1 / 19

Utility

Utility. Microeconomics. What is Marketing? Principles of Marketing. Total and Marginal Utility. Utility is a person’s level of satisfaction or happiness with his or her choices Total utility is satisfaction derived from consumer choices

jesther
Download Presentation

Utility

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Utility Microeconomics What is Marketing? Principles of Marketing

  2. Total and Marginal Utility • Utility is a person’s level of satisfaction or happiness with his or her choices • Total utility is satisfaction derived from consumer choices • Marginal utility is the additional utility provided by one additional unit of consumption • Utility is measured in utils

  3. Budget Constraint Line A budget constraint lineshows the possible combinations of two goods that are affordable given a consumer’s limited income

  4. Calculating Marginal Utility MU=​​​change in total utility/change in quantity​​ marginal utility per dollar = marginal utility/price Marginal utility per dollar helps people compare a wide range of purchases and make choices

  5. Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility The law of diminishing marginal utility holds that the additional utility decreases with each unit added

  6. Calculating Total Utility

  7. Steps to Calculate Total Utility • Step 1. Observe that, at point Q (for example), José consumes three T-shirts and two movies. • Step 2. Look at Table 6.2. You can see from the fourth row/second column that three T-shirts are worth 63 utils. Similarly, the second row/fifth column shows that two movies are worth 31 utils. • Step 3. From this information, you can calculate that point Q has a total utility of 94 (63 + 31). • Step 4. You can repeat the same calculations for each point on Table 6.3, in which the total utility numbers are shown in the last column.

  8. A Step-by-Step Approach to Maximizing Utility

  9. Choices are Made at the Margin A choice at the margin is a decision to do a little more or a little less of something

  10. The Utility Maximizing Rule The utility-maximizing choice between consumption goods occurs where the marginal utility per dollar is the same for both goods. =

  11. Consumer Equilibrium Consumer equilibrium is when the ratio of the prices of goods is equal to the ratio of the marginal utilities (point at which the consumer can get the most satisfaction)

  12. Foundations of Demand Curves Changes in the price of a good lead the budget constraint to shift. A shift in the budget constraint means that when individuals are seeking their highest utility, the quantity that is demanded of that good will change

  13. How a Change in Income Affects Consumption Choices A choice like N will be made if both goods are normal goods. If overnight stays is an inferior good, a choice like P will be made. If concert tickets are an inferior good, a choice like Q will be made.

  14. How a Change in Price Affects Consumption Choices The original utility-maximizing choice is M. When the price rises, the budget constraint shifts in to the left. The new possible choices would be fewer baseball bats and more cameras, like point H, or less of both goods, as at point J. Choice K would mean that the higher price of bats led to exactly the same quantity of bats being consumed, but fewer cameras.

  15. Practice Question Explain what choice the consumer is making at point L and why this choice is unlikely.

  16. Consequences of a Price Increase The typical response to higher prices is that a person chooses to consume less of the product with the higher price. This happens for two related reasons: • The substitution effect occurs when a price changes and consumers have an incentive to consume less of the good with a relatively higher price and more of the good with a relatively lower price • The income effect is that a higher price means, in effect, the buying power of income has been reduced (even though actual income has not changed), which leads to buying less of the good (when the good is normal) A higher price typically causes reduced consumption of the good in question, but it can affect the consumption of other goods as well.

  17. Behavioral Economics Behavioral economicsa branch of economics that seeks to enrich the understanding of decision-making by integrating the insights of psychology and by investigating how given dollar amounts can mean different things to individuals depending on the situation

  18. Insights from Behavioral Economics • Loss aversion • Nudges help people avoid temptation • Opt-outs work better to encourage behavior like retirement savings since the default is the rational choice • mental accounting, or putting dollars in different mental categories where they take different values

  19. Quick Review • What are utility and satisfaction? • How do consumers maximize total utility within a given income using the Utility Maximizing Rule? • How does consumer’s utility change when income or prices change? • What is the behavioral economics approach to understanding decision making?

More Related