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Consumer Behaviour in Microeconomics
Typology: Summaries
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pleasure people derive from goods and services.
(Chapter 3)
choices
consumption, subject to the constraints they face.
3. Monotonic (more is better) Preferences: are
monotonic if a basket with more of at least one good
and no less of any good is preferred to the original
basket.
The more is better assumption is also known as the property
of non-satiation.
It assumes are looking at what economists call a ‘good’.
Something we want more of
We are not looking at a ‘bad’ i.e. pollution
We can relax this assumption it is the first two that are
crucial for the analysis
This is how we view preferences.
Would be hard to say I like eating pizza out 10.5 times
more than eating bad Chinese. Putting an exact number to
our preferences is hard! – this is why we use ordinal
rankings for consumer preferences
14
U(y) = y
.
y, weekly consumption of muffins
U(y): total
utility of
muffins
Slopes on A and C give marginal utility – each additional unit makes
person happy but by less than the previous unit
The marginal utility : of a good, x, is the additional utility
that the consumer gets from consuming a little more of x
when the consumption of all the other goods in the
consumer’s basket remain constant.
x
y
…or…the marginal utility of x is the slope of the utility
function with respect to x.
The principle of diminishing marginal utility : states that
the marginal utility falls as the consumer consumes more
of a good
y, weekly consumption of muffins
MU(y):
marginal
utility of
muffins
-If more is always better: marginal utility
must always be positive.
-Diminishing marginal utility
-A positive marginal utility means you like
the good. Otherwise you would get zero or
perhaps negative marginal utility
1
for U=
food
Clothing
2 good graph (keeps it simple)
indifferent between each of the
bundles of food and clothing
Same level of utility for bundle
A, B, and C
A
B
C
20
1
for U=
2
for U = 6
Food
Clothing
Preference direction ( happier
the further away from the
origin)
Are indifferent to any bundle along an
indifference curve. But more is better so
are better off as we move away from
the origin.