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C hapter 5

C hapter 5. Marginal Utility and Consumer Choice. Economic Principles. Total utility and marginal utility Law of diminishing marginal utility Relationship between the law of demand and the marginal-utility-to-price ratio Consumer surplus Difficulties with interpersonal comparison of utility.

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C hapter 5

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  1. Chapter 5 Marginal Utility and Consumer Choice

  2. Economic Principles • Total utility and marginal utility • Law of diminishing marginal utility • Relationship between the law of demand and the marginal-utility-to-price ratio • Consumer surplus • Difficulties with interpersonal comparison of utility Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  3. What is Marginal Utility? Util • It is a hypothetical unit used to measure how much utility a person obtains from consuming a good. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  4. What is Marginal Utility? Utilitymeasures the satisfaction or enjoyment a person obtains from consuming a good. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  5. What is Marginal Utility? Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility • It is the idea that as more of a good is consumed, the utility a person derives from each additional unit diminishes. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  6. What is Marginal Utility? The implication of someone experiencing increasing marginal utility for pizza slices is: • The next slice of pizza would generate higher marginal utility than the one before. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  7. What is Marginal Utility? The implication of someone experiencing increasing marginal utility for pizza slices is: • When his stomach is full to bursting from eating so much pizza, the marginal utility from eating yet another slice would be higher than for any of the preceding slices. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  8. What is Marginal Utility? The implication of someone experiencing increasing marginal utility for pizza slices is: • It is not clear that someone could survive having increasing marginal utility! Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  9. What is Marginal Utility? It possible for marginal utility to become negative. • For example, if you overeat and feel ill, then the marginal utility for the last bit of food you ate is negative. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  10. What is Marginal Utility? A rational consumer will not knowingly pay to buy a unit of a good that generates negative marginal utility. • Presumably something else could be bought that generates positive marginal utility. • Buying something that generates negative marginal utility is not consistent with utility maximization. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  11. EXHIBIT 1 TOTAL UTILITY AND MARGINAL UTILITY DERIVED FROM CONSUMING T-BONE STEAKS (UTILS) Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  12. Exhibit 1: Total Utility and Marginal Utility Derived From Consuming T-Bone Steaks (utils) If marginal utility is declining, but is still positive, total utility is: • Total utility increases as long as marginal utility is positive. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  13. Exhibit 1: Total Utility and Marginal Utility Derived From Consuming T-Bone Steaks (utils) If marginal utility is declining, but is still positive, total utility is: • In Exhibit 1, total utility reaches its maximum at five t-bone steaks. Consuming more than five steaks will reduce total utility. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  14. EXHIBIT 2A TOTAL AND MARGINAL UTILITY

  15. EXHIBIT 2B TOTAL AND MARGINAL UTILITY

  16. Exhibit 2: Total and Marginal Utility In Exhibit 2, the curves in Panel a and b represent: • The curve in Panel a is the total utility curve for T-bone steaks. • Panel a depicts the number of utils, or the amount of utility, a person gains from consuming a certain number of steaks. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  17. Exhibit 2: Total and Marginal Utility In Exhibit 2, the curves in Panel a and b represent: • Total utility peaks at 81 utils, or 5 steaks. Each steak consumed beyond 5 reduces total utility. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  18. Exhibit 2: Total and Marginal Utility In Exhibit 2, the curves in Panel a and b represent: • The curve in Panel b is the marginal utility curve for T-bone steaks. • The curve depicts the change in total utility a person derives from consuming each additional steak. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  19. Exhibit 2: Total and Marginal Utility In Exhibit 2, the curves in Panel a and b represent: • When marginal utility is zero, total utility is maximized. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  20. What Is Marginal Utility? If water is necessary for life, then the market price of water so much lower than for diamonds because: • Market price reflects marginal utility, not total utility. • Due to diminishing marginal utility and the abundance of water, the marginal utility of water is lower than for diamonds. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  21. What is Marginal Utility? A hypothetical circumstance in which the marginal utility of water might exceed the marginal utility of a diamond: • If you are lost in the desert and are severely dehydrated, then your marginal utility for a gallon of water might exceed your marginal utility for a diamond. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  22. French Cuisine and Marginal Utility Many courses, each with small portions of food (French cuisine), may generate more utility than one course with a large portion of food because: • One large portion will drive down marginal utility. • Marginal utility is high for the whole meal. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  23. EXHIBIT 3 MARGINAL UTILITIES OF CLOTHES AND AMUSEMENT GOODS (UTILS) Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  24. Exhibit 3: Marginal Utilities of Clothes and Amusement Goods (Utils) Based on the utility data in Exhibit 3, a rational consumer will select the best combination of clothes and amusement goods: • By sequentially picking units of clothing and amusement goods that generate the largest MU/P. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  25. EXHIBIT 4 MARGINAL-UTILITY-TO-PRICE RATIOS OF CLOTHES AND AMUSEMENT GOODS (MU/P) Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  26. Exhibit 4: Marginal-Utility-to-Price Ratios of Clothes and Amusement Goods (MU/P) If a unit of clothes and amusement goods both cost $10, and if you have $80 to spend, the rational consumer will spend her money: • MU/P is equal when three units of clothes and five units of amusement goods are purchased (MU/P = 1.4). Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  27. Marginal-Utility-to-Price Ratio Marginal-utility-to-price ratio • The ratio is calculated by dividing the marginal utility of a good by the price of the good—MU/P. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  28. Marginal-Utility-to-Price Ratio The MU/P equalization principle • A person’s total utility is maximized when the ratios of marginal utility to price for the last unit of each of the goods consumed are equal. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  29. Marginal-Utility-to-Price Ratio The MU/P equalization principle: • MU/P measures marginal utility per dollar spent. • Total utility will be maximized (within the constraints of a limited budget) when each individual purchase generates the largest possible MU/P.

  30. Marginal-Utility-to-Price Ratio The MU/P equalization principle: • A rational and fully-informed consumer will always shift a dollar from a good whose MU/P is lower to one whose MU/P is higher, if such a shift is possible. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  31. Marginal-Utility-to-Price Ratio The MU/P equalization principle: • The principle is based on consumer behavior. • Consumers will always arrange their sequence of choices among goods starting with the highest MU/P and running down to exhaust an expenditure budget.

  32. Marginal-Utility-to-Price Ratio The MU/P equalization principle: • The consumer choice process is in equilibrium when: • There is no longer any incentive for the consumer to rearrange her purchases. • The MU/P is equal for the last unit of each good or service consumed. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  33. EXHIBIT 5 COMPARING MU/Ps AFTER A 20-PERCENT- OFF SALE ON CLOTHES Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  34. Exhibit 5: Comparing MU/Ps After a 20 Percent Off Sale on Clothes The MU/P of clothes changes when there is a 20 percent off sale on clothes by: • MU/P for each unit of clothingrises when price is reduced by 20 percent. • This will cause a rational consumer to consume more clothes. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  35. EXHIBIT 6 COMPARING MU/Ps AFTER A 50-PERCENT- OFF SALE ON CLOTHES Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  36. Exhibit 6: Comparing MU/Ps After a 50 Percent Off Sale on Clothes An additional reduction in the price of clothing will change all of the MU/Ps for clothing, and thus change a rational consumer’s consumption of clothing. • If the price of clothes falls again, from $8 to $5, the quantity of clothing demanded increases from four to six units. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  37. EXHIBIT 7 THE DEMAND CURVE FOR CLOTHES Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  38. Exhibit 7: The Demand Curvefor Clothes When the price of clothing falls from $10 to $8 to $5, which of the following occurs: • Quantity demanded remains the same. • Quantity demanded falls from 6 to 4 to 3. • Quantity demanded rises from 3 to 4 to 6. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  39. Exhibit 7: The Demand Curvefor Clothes When the price of clothing falls from $10 to $8 to $5, which of the following occurs: • Quantity demanded remains the same. • Quantity demanded falls from 6 to 4 to 3. • Quantity demanded rises from 3 to 4 to 6. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  40. MU/P Equalization Principle and the Law of Demand Changes in the marginal-utility-to-price ratio are caused by: • A change in the marginal utility of a good or a change in the price of a good changes the marginal-utility-to-price ratio, and therefore changes quantity demanded. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  41. MU/P Equalization Principle and the Law of Demand The relationship between the MU/P Principle and the Law of Demand: If the price of a good falls: • MU/P rises. • The rational consumer will increase her consumption of that good. • Increase in quantity demanded (movement along the demand curve). Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  42. MU/P Equalization Principle and the Law of Demand The relationship between the MU/P Principle and the Law of Demand: If consumer preference for a good decreases: • MU/P declines. • The rational consumer will reduce consumption. • The demand curve shifts to the left (since consumer preference is a nonprice factor).

  43. MU/P Equalization Principle and the Law of Demand The relationship between the MU/P Principle and the Law of Demand: If consumer income increases: • The consumer can pursue a lower MU/P. • The consumer can afford to increase consumption. • An increase in the demand for normal goods. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  44. MU/P Equalization Principle and the Law of Demand A downward-sloping demand curve is consistent with the law of diminishing marginal utility. • Diminishing marginal utility means that MU/P declines as quantity consumed increases. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  45. MU/P Equalization Principle and the Law of Demand A downward-sloping demand curve is consistent with the law of diminishing marginal utility. • A consumer’s willingness-to-pay falls as quantity consumed increases. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  46. Are White Rats Rational Consumers? There is evidence that lab rats make consumer choices based on MU/P. • Economists Battalio and Kagel found that white lab rats respond to price and income changes in a manner consistent with economic theory. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  47. The MU/P Guide to Auction Bidding MU/P can help guide auction bidding: • If a particular MU/P is guaranteed by buying something outside of the auction, and if the marginal utility from the auction good is known, then you can figure out your maximum auction price. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  48. Creating Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus • The difference between the maximum price a person would be willing to pay for a good or service, and the price the person actually pays. • Most consumers receive some consumer surplus from a transaction. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  49. Creating Consumer Surplus When market price falls, consumer surplus increases. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

  50. Creating Consumer Surplus If the price of a good is greater than amount a consumer is willing to pay for that good, the consumer surplus will be negative if the consumer buys the good. Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e

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