Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGwen Douglas Modified over 8 years ago
1
Consumer behavior and demand
2
Satisfaction, happiness, benefit
3
Cardinal Utility: Assigning numerical values to the amount of satisfaction Ordinal Utility: Not assigning numerical values to the amount of satisfaction but indicating the order of preferences, that is, what is preferred to what
4
x1x1 x2x2 U 0 2 U
5
The amount of satisfaction obtained by consuming specified amounts of a product per period of time. 5 units of the product per period of time yields 55 utils of satisfaction
6
The change in total utility ( TU) resulting from a one unit change in consumption ( X). MU = TU/ X
7
QTUMU 00--- 120 2277 3325 4353 5 0 634 736-4 Example (Table 4.1): TU, in general, increases with Q At some point, TU can start falling with Q If TU is increasing, MU > 0 From Q = 1 onwards, MU is declining principle of diminishing marginal utility As more and more of a good are consumed, the process of consumption will (at some point) yield smaller and smaller additions to utility QTUMU 00--- 120 2277 3325 4353 5 0 634 730-4 Example (Table 4.1):
8
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 0123456 Quantity Total utility(in utils) Q TU Figure 4.1
9
-5 0 5 10 15 20 123456 Quantity Marginal utility (in utils) Q MU Figure 4.2
10
Each additional unit of a product contributes less extra utility than the previous unit. MU = dTU/dX
11
Example If I’m really hungry, I get a lot of satisfaction from first slice of pizza. If I keep eating pizza, the satisfaction from the 8th slice would be much less than that of the first slice.
12
Explanation: As more and more quantity of a commodity is consumed, the intensity if desire decreases and also the utility derived from the additional unit. Assumptions: AAll the units of a commodity must be same in all respects TThe unit of the good must be standard TThere should be no change in taste during the process of consumption TThere must be continuity in consumption TThere should be no change in the price of the substitute goods
13
Notes about the Law of Diminishing MU Time period must be specified for law. Law tells us that eventually the marginal utility curve will be downward sloping. Law tells us that eventually the total utility curve will become “flatter.”
14
MU Q
15
Eventually downward sloping Law of diminishing marginal utility Positive always Rational behavior Consumer only purchases a good if they get some positive utility from it.
16
TU Q TU QQ QQ
17
Positive slope Consumer only purchases a good if gets some positive amount of utility (rational behavior) Slope gets flatter as Q increases Law of diminishing marginal utility
18
QTUMU 00--- 120 2277 3325 4353 5 0 634 736-4 Example (Table 4.1): TU, in general, increases with Q At some point, TU can start falling with Q If TU is increasing, MU > 0 From Q = 1 onwards, MU is declining principle of diminishing marginal utility As more and more of a good are consumed, the process of consumption will (at some point) yield smaller and smaller additions to utility QTUMU 00--- 120 2277 3325 4353 5 0 634 730-4 Example (Table 4.1):
19
X X Total Utilit y Margin al Utility TU MU X1X2X1X2 X1X2X1X2 Graphs of Total Utility & Marginal Utility X 2 is where total utility reaches its maximum. MU is zero. This is the saturation point or satiation point. After that point, TU falls and MU is negative. X 1 is where marginal utility reaches its maximum. This is where we encounter diminishing marginal utility. The slope of TU has reached its maximum; TU has an inflection point here.
20
This law states that the consumer maximizing his total utility will allocate his income among various commodities in such a way that his marginal utility of the last rupee spent on each commodity is equal. Or The consumer will spend his money income on different goods in such a way that marginal utility of each good is proportional to its price
21
# # It is difficult for the consumer to know the marginal utilities from different commodities because utility cannot be measured. #Consumer are ignorant and therefore are not in a position to arrive at an equilibrium. #It does not apply to indivisible and inexpensive commodity.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.