In microeconomics, a consumer's Hicksian demand correspondence is the demand of a consumer over a bundle of goods that minimizes their expenditure while delivering a fixed level of utility. If the is actually a function, it is referred to as the Hicksian demand function, or compensated demand function. The function is named after John Hicks. Mathematically, where h is the Hicksian demand function, or commodity bundle demanded, at price vector p and utility level. Here p is a vector of prices, and x is a vector of quantities demanded so that the sum of all pixi, is the total expense on goods x.
Downward sloping Marshallian demand curves show the effect of price changes on quantity demanded. As the price of a good rises, presumably the quantity of that good demanded will fall, holding wealth and other prices constant. However, this effect of price changes on quantities demanded is due to both the income effect and the substitution effect. The substitution effect is a change in quantity demanded due to a price change that alters the slope of the budget constraint but leaves the consumer on the same indifference curve By this effect, the consumer is posited to substitute toward the good that becomes comparatively less expensive. If the good in question is a normal good, then the income effect from the rise in purchasing power from a price fall reinforces the substitution effect. If the good is an inferior good, then the income effect will offset in some degree the substitution effect. The Hicksian demand function is also downward sloping, but isolates the substitution effect by supposing the consumer is compensated exactly enough to purchase some bundle on the same indifference curve. Hicksian demand illustrates the consumer's new consumption basket after the price change while being compensated as to allow the consumer to be as happy as previously. If the Hicksian demand function is "steeper" than Marshallian demand, the good is a normal good; otherwise, the good is inferior.
Mathematical properties
If the consumer's utility function is continuous and represents a locally nonsatiated preference relation, then the Hicksian demand correspondence satisfies the following properties: i. Homogeneity of degree zero in p: For all,. This is because the same x that minimizes also minimizes subject to the same constraint. ii. No excess demand: The constraint holds with strict equality,. This follows from continuity of the utility function. Informally, they could simply spend less until utility was exactly.