Transcript Ch 7
CHAPTER
Utility and Demand
7
After studying this chapter you will be able to
Explain what limits a household’s consumption choices
Describe preferences using the concept of utility and
distinguish between total utility and marginal utility
Explain the marginal utility theory of consumer choice
Use marginal utility theory to predict the effects of
changing prices and incomes
Use marginal utility theory to prove the law of demand
Explain the paradox of value
2
Approaches to Consumer Utility
• Marginal Utility approach
Based on cardinal numbers
• Indifference Curve approach
Based on ordinal numbers
3
The Household’s Budget
Consumption Possibilities
A household’s consumption possibilities are constrained
by its income and the prices of the goods and services it
buys.
A household has a given amount of income to spend and
cannot influence the prices of the goods and services it
buys.
A household’s budget line describes the limits to a
household’s consumption choices.
The Household’s Budget
Relative Price
A relative price is the price of one good divided by the
price of another good.
The price of a movie is $6 and the price of soda is $3 a
six-pack.
So the relative price of a movie is $6 per movie divided by
$3 per six-pack, which equals 2 six-packs per movie.
The Household’s Budget
Real Income
A household’s real income is the household’s income
expressed as the quantity of goods that the household can
afford to buy.
Expressed in terms of soda, Lisa’s real income is 10 sixpacks—the maximum quantity of six-packs that she can
buy.
Lisa’s real income equals her money income ($30) divided
by the price of a six-pack ($3).
Preferences and Utility
Preferences
A household’s preferences determine the benefits or
satisfaction a person receives consuming a good or
service.
The benefit or satisfaction from consuming a good or
service is called utility.
Total Utility
Total utility is the total benefit a person gets from the
consumption of goods. Generally, more consumption gives
more utility.
Preferences and Utility
Table 7.1 on page 157
provides an example of
total utility schedule.
Figure 7.2(a) shows a total
utility curve.
Total utility increases with
the consumption of a
good.
Preferences and Utility
Marginal Utility
Marginal utility is the change in total utility that results
from a one-unit increase in the quantity of a good
consumed.
As the quantity consumed of a good increases, the
marginal utility from consuming it decreases.
We call this decrease in marginal utility as the quantity of
the good consumed increases the principle of diminishing
marginal utility.
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
As a person consumes
additional units of a
commodity, at some point,
the additional satisfaction
(marginal utility) will diminish.
Preferences and Utility
Figure 7.2(b) illustrates
diminishing marginal utility.
Utility is analogous to
temperature.
Both are abstract concepts
and both are measured in
arbitrary units.
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
• Utility defined
• Subjective nature
• Difficult to quantify
Total and Marginal Utility
0
10
18
24
28
30
30
28
10
8
6
4
2
0
-2
TU
30
Total Utility (utils)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Marginal
utility
(2)
20
10
0
Marginal Utility (utils)
Hamburgers Total
consumed Utility
per meal
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Units consumed per meal
10
8
6
4
2
0
-2
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Units consumed per meal
MU
Maximizing Utility
The key assumption of marginal utility theory is that the
household chooses the consumption possibility that
maximizes total utility.
The Utility-Maximizing Choice
We can find the utility-maximizing choice by looking at the
total utility that arises from each affordable combination.
Table 7.2 (page 158) shows an example of the utilitymaximizing combination, which is called a consumer
equilibrium.
Maximizing Utility
Equalizing Marginal Utility per Dollar
Using marginal analysis, a consumer’s total utility is
maximized by following the rule:
Spend all available income and equalize the marginal
utility per dollar for all goods.
The marginal utility per dollar is the marginal utility from
a good divided by its price.
Utility Maximizing Rule
The consumer’s money income
should be allocated so that the
last dollar spent on each product
purchased yields the same amount
of extra (marginal) utility
Algebraic Restatement of the
Utility Maximization Rule
MU of product A
Price of A
=
MU of product B
Price of B
Product A: Price = $1
Unit of
product
First
Second
Third
Fourth
Fifth
Sixth
Seventh
Product B: Price = $2
Marginal
Marginal
Marginal utility per Marginal utility per
dollar
dollar
utility,
utility,
(MU/price)
(MU/price)
utils
utils
10
8
7
6
5
4
3
10
8
7
6
5
4
3
24
20
18
16
12
6
4
12
10
9
8
6
3
2
Marginal Utility and the Demand Curve
Deriving the Demand Curve
• Preferences or tastes
• Money Income
• Prices of other goods
Create a demand schedule from the
purchase decisions as the price of
the product is varied ....
Price per unit of B
$2
1
Quantity Demanded
4
6
THE LAW OF DEMAND
Substitution Effect
–The change in quantity demanded
resulting from a change in relative
price
Income Effect
–The change in quantity demanded
resulting from a change in price due
to the change in real income
THE LAW OF DEMAND
Total Effect
–The change in quantity demanded
resulting from a change in price
THE LAW OF DEMAND
Total
Effect
Substitution
Effect
Income
Effect
Price of Good X Decreases
Type
Good
Subst
Effect
Income
Effect
Total
Effect
Normal
+
+
+
Inferior
+
-
+
Giffen
+
-
-
Giffen good is the only exception to the law of demand.
Efficiency, Price, and Value
Consumer Efficiency and Consumer Surplus
–When consumers maximize their utility, they are
using resources efficiently.
–And the marginal benefit from a good or service
is the maximum price the consumer is willing to
pay for an extra unit of that good or service when
his or her utility is maximized.
Applications and Discussion
Transfers and Gifts
Diamond-Water Paradox
Efficiency, Price, and Value
–Value and Consumer
Surplus
–The supply of water is
perfectly elastic, so the
quantity of water consumed
is large and the consumer
surplus from water is large.
–In contrast, the supply of
diamonds in perfectly
inelastic, so the price is
high and the consumer
surplus from diamonds is
small.