Workbook Doubt

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Workbook Doubt

Ashima
Can someone please explain how did we get the indifference curves and budget constraints for this problem? Please...

5.9 (0) Joe Grad has just arrived at the big U. He has a fellowship that
covers his tuition and the rent on an apartment. In order to get by, Joe
has become a grader in intermediate price theory, earning $100 a month.
Out of this $100 he must pay for his food and utilities in his apartment.
His utilities expenses consist of heating costs when he heats his apartment
and air-conditioning costs when he cools it. To raise the temperature of
his apartment by one degree, it costs $2 per month (or $20 per month
to raise it ten degrees). To use air-conditioning to cool his apartment by
a degree, it costs $3 per month. Whatever is left over after paying the
utilities, he uses to buy food at $1 per unit.

When Joe rst arrives in September, the temperature of his apartment
is 60 degrees. If he spends nothing on heating or cooling, the temperature
in his room will be 60 degrees and he will have $100 left to spend on food.
If he heated the room to 70 degrees, he would have $80 left to spend
on food. If he cooled the room to 50 degrees, he would have $70 left
to spend on food. On the graph below, show Joe's September budget
constraint (with black ink). (Hint: You have just found three points that
Joe can a ord. Apparently, his budget set is not bounded by a single
straight line.)
(b) In December, the outside temperature is 30 degrees and in August
poor Joe is trying to understand macroeconomics while the temperature
outside is 85 degrees. On the same graph you used above, draw Joe's
budget constraints for the months of December (in blue ink) and August
(in red ink).
(c) Draw a few smooth (unkinky) indi erence curves for Joe in such a way
that the following are true. (i) His favorite temperature for his apartment
would be 65 degrees if it cost him nothing to heat it or cool it. (ii) Joe
chooses to use the furnace in December, air-conditioning in August, and
neither in September. (iii) Joe is better o in December than in August.
(d) In what months is the slope of Joe's budget constraint equal to the
slope of his indi erence curve? August and December.