Hicksian demand functions are often convenient for mathematical manipulation because they do not require representing income or wealth. Additionally, the function to be minimized is linear in the x_i, which gives a simpler optimization problem. However,
Marshallian demand functions of the form x(p, w) that describe demand given prices
p and income w are easier to observe directly. The two are related by :h(p, u) = x(p, e(p, u)), \ where e(p, u) is the
expenditure function (the function that gives the minimum wealth required to get to a given utility level), and by :h(p, v(p, w)) = x(p, w), \ where v(p, w) is the
indirect utility function (which gives the utility level of having a given wealth under a fixed price regime). Their derivatives are more fundamentally related by the
Slutsky equation. Whereas Marshallian demand comes from the Utility Maximization Problem, Hicksian Demand comes from the Expenditure Minimization Problem. The two problems are mathematical duals, and hence the Duality Theorem provides a method of proving the relationships described above. The Hicksian demand function is intimately related to the
expenditure function. If the consumer's utility function u(x) is
locally nonsatiated and
strictly convex, then by
Shephard's lemma it is true that h(p, u) = \nabla_p e(p, u).. Note that if there is more than one vector of quantities that minimizes expenditure for the given utility, we have a Hicksian demand
correspondence rather than a
function. ==Hicksian demand and compensated price changes==