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1 Frank & Frank & Bernanke Bernanke 3 3 rd rd edition, edition, 2007 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

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Page 1: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

11

Frank & BernankeFrank & Bernanke33rdrd edition, 2007 edition, 2007

Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

Page 2: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

22

QuestionsQuestions

If free ice cream is available between 2 If free ice cream is available between 2 PM and 4 PM, do every one who is PM and 4 PM, do every one who is attracted to the site get it?attracted to the site get it?What is the MC in monetary terms?What is the MC in monetary terms?What is the MC in opportunity cost terms?What is the MC in opportunity cost terms?How is ice cream allocated among How is ice cream allocated among

consumers?consumers?

Page 3: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

33

Law of DemandLaw of Demand

The costly one views an activity, the less The costly one views an activity, the less likely one will do it.likely one will do it.

The lower the cost of a good/service/activity, The lower the cost of a good/service/activity, the more of it will be “consumed.”the more of it will be “consumed.”

Page 4: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

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Law of DemandLaw of Demand

The benefit of an activity equals the highest The benefit of an activity equals the highest price we’d be willing to pay to pursue it (i.e., price we’d be willing to pay to pursue it (i.e., the reservation price).the reservation price).

As the cost of an activity rises and exceeds As the cost of an activity rises and exceeds the reservation price, less of the activity will the reservation price, less of the activity will be pursued.be pursued.

Page 5: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

55

Needs vs WantsNeeds vs Wants

““Californians don’t have as much water as Californians don’t have as much water as they need!”they need!”

““Californians don’t have as much water as Californians don’t have as much water as they want at the ongoing price of water!”they want at the ongoing price of water!”

Page 6: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

66

Measuring Wants: The Measuring Wants: The Concept of UtilityConcept of Utility

UtilityUtilityThe satisfaction people derive from their The satisfaction people derive from their

consumption activitiesconsumption activitiesAssumptionAssumption

People allocate their income to maximize their People allocate their income to maximize their satisfaction or total utilitysatisfaction or total utility

Page 7: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

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Sarah’s Total Utility Sarah’s Total Utility from Ice Cream Consumptionfrom Ice Cream ConsumptionCone quantity (cones/hour) Total utility (utils/hour)

0 01 502 903 1204 1405 1506 140

How much ice cream should Sarah consume if the ice cream is “free”?

How many cones should she order once she is at the counter?

Is the time spent in the line relevant to how many cones to order?

Page 8: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

88

Sarah’s Total Utility Sarah’s Total Utility from Ice Cream Consumptionfrom Ice Cream Consumption

Cones/hour

Uti

ls/h

ou

r

1 3 4 5 60 2

150140

120

90

50

Page 9: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

99

Sarah’s Marginal Utility from Sarah’s Marginal Utility from Ice Cream ConsumptionIce Cream Consumption

Cone quantity Total utility Marginal utility(cones/hour) (utils/hour) (utils/cone)

0 01 502 903 1204 1405 1506 140

50 40 30 20 10-10

Page 10: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1010

Diminishing Marginal UtilityDiminishing Marginal Utility

50

40

30

20

10

Sarah’smarginalutility

0

0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3.5 43 4.5

Page 11: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1111

The Law of Diminishing The Law of Diminishing Marginal UtilityMarginal Utility

The tendency for the additional utility gained The tendency for the additional utility gained from consuming an additional unit of a good from consuming an additional unit of a good to diminish as consumption increases beyond to diminish as consumption increases beyond some pointsome point

Page 12: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

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Allocating A Fixed Income Allocating A Fixed Income Between Two GoodsBetween Two Goods

Two goods: Chocolate and vanilla ice Two goods: Chocolate and vanilla ice creamcream

Price of chocolate equals $2/pintPrice of chocolate equals $2/pintPrice of vanilla equals $1/pintPrice of vanilla equals $1/pintSarah’s budget = $400/yrSarah’s budget = $400/yrCurrently Sarah is consuming 200 pints of Currently Sarah is consuming 200 pints of

vanilla and 100 pints of chocolatevanilla and 100 pints of chocolate

Page 13: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1313

Marginal Utility Curves for Marginal Utility Curves for Two Flavors of Ice CreamTwo Flavors of Ice Cream

Mar

gin

al u

tili

ty o

f va

nil

la i

ce c

ream

(uti

ls/

pin

t)

Mar

gin

al u

tili

ty o

f ch

oco

late

ice

cre

am(u

tils

/ p

int)

12

200

16

100

Pints/yr Pints/yr

Page 14: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1414

Is Sarah Maximizing Her Is Sarah Maximizing Her Total Utility?Total Utility?

Marginal utility vanilla/P: $12/1 = 12 utils/$Marginal utility chocolate/P: 16/2 = 8 utils/$

If Sarah spends $2 less on chocolate, utils will decline by 16.If Sarah spends $2 more on vanilla, utils will increase by 24.

So…Sarah should buy more vanilla and less chocolate.

Page 15: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1515

Is Sarah Maximizing Her Is Sarah Maximizing Her Total Utility?Total Utility?

But how much more vanilla and how much But how much more vanilla and how much less chocolate?less chocolate?

Until MUUntil MUvv/P/Pv v = MU= MUcc/P/Pcc

If MUIf MUvv/P/Pv v > MU> MUcc/P/Pc c then buy more vanilla then buy more vanilla

and less chocolate.and less chocolate. If MUIf MUvv/P/Pvv < MU < MUcc/P/Pc c then buy more then buy more

chocolate and less vanilla.chocolate and less vanilla.

Page 16: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1616

Pints/yr

Mar

gin

al u

tilit

y o

f va

nill

a ic

e cr

eam

(uti

ls/ p

int)

12

200

8

300

Sarah increases vanillaspending by $100, andMUV/PV = 8/$1 = 8

VanillaVanilla

Page 17: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1717

ChocolateChocolate

Mar

gin

al u

tilit

y o

f ch

oco

late

ice

crea

m

(uti

ls/ p

int)

Pints/yr

16

100

24

50

Sarah decreases chocolatespending by $100, andMUC/PC = 24/$2 = 12 >MUV/pV = 8

Page 18: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1818

Is Sarah Maximizing Her Is Sarah Maximizing Her Total Utility?Total Utility?

Can she improve her position?Can she improve her position?Use the rational decision-making rule.Use the rational decision-making rule. Is MU per $ of vanilla greater or less than Is MU per $ of vanilla greater or less than

MU per $ of chocolate?MU per $ of chocolate?MU/P of vanilla was $8 and MU/P of MU/P of vanilla was $8 and MU/P of

chocolate was $12.chocolate was $12.So Sarah should buy more chocolate and So Sarah should buy more chocolate and

less vanilla.less vanilla.

Page 19: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

1919

EquilibriumEquilibrium

Pints/yr

Mar

gin

al u

tilit

y o

f va

nill

a ic

e cr

eam

(uti

ls/ p

int)

10

250

1

10

VanillaPrice

Vanilla

MU

Page 20: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2020

EquilibriumEquilibrium

Mar

gin

al u

tilit

y o

f ch

oco

late

ice

crea

m

(uti

ls/ p

int)

Pints/yr

20

75

2

20

Chocolate Price

Chocolate

MU

Page 21: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2121

EquilibriumEquilibrium

Budget = $400Budget = $400PPCC = = $2 & $2 & PPVV = $1 = $1

QQCC = 75 & = 75 & QQVV = 250 = 250

1

10

P

MU

2

20

P

MU

V

V

C

C

Page 22: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2222

The Rational Spending RuleThe Rational Spending Rule

Spending should be allocated across goods Spending should be allocated across goods so that the marginal utility per dollar is the so that the marginal utility per dollar is the same for each good.same for each good.

V

V

C

C

P

MU

P

MU

Page 23: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2323

Price of chocolate falls to $1Price of chocolate falls to $1

1

10

P

MU

1

20

P

MU

V

V

C

C

Page 24: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2424

Applying theApplying theRational Spending RuleRational Spending Rule

Why do the wealthy in Manhattan live in smaller Why do the wealthy in Manhattan live in smaller houses than the wealthy in Seattle?houses than the wealthy in Seattle?

Why did people turn to four-cylinder cars in the Why did people turn to four-cylinder cars in the 1970s only to shift back to six- and eight-cylinder 1970s only to shift back to six- and eight-cylinder cars in the 1990s?cars in the 1990s?

Why are automobile engines smaller in England Why are automobile engines smaller in England than in the United States?than in the United States?

Why are waiting lines longer in poorer Why are waiting lines longer in poorer neighborhoods?neighborhoods?

Page 25: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

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Individual and Market Individual and Market Demand Curves for Canned TunaDemand Curves for Canned Tuna

Pri

ce (

$/ca

n)

Smith’s quantity

1.20

6

1.40

1.60

1.00

.80

.60

.40

.20

0

(cans/week)

2 4 8

Pri

ce (

$/ca

n)

Jones’s quantity

60

(cans/week)

2 4

Smith Jones+

Horizontal Addition

1.20

1.40

1.60

1.00

.80

.60

.40

.20

Page 26: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2626

Individual and Market Individual and Market Demand Curves for Canned TunaDemand Curves for Canned Tuna

Pri

ce (

$/ca

n)

Total quantity

60

(cans/week)

2 4 8 1210

=

MarketDemandcurve

1.20

1.40

1.60

1.00

.80

.60

.40

.20

Page 27: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2727

The Individual and Market Demand Curves The Individual and Market Demand Curves When All Buyers Have Identical Demand CurvesWhen All Buyers Have Identical Demand Curves

Pri

ce (

$/ca

n)

Quantity

6

6

5

4

3

2

1

0

(cans/month)

2 4 8 1210

D

Quantity

6

6

5

4

3

2

1

0

(1000s of cans/month)

2 4 8 1210

D

Pri

ce (

$/ca

n)

•Each of 1,000 consumers have the same demand•Market Demand = P x number of consumers (1,000)

Page 28: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

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Consumer SurplusConsumer Surplus

The difference between a buyer’s The difference between a buyer’s reservation price for a product and the reservation price for a product and the price actually paid.price actually paid.

P

Page 29: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

2929

Supply and Demand Supply and Demand in the Market for Milkin the Market for Milk

Quantity (1,000s of gallons/day)

Pri

ce (

$/g

allo

n)

1

.50

1.00

1.50

2.00

2.50

3.00

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 120

S

D

Page 30: 1 Frank & Bernanke 3 rd edition, 2007 Ch. 5: Ch. 5: Demand - The Benefit Side of The Market

3030

Consumer Surplus Consumer Surplus in the Market for Milkin the Market for Milk

Quantity (1,000s of gallons/day)

Pri

ce (

$/g

allo

n)

1

.50

1.00

1.50

2.00

2.50

3.00

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 120

S

D

Consumer surplus •h = $1/gallon•b = 4,000•Consumer surplus = (1/2)(4,000)(1) = $2,000/day