Consumer Choice: Maximizing Utility · •Utility: A measure of the satisfaction, happiness, or...

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Consumer Choice: Maximizing

Utility

Definition….

• Utility: A measure of the satisfaction, happiness,

or benefit that results from the consumption of a

good.

– Util: An artificial construct used to measure utility.

• Total Utility: The total satisfaction received from

consuming a particular quantity of a good.

• Marginal Utility: The additional utility a person

receives from consuming an additional unit of a

good.

Demand for Mogu-Mogu

Think

• Diamonds vs. Water

– Total Utility versus marginal utility

• Goods change as we become more familiar with them…

• Interpersonal utility comparisons.

– We often do compare marginal utility of additional income across different income levels, but it is not always appropriate…

Normally

• Income is limited!

– You have to make trade-offs in purchasing

different goods…

• Example:

– To buy 1 more Justin Bieber CD at Php375,

need to give up something else, i.e., 3

Starbucks Lattes at Php125 each….

• The trade-off occurs ―rationally” because

you know how much you value each of

these goods.

6

The Budget Constraint• Virtually all individuals must face two facts of economic life

– Have to pay prices for the goods and services they buy

– Have limited funds to spend

• A consumer’s budget constraint identifies which combinations of

goods and services the consumer can afford with a limited

budget

• Budget line is the graphical representation of a budget constraint

– The price of one good relative to the price of another

– The slope of the budget line indicates the spending trade-off

between one good and another

• Amount of one good, that must be sacrificed in order to

buy more of another good

7

The Budget Constraint

A

B

G

H

Number of Concerts

per Month

Number of Movies per

Month

15

12

9

6

3

1 2 3 4 5

With Php1500 per month, Iego can afford 15 movies and no concerts, . . .

12 movies and 1Sarah geronimo concert or any other combination on the budget line.

Points below the line are also affordable.

But not points

above the line.

D

F

E

C

8

Changes in the Budget Line

• Changes in income – Increase in income will shift the budget line upward

(and rightward)

– A decrease in income will shift the budget line downward (and leftward)

– Shifts are parallel

• Changes in price– In each case, one of the budget line’s intercepts will

change, as well as its slope• When the price of a good changes, the budget line rotates

– Both its slope and one of its intercepts will change

9

Shifting of the Budget Line

1. An increase in income shifts

the budget line rightward, with

no change in slope.

(a)

Number of Concerts per

Month

5

15

15

Number of Movies per Month

30

10

10

Changes in the Budget Line

2. A decrease in the price of

movies rotates the budget line

upward.

(b)

Number of Concerts per

Month

5

15

15

Number of Movies per Month

30

11

Changes in the Budget Line

3. while a decrease in the price of

concerts rotates it rightward.

Number of Concerts per

Month

5

15

15

Number of Movies per Month

30

(c)

12

Rationality(Indifference Curve)

• One common denominator– People have preferences

– We assume that you can look at two alternatives and state either that you prefer one to the other or

• That you are entirely indifferent between the two—you value them equally

• Another common denominator– Preferences are logically consistent, or transitive

• When a consumer can make choices, and is logically consistent, we say that she has rational preferences

• Rationality is a matter of how you make your choices, and not what choices you make– What matters is that you make logically consistent choices

13

More Is Better

• We generally feel that more is better

• The model of consumer choice is designed for preferences that satisfy the ―more is better‖ condition

– It would have to be modified to take account of exceptions

• The consumer will always choose a point on the budget line

– Rather than a point below it

14

Theories

• Theories of consumer decision making– Marginal utility

– Indifference curve• Both assume that preferences are rational

• Both assume that consumer would be better off with more of any good

• Both theories come to same general conclusions about consumer behavior

• Our goal is to describe and predict how consumers are likely to behave in markets– Rather than describe what actually goes on in their

minds

15

Marginal Utility

• Marginal utility of an additional unit

– Change in utility derived from consuming an

additional unit of a good

• The law of diminishing marginal utility, as

defined by Alfred Marshall (1842-1924)

states that

– Marginal utility of a thing to anyone diminishes

with every increase in the amount of it he/she

already has

16

Total And Marginal Utility

Total Utility

Marginal Utility

Utils302010

Mogu-Mogu per Week1 2 3 4 5 6

Utils605040

70

302010

Mogu-Mogu per Week1 2 3 4 5 6

1. The change in total utility from one more bottle . . .

2. is called the marginal utility of an additional bottle.

3. Marginal utility falls as more bottles are consumed.

17

Budget Constraint and Preferences

(Marginal Utility)

• If we combine information about preferences (marginal utility values) with information about what is affordable (the budget constraint)

– Can develop a useful rule to guide us to an individual’s utility-maximizing choice

• Highest possible utility will be point at which marginal utility per PESO is the same for both goods

18

Consumer Decision Making

A

B

C

D

EG

F

15

12

9

6

3

1 2 3 4 5 Number of Concerts per

Month

Number of Movies per

Month15

P

MU 40,

P

MU

movies

movies

concerts

concerts

20P

MU 20,

P

MU

movies

movies

concerts

concerts

35P

MU 15,

P

MU

movies

movies

concerts

concerts

19

Budget Constraint and Preferences

(Marginal Utility)

• For any two goods x and y, with prices Px and

PY, whenever MUx / Px > MUY / PY, a consumer is

made better off shifting away from y and toward x

– When MUY / PY > MUX / PX, a consumer is made

better off by shifting spending away from x and toward

y

• Leads to an important conclusion

– A utility-maximizing consumer will choose the point on

the budget line where marginal utility per peso is the

same for both goods (MUX / PX = MUY / PY)

– At that point, there is no further gain from reallocating

expenditures in either direction

20

Budget Constraint and Preferences

(Marginal Utility)

• No matter how many goods there are to

choose from, when the consumer is doing

as well as possible

– It must be true that MUX / PX = MUY / PY for

any pair of goods x and y

– If this condition is not satisfied, consumer will

be better off consuming more of one and less

of the other good in the pair

Consumer Equilibrium

• Occurs when the

consumer has spent

all income and the

marginal utilities per

peso spent on each

good purchased are

equal.

• MUA/PA=MUB/PB=MUC/PC

=

……………MUZ/PZ

housing

food

recreation

education

other

transport.

entertain.

A B

22

Changes In Income

• A rise in income—with no change in

price—leads to a new quantity demanded

for each good

– Whether a particular good is normal (quantity

demanded increases) or inferior (quantity

demanded decreases) depends on the

individual’s preferences

• As represented by the marginal utilities for each

good, at each point along the budget line

23

Effects of an Increase in Income

1. When Iego's income rises to Php3000, his budget line shifts outward.

H'

H''

H

30

27

15

12

9

6

3

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Number of Concerts per Month

Number of Movies per

Month

2. If his preferences are as given in the table, he'll choose point H

3.But different marginal

utility numbers could

lead him to H' or H''

A

B

C

D

E

F

24

Changes In Price

• A drop in the price of concerts rotates the

budget line rightward, pivoting around its

vertical intercept

• The consumer will select the combination

of movies and concerts on his budget line

that makes him as well off as possible

– Will be combination at which marginal utility

per dollar spent on both goods is the same

25

Deriving the Demand Curve

JD

D

JK

2. If the price falls to Php100, Iego's budget line rotates rightward, and he choose point J.

3. And if the price drops to Php50, he chooses point K.

Price per Concert

30

105

3 7 10 Number of Concerts per Month

15

6

3 5 15 300

108

7 10

Number of Movies per

Month K

4. The demand curve shows the quantity Iego chooses at each price.

1. When the price of concerts is Php300, point D is best for Iego.

26

The Individual’s Demand Curve

• Curve showing quantity of a good or

service demanded by a particular

individual at each different price

• In theory, an individual’s demand curve

could slope upward

27

Substitution Effect

• Substitution effects

– As the price of a good falls, the consumer substitutes that good

in place of other goods whose prices have not changed

• Substitution effect of a price change arises from a

change in the relative price of a good

– And it always moves quantity demanded in the opposite direction

to the price change

• When price decreases (increases), substitution effect works to

increase (decrease) quantity demanded

28

Income Effect

• Income effect– As price of a good decreases, the consumer’s purchasing power

increases, causing a change in quantity demanded for the good

• Income effect of a price change arises from a change in purchasing power over both goods– A drop (rise) in price increases (decreases) purchasing

power

• Income effect can work to either increase or decrease the quantity of a good demanded, depending on whether the good is normal or inferior

29

Combining Substitution and Income

Effect

• A change in the price of a good changes

– Relative price of the good (the substitution

effect) and

– Overall purchasing power of the consumer

(the income effect)

30

Normal Goods

• Substitution and income effects work

together

– Causing quantity demanded to move in

opposite direction of price

• Normal goods must always obey law of demand

31

Inferior Goods

• Substitution and income effects of a price

change work against each other

– Substitution effect moves quantity demanded in the

opposite direction of the price

– While income effect moves it in same direction of

price

– But since substitution effect virtually always

dominates

• Consumption of inferior goods will virtually always obey law

of demand

32

AGAIN, Income and Substitution

Effects

Price Decrease:

P

Purchasing Power

QD

QD

QD

if normal

if inferior

Substitution Effect

UltimateEffect

(Almost Always)

QD

Price Increase:

P QD

QD

QD

if normal

if inferior

Substitution Effect

QD

Purchasing Power

AGAIN, Utility

• Total utility–Total satisfaction from a specific

quantity

• Marginal utility–Extra satisfaction from an

additional unit

• Law of diminishing marginal utility –Explains downward sloping

demand 7-33

AGAIN,Utility Graphically

0

10

20

30

10

8642

0-2

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

To

tal U

tility

(U

tils

)M

arg

inal

Uti

lity

(U

tils

)

(1)Tacos

ConsumedPer Meal

(2)Total

Utility,Utils

(3)Marginal

Utility,Utils

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

0

10

18

24

28

30

30

28

]]]]]]]

10

8

6

4

2

0

-2

TU

MU

Total Utility

Marginal Utility

Units Consumed Per Meal

Units Consumed Per Meal

7-34

AGAIN, Consumer Behavior

• Key dimensions of the consumer problem

–Rational behavior

–Preferences

–Budget constraint

–Prices

7-35

AGAIN, Theory of Consumer

Behavior

• Find utility maximizing combination of goods

• Utility maximizing rule

–Allocate income

–Last peso spent on each good yields same marginal utility

–Marginal utility per peso

7-36

AGAIN, Numerical ExampleCombinations of apples and oranges obtainable with an income of Php10

(1)Unit of

Product

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(2)Apple (product A)

Price = 1

(3)Orange (product B)

Price = 2

First

Second

Third

Fourth

Fifth

Sixth

Seventh

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

24

20

18

16

12

6

4

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

12

10

9

8

6

3

2

Compare marginal utilities

Then compare per peso - MU/Price

Choose the highest

Check budget - proceed to next item 7-37

Numerical ExampleCombinations of apples and oranges obtainable with an income of Php10

(1)Unit of

Product

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(2)Apple (product A)

Price = 1

(3)Orange (product B)

Price = 2

First

Second

Third

Fourth

Fifth

Sixth

Seventh

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

24

20

18

16

12

6

4

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

12

10

9

8

6

3

2

Again, compare per peso - MU/Price

Choose the highest

Buy one of each – budget has Php5 left

Proceed to next item 7-38

Numerical ExampleCombinations of apples and oranges obtainable with an income of Php10

(1)Unit of

Product

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(2)Apple (product A)

Price = 1

(3)Orange (product B)

Price = 2

First

Second

Third

Fourth

Fifth

Sixth

Seventh

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

24

20

18

16

12

6

4

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

12

10

9

8

6

3

2

Again, compare per peso - MU/Price

Buy one more orange – budget has Php3 left

Proceed to next item 7-39

Numerical ExampleCombinations of apples and oranges obtainable with an income of Php10

(1)Unit of

Product

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(2)Apple (product A)

Price = 1

(3)Orange (product B)

Price = 2

First

Second

Third

Fourth

Fifth

Sixth

Seventh

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

24

20

18

16

12

6

4

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

12

10

9

8

6

3

2

Again, compare per peso - MU/Price

Buy one of each – budget exhausted7-40

Numerical ExampleCombinations of apples and oranges obtainable with an income of Php10

(1)Unit of

Product

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(a)Marginal

Utility,Utils

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(b)Marginal

UtilityPer Peso

(MU/Price)

(2)Apple (product A)

Price = 1

(3)Orange (product B)

Price = 2

First

Second

Third

Fourth

Fifth

Sixth

Seventh

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

24

20

18

16

12

6

4

10

8

7

6

5

4

3

12

10

9

8

6

3

2

Final result – at these prices,

purchase 2 apples and 4 oranges 7-41

Algebraic Generalization

MU of product A

price of A

MU of product B

price of B=

8 Utils

Php1

16 Utils

Php2=

Optimum Achieved – Money income

is allocated so that the last peso spent on

each product yields the same extra or

marginal utility

43

Consumers in Markets

• Since market demand curve tells us

quantity of a good demanded by all

consumers in a market

– Can derive it by summing individual

demand curves of every consumer in

that market

44

From Individual To Market Demand

Number of Mogu-MoguBottles per Week

c

4 12

Dan

Price

4

0

3

2

1

C'

Alvir

Price

0 6 12

4

3

2

1

C''

Marj

Price

0 10 20

4

3

2

1

+ + =

45

From Individual To Market Demand

A

C

B

D

E

Market Demand Curve

Price

4

3

2

1

3 10 27 44

Number of Mogu-Mogu Bottles per Week

46

Consumer Theory in Perspective:

Extensions of the Model

• Problems– The simple model ignores uncertainty

– Imperfect information

– People can spend more than their incomes in any given year by borrowing funds or spending out of savings

• You might think consumer theory always regards people as relentlessly selfish– In fact, when people trade in impersonal markets, this

is mostly true• People try to allocate their spending among different goods

to achieve the greatest possible satisfaction

Who cares about this?

(Beyond Econ Class in Pisay)• Companies, like P&G,

realize that people have limited budgets. They want to maximize consumer utility with THEIR products….– Adjust product qualities to

change utility to consumer.

– Adjust prices

• Methods– Focus groups

– Test markets

– Advertising

– Packaging

– Reformulations…

P&G Product Family

Limits to Utility Theory

• Utility theory assumes people are:

– Rational, self-interested, & consistent.

• In recent years, many limitations to utility theory

in economics have been noted by psychologists

and economists.

– These affect different kinds of transactions

differently….

– Probably have little effect on buying and selling

everyday things….

Inconsistent behavior?• Spite: In experiments, some people have been

observed to spend money to reduce the money other people have won…– In a study, 62% of the participants made themselves

worse off in order to make someone else worse off.

• Compartmentalizing: People often treat money differently depending on the circumstances:

• Endowment Effect: We value things we are endowed with more than things we don’t have…– Coffee mugs: 15 to sell; 10 to buy.

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