Final answer:
Expected income (E[I]) and expected utility (E[U]) are defined using probabilities and outcomes for income in different health states, and a full insurance policy guarantees a utility gain, with consumer surplus calculated as the monetary value equivalent to this utility gain.
Step-by-step explanation:
The student's question revolves around expected utility theory in the context of insurance and income. In terms of the parameters provided (I_s = 0, I_H > 0, probability p, E[I], E[U]), one can express expected income (E[I]) as E[I] = p * I_s + (1 - p) * I_H, which represents a weighted average of income in healthy and sick states, weighted by the probability of each state occurring. Expected utility (E[U]), without insurance, is then E[U] = p * U(I_s) + (1 - p) * U(I_H), reflecting the utility associated with each income level, again weighted by the probability of being healthy or sick.
For a full insurance product that guarantees the individual an income of E[I], the diagram in U-I space would include the individual's convex utility curve and the lines representing I_s, I_H, and E[I]. The utility gain from buying this insurance product (DeltaU) would be represented by a vertical line segment between the curve at I_H and the curve at E[I]. The consumer surplus from insurance, M, is the monetary equivalent of the utility gain and can be algebraically derived by solving U-1(DeltaU + U(I_s)) = M, where U-1 is the inverse utility function. It represents the difference in income that gives the same utility increase as the insurance.