Unit 3. The Theory of Individual Economic Behavior (Ch. 4)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Supply of Labor Labor Economics Copyright © 2011 by W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Advertisements

Chapter 5 Appendix Indifference Curves
AAEC 2305 Fundamentals of Ag Economics Chapter 2 Economics of Demand.
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy
AAEC 2305 Fundamentals of Ag Economics Chapters 3 and 4—Part 1 Economics of Demand.
Chapter 2 Utility and Choice © 2004 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
The Theory of Consumer Choice
Basic Concepts in Economics: Theory of Demand and Supply
Chapter 21 The Theory of Consumer Choice
The Theory of Consumer Choice
Consumer Choice From utility to demand. Scarcity and constraints Economics is about making choices.  Everything has an opportunity cost (scarcity): You.
The Theory of Consumer Choice
In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
Part 2 Demand © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
Michael R. Baye, Managerial Economics and Business Strategy, 3e. ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter.
Theory of Consumer Behavior Basics of micro theory: how individuals choose what to consume when faced with limited income? Components of consumer demand.
CHAPTER 2 DEMAND AND SUPPLY ANALYSIS: CONSUMER DEMAND Presenter’s name Presenter’s title dd Month yyyy.
Schedule of Classes September, 3 September, 10 September, 17 – in-class#1 September, 19 – in-class#2 September, 24 – in-class#3 (open books) September,
Consumer Behavior There are 3 steps involved in studying consumer behavior. Consumer preferences: describe how and why people prefer one good to another.
Chapter 5: Theory of Consumer Behavior
Introduction to Economics
Indifference Curves and Utility Maximization
David Bryce © Adapted from Baye © 2002 Individual Behavior MANEC 387 Economics of Strategy MANEC 387 Economics of Strategy David J. Bryce.
Chapter 5 Constraints, Choices, and Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Economics Winter 14 February 24 th, 2014 Lecture 15 Ch. 8 and Ch. 9.
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy
7 TOPICS FOR FURTHER STUDY. Copyright©2004 South-Western 21 The Theory of Consumer Choice.
PART 7 TOPICS FOR FURTHER STUDY. Copyright © 2006 Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Ltd. 21 The Theory of Consumer Choice.
The Theory of Consumer Choice
Consumer Theory Introduction Budget Set/line Study of Preferences Maximizing Utility.
In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
Principles of Microeconomics
6.1 Chapter 7 – The Theory of Consumer Behavior  The Theory of Consumer behavior provides the theoretical basis for buyer decision- making and the foundation.
© 2011 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved C H A P T E R 2011 update The Theory of Consumer Choice M icroeconomics P R I N C.
5.1 Household Behavior and Consumer Choice We have studied the basics of markets: how demand and supply determine prices and how changes in demand and.
The Theory of Consumer Choice
Chapter 2 Theoretical Tools of Public Economics Jonathan Gruber Public Finance and Public Policy Aaron S. Yelowitz - Copyright 2005 © Worth Publishers.
The Theory of Individual Behavior. Overview I. Consumer Behavior n Indifference Curve Analysis n Consumer Preference Ordering II. Constraints n The Budget.
Lecture 3: Consumer BehaviorSlide 1 Topics to be Discussed Consumer Preferences Budget Constraints Consumer Choice.
Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior. Chapter 32©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Introduction How are consumer preferences used to determine demand? How do consumers.
Copyright (c) 2000 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Utility The pleasure people get from their economic activity. To identify all of the factors.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. The Theory of Consumer Choice The theory of consumer choice addresses the following questions: –Do all demand curves slope.
Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior. Chapter 3: Consumer BehaviorSlide 2 Topics to be Discussed Consumer Preferences Budget Constraints Consumer Choice Marginal.
Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior. Chapter 3: Consumer BehaviorSlide 2 Topics to be Discussed Consumer Preferences Budget Constraints Consumer Choice Revealed.
Lecture 7 Consumer Behavior Required Text: Frank and Bernanke – Chapter 5.
Theory of Consumer Behaviour
Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior. Chapter 32©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Introduction How are consumer preferences used to determine demand? How do consumers.
Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior. Question: Mary goes to the movies eight times a month and seldom goes to a bar. Tom goes to the movies once a month and goes.
Demand Analysis Some Questions What is behind a consumer’s demand curve? How do consumers choose from among various consumer “goods”? What determines.
The Theory of Consumer Choice Chapter 21 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of.
Consumer Choices and Economic Behavior
Lecture 4 Consumer Behavior Recommended Text: Franks and Bernanke - Chapter 5.
1 Chapter 4 Prof. Dr. Mohamed I. Migdad Professor in Economics 2015.
The Theory of Consumer Choice
5 © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair Household Behavior and Consumer Choice Appendix: Indifference.
Chapter 5 Constraints, Choices, and Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
BUS 525: Managerial Economics Lecture 4 The Theory of Individual Behavior.
Recall: Consumer behavior Why are we interested? –New good in the market. What price should be charged? How much more for a premium brand? –Subsidy program:
Consumer Behavior.  Common Sense ◦ High Price discourages customers from buying ◦ Low Price encourages customers to buy  Consumer Behavior is reflected.
Consumer Choice Theory Public Finance and The Price System 4 th Edition Browning, Browning Johnny Patta KK Pengelolaan Pembangunan dan Pengembangan Kebijakan.
1 Indifference Curves and Utility Maximization CHAPTER 6 Appendix © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
© 2011 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved C H A P T E R 2011 update The Theory of Consumer Choice M icroeconomics P R I N C.
The theory of consumer choice Chapter 21 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Theory of Consumer Behavior.
Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 4 The Theory.
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy
Chapter 5 Theory of Consumer Behavior
The Theory of Individual Economic Behavior (Ch. 4)
Consumer Choices and Economic Behavior
Presentation transcript:

Unit 3. The Theory of Individual Economic Behavior (Ch. 4)

Raise the Wage or Pay Overtime? Boxes, Inc. produces corrugated paper containers at its plant in Sunrise Beach, TX. The plant is located in a retirement community with an aging population and a shrinking work force which has hampered the firm’s ability to hire enough workers to meet its growing production targets. This is despite the fact that the company already pays a wage rate that is twice the local average. The firm’s manager is considering two options to deal with the firm’s growing labor shortage: 1) raise the wage rate by 50% to be paid for all hours worked by workers or 2) implement an overtime wage plan that would raise the wage rate by 50% to be paid for hours worked in excess of 8 hours per day. Which plan would you recommend?

Preferred Investment Strategy? Bill is a financial planner for FVS (Financial Vision Services’). Today, he has a meeting scheduled with a client to discuss some alternative retirement investment strategies. He is trying to figure out which strategies the client is most likely to be interested in. As he reviews possible investment options, he is aware that different strategies offer his client different risk and return tradeoffs. Bill has decided to focus on higher-returning (yet riskier) investments for his client today, who is a middle-aged, white collar worker. Do you agree with his approach?

Buy One, Get One Free A popular sales strategy of pizza restaurants is to offer a deal “buy one large pizza, get a medium pizza free”. Is the budget impact of this strategy the same as simply lowering the price of the pizza? Which strategy would you recommend to the manager of such a restaurant to increase sales?

Cash or Vacation? Sue is a DSM (district sales manager) for a well respected pharmaceutical company. She is considering implementing a “bonus” plan to provide additional incentive for sales reps to reach sales goals. She has two alternative bonus plans that she is looking at: 1) a straight $2,000 cash bonus or 2) a $2,000 expenses- paid vacation to a popular tourist attraction. Which plan would you recommend Sue adopt, without having any specific knowledge of her sales reps?

What to Buy for a Snack? Molly Dogood is a grade-school student who has a monthly allowance from her parents of $40 to be spent on snacks at school. Molly is deciding how much of her allowance to spend on S (= cans of soda pop, $1.00 each) and O (other items, prices vary). How can Molly’s attainable, affordable choices be shown graphically and mathematically? What combination of S and O should Molly buy? When would Molly likely by all S and no O?

Buying and Selling “Perfect” Substitutes Assume two firms (A and B) compete against each other by selling similar products in a market. Currently, A’s product sells at a slightly higher price. Jack is a prospective customer of both. What does it mean if Jack regards the products of A and B to be “perfect” substitutes. If you were a sales rep working for either of these firms, how would your sales pitch to Jack likely depend on whether you work for A or B? When would Jack likely buy either all A or all B?

I Save, You Borrow? Sonny and Cher have the same present value of combined incomes this year and next year. They also have the same preferences regarding saving and borrowing, yet Sonny is a saver and Cher is a borrower. Explain how that can be?

Budget Constraint  The maximum Q combinations of goods that can be purchased given one’s income and the prices of the goods.

Budget Constraint Variables I (or M) =the amount of income or money that a consumer has to spend on specified goods and services. X=the quantity of one specific good or one specific bundle of goods Y=the quantity of a second specific good or second specific bundle of goods P x =the price or per unit cost of X P Y =the price or per unit cost of Y

Budget Line Equation Income = expenses I = P x X+P Y Y Y = l/P Y – (P x /P Y )X  straight line equation  vert axis intercept = I/P Y  slope = dY/dX = -P x /P Y

The Opportunity Set

Budget Line: Axis Intercepts & Slope Vertical Axis Intercept =I/P Y =max Y (X = 0) Horizontal Axis Intercept =I/P X =max X (Y = 0) - Slope =P X /P Y = ‘inverse’ P ratio = X axis good P/Y axis good P =  Y/  X

Budget Line Slope Equation: ¯Slope = ¯ = rate at which y CAN be exchanged for x (holding $ expenses constant) e.g. => 2y can be exchanged for 1x

Changes in the Budget Line Changes in Income -Increases lead to a parallel, outward shift in the budget line. -Decreases lead to a parallel, downward shift.

Changes in the Budget Line Changes in Price -A decrease in the price of good X rotates the budget line counter- clockwise. -An increase rotates the budget line clockwise.

Your Preferences? Lunch A:1 drink, 1 pizza slice B:1 drink, 2 pizza slices C:2 drinks, 1 pizza slice Entertainment A:1 movie, 1 dinner B:1 movie, 2 dinners C:2 movies, 1 dinner For each, indicate which of the following you prefer: A vs B, B vs C, A vs C

Utility Concepts Utility: satisfaction received from consuming goods Cardinal utility: satisfaction levels that can be measured or specified with numbers (units = ‘utils’) Ordinal utility: satisfaction levels that can be ordered or ranked Marginal utility: the additional utility received per unit of additional unit of an item consumed (  U/  X)

An Understanding of Concepts Related to Utility Should Help One: 1.Get along better with other people, by doing things that increase their utility. 2.Make better business decisions that result in improved customer satisfaction and, thus, more sales. 3.Understand what motivates people and why they behave the way they do, including how people are likely to respond to economic changes.

Utility Assumptions 1.Complete (or continuous)  can rank all bundles of goods 2.Consistent (or transitive)  preference orderings are logical and consistent 3.Consumptive (nonsatiation)  more of a ‘normal’ good is preferred to less

More of a Good is Preferred to Less The shaded area represents those combinations of X and Y that are unambiguously preferred to the combination X*, Y*. Ceteris paribus, individuals prefer more of any good rather than less. Combinations identified by “?” involve ambiguous changes in welfare since they contain more of one good and less of the other.

Indifference Curve Analysis Indifference Curve A curve that defines the combinations of 2 or more goods that give a consumer the same level of satisfaction. Marginal Rate of Substitution The rate at which a consumer is willing to substitute one good for another and stay at the same satisfaction level.

Investment Alternatives FundReturnSafety A2.89%Hi B6.59%Med C7.29%Low

1. Ida Dontcare is indifferent regarding all three investment alternatives. U(A) = U(B) = U(C)

2. Ralph Returnman prefers C over B and prefers B over A. U(C) > U(B) > U(A)

3. Sally Safetyfirst prefers A over B and prefers B over C. U(A) > U(B) > U(C)

MRS & MU MRS =- slope of indifference curve =-  Y/  X =the rate at which a consumer is willing to exchange Y for 1more (or less) unit of X  U=0 along given indiff curve =MU x (  X)+MU Y (  Y) = 0 =-  Y/  X = MU x /MU Y =- slope = inverse MU ratio

MRS Calculation 2) Given indifference curve equation, derive ¯dy/dx directly. e.g. 1) 2) => Willing to exchange 2y for 1x Two ways to calculate: 1) Given utility function equation, derive inverse MU ratio =

Types of Goods & Utility Functions 1.Normal 2.Perfect Substitutes 3.Perfect Complements

Normal Goods = goods for which a consumer’s willingness to exchange one good for another varies depending on Q’s of each  Represented by U = x α Y B 

Perfect Substitutes = goods for which a consumer is willing to exchange one good for another at a constant rate.  Represented by U = αx + BY  Equation of indifferent curve = (= a constant)

Perfect Complements = goods that are used in fixed or constant proportions with one another  Represented by U = min [αX, βY]  A consumer’s U = whichever is the least, αX or βY  too much of one good without more of the other good will not increase one’s utility  values where αX = βY lie along line (solve for Y) where Y = (α/β)X

Non ‘Goods’ & Indifference Curves  1 Good and 1 ‘Neutral’  1 Good and 1 ‘Bad’

Utility Maximization WordsSpend one’s income so as to get the most satisfaction possible GraphGo to the highest indifference curve that is within reach of the budget line MathNormal goods: point of tangency (equal slopes condition) between budget line and highest attainable indifference curve Perfect substitutes: corner solution normally; if slope of budget line flatter than slope of indifference curves => All X; else => All Y Perfect complements; pt. of intersection between budget line and line through vertex pts of indifference curves

Consumer Equilibrium (U Max) The equilibrium consumption bundle is the affordable bundle that yields the highest level of satisfaction.

Equal Slopes Condition (for consumer equilibrium) MU X /MU Y = P X /P Y MU X /P X = MU Y /P Y

Consumer Equilibrium (Perfect Substitutes)

Consumer Equilibrium (Perfect Complements)

Changes in Price Substitute Goods –An increase (decrease) in the price of good X leads to an increase (decrease) in the consumption of good Y. Complementary Goods –An increase (decrease) in the price of good X leads to a decrease (increase) in the consumption of good Y.

Complementary Goods

Changes in Income Normal Goods –Good X is a normal good if an increase (decrease) in income leads to an increase (decrease) in its consumption. Inferior Goods –Good X is an inferior good if an increase (decrease) in income leads to a decrease (increase) in its consumption.

Normal Goods

Individual Demand Curve An individual’s demand curve is derived from each new equilibrium point found on the indifference curve as the price of good X is varied.

Market Demand The market demand curve is the horizontal summation of individual demand curves. It indicates the total quantity all consumers would purchase at each price point.

A Classic Marketing Application

Variables: W=hrs/day worked (labored) L=hrs/day leisured (happy) Note: L = 24 – W P=hourly wage or ‘pay’ rate Q=consumer good quantity C=price per unit of Q N=nonlabor income

Constraint:  expenses = income  CQ = N + PW  Q = (N + 24P)/C – (P/C)L If C = 1, Q = (N + 24P) - PL

Intertemporal Choice Model Inter  between; temporal  time pds Time pds  current (0) or next yr (1) Variables: C 0 and C 1 = Q of goods consumed I 0 and I 1 = income levels P = price of consumer goods (P 0 = P 1 ) r = interest rate Objective (goal) = Max U = f(C 0, C 1 ) Constraint: PV of Income = PV of Expenses

Intertemporal Saving & Borrowing Facts If you save an extra $ (i.e. reduce current pd consumption by a $), you can INCREASE future pd consumption by the FV of the $. If you borrow a $ against your future income (i.e. agree to pay back a $ principal and interest), you can INCREASE current pd consumption by the PV of the $.

Math Summary of Intertemporal Choice Problem Max U (C0, C1) Subj. to PV of income = PV of expenses

Intertemporal Choice Problem Graph