consistency, where the Hicksian demand for a good, representing a quantity, is derived from the partial derivative of the expenditure function (monetary units)

Common confusion

A common mistake is to confuse the units of price (money per unit of good) with total expenditure (money), which can lead to incorrect dimensional analysis when deriving demand functions.

Unit systems

units of good i - Represents the quantity of good i demanded to maintain a specific utility level.
monetary units - Represents the minimum expenditure required to achieve a given utility level.
monetary units / unit of good i - Represents the price of good i.
unitless - Utility is an ordinal measure, typically treated as dimensionless in this context for mathematical operations.

One free problem

Practice Problem

Given an expenditure function , where and are prices of two goods and is the utility level. Derive the Hicksian demand function for good 1, .

Solve for:

Hint: Apply the partial derivative rule: and chain rule if needed.

The full worked solution stays in the interactive walkthrough.

Where it shows up

Real-World Context

In the compensated demand for gasoline to maintain a certain lifestyle utility despite fuel price fluctuations, Compensated (Hicksian) Demand Function is used to calculate Hicksian Demand for Good i from Price Vector, Utility Level, and Expenditure Function. The result matters because it helps interpret the local rate of change, direction, or marginal effect in the original situation.

Study smarter

Tips

  • Remember that Hicksian demand holds utility () constant, not income.
  • The expenditure function gives the minimum cost to achieve utility at prices .
  • The partial derivative means differentiating with respect to , treating all other prices and as constants.
  • This relationship is known as Shephard's Lemma.

Avoid these traps

Common Mistakes

  • Confusing Hicksian demand with Marshallian demand (which holds income constant).
  • Incorrectly performing the partial differentiation, especially with multiple price variables.
  • Forgetting that is a vector of *all* prices, not just .

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

The Hicksian demand for a good is found by taking the partial derivative of the expenditure function with respect to that good's price.

This formula is used in microeconomics to derive the Hicksian demand function for a good when the expenditure function is known. It's essential for analyzing consumer behavior under the assumption of constant utility, particularly when separating substitution effects from income effects of price changes, or for welfare analysis.

Understanding Hicksian demand is fundamental for advanced consumer theory and welfare economics. It allows economists to precisely measure the welfare impact of price changes (e.g., using compensating variation or equivalent variation) and to construct true cost-of-living indices, providing a more accurate picture of consumer well-being than standard Marshallian demand.

Confusing Hicksian demand with Marshallian demand (which holds income constant). Incorrectly performing the partial differentiation, especially with multiple price variables. Forgetting that $\mathbf{p}$ is a vector of *all* prices, not just $p_i$.

In the compensated demand for gasoline to maintain a certain lifestyle utility despite fuel price fluctuations, Compensated (Hicksian) Demand Function is used to calculate Hicksian Demand for Good i from Price Vector, Utility Level, and Expenditure Function. The result matters because it helps interpret the local rate of change, direction, or marginal effect in the original situation.

Remember that Hicksian demand holds utility ($u$) constant, not income. The expenditure function $e(\mathbf{p}, u)$ gives the minimum cost to achieve utility $u$ at prices $\mathbf{p}$. The partial derivative $\frac{\partial e}{\partial p_i}$ means differentiating $e$ with respect to $p_i$, treating all other prices and $u$ as constants. This relationship is known as Shephard's Lemma.

References

Sources

  1. Varian, Hal R. Microeconomic Analysis. W. W. Norton & Company.
  2. Mas-Colell, Andreu, Michael D. Whinston, and Jerry R. Green. Microeconomic Theory. Oxford University Press.
  3. Wikipedia: Hicksian demand function
  4. Wikipedia: Shephard's lemma
  5. Microeconomic Analysis, 3rd Edition by Hal R. Varian
  6. Microeconomic Theory: Basic Principles and Extensions, 12th Edition by Walter Nicholson and Christopher Snyder
  7. Nicholson, Walter, and Christopher Snyder. Microeconomic Theory: Basic Principles and Extensions. Cengage Learning.
  8. Shephard, R. W. (1953). Cost and Production Functions. Princeton University Press. (Formal proof of Shephard's Lemma)