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Chapter 3: Consumer Preferences and the Concept of Utility

2. . . Outline. IntroductionDescription of consumer preferencesThe Utility functionsMarginal utility and diminishing marginal utilityIndifference CurvesMarginal rate of substitutionSpecial functional forms. 3. Supply and Demand Models (Ch. 2) are useful for analyzing economic questions concern

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Chapter 3: Consumer Preferences and the Concept of Utility

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    1. Chapter 3: Consumer Preferences and the Concept of Utility

    2. 2 Outline Introduction Description of consumer preferences The Utility functions Marginal utility and diminishing marginal utility Indifference Curves Marginal rate of substitution Special functional forms

    3. 3 Supply and Demand Models (Ch. 2) are useful for analyzing economic questions concerning markets. How will increasing the real wage affect output? In these models we summed each individuals demand to obtain the market demand curve. But, how do individuals decide what to consume and how much to consume. Introduction

    4. 4 We need to develop a model about individual or consumer behavior Model is based on: Individual tastes or preferences determine the amount of pleasure people derive from goods and services. (Chapter 3) Consumers face constraints (budget) that limit their choices Consumers maximize their well-being or pleasure from consumption, subject to the constraints they face. We want our model to be realistic so we can predict consumer behavior. But, still as simple as possible. Introduction

    5. 5 Description of Consumer Preferences Consumer Preferences tell us how the consumer would rank any two basket of goods, assuming these allotments were available to the consumer at no cost. baskets or bundles is a collection of goods or services that an individual might consume.

    6. 6 Properties of Consumer Preferences

    7. 7 Properties of Consumer Preferences 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. – free disposal can’t be worse of with more 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

    8. 8 Preferences Examples

    9. 9 Intransitivity and Age

    10. 10 Ordinal vs Cardinal Rankings Ordinal Ranking: gives us information on how a consumer ranks different baskets of goods. But it does not say by how much (i.e. 2 times as much) This is how we view preferences. Cardinal Rankings: Give us information on the intensity of the consumer preferences (i.e. they like basket A 10 times more than basket B). 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

    11. 11 Ordinal vs Cardinal Example Students take an exam. After the exam, the students are ranked according to their performance. An ordinal ranking lists the students in order of their performance (i.e., Harry did best, Joe did second best, Betty did third best, and so on). A cardinal ranking gives the grade of the exam, based on an absolute grading standard (i.e., Harry got 50, Joe got 100, so Joe did 2 times better than Harry).

    12. 12 Utility Function Utility Function: measures the level of satisfaction that a consumer receives from any basket of goods.

    13. 13 Implications

    14. 14 Utility Function (one good example) Are the assumptions on preferences meet?

    15. 15 Marginal Utility Marginal Utility: Rate at which total utility changes as the level of consumption rises. Each new muffin makes you happier, but makes you happier by smaller and smaller amount.

    16. 16 Marginal Utility

    17. 17 Marginal Utility

    18. 18 Utility function (2 good example)

    19. 19 Indifference Curve (IC)

    20. 20 Indifference Map:

    21. 21 Indifference Curves and Map An Indifference Curve or Indifference Set: is the set of all baskets for which the consumer is indifferent An Indifference Map: illustrates a set of indifference curves for a consumer, it is an ordinal ranking.

    22. 22 Properties of Indifference Maps 1. Monotonicity => indifference curves have negative slope …and… indifference curves are not “thick” 2. Transitivity => indifference curves do not cross 3. Completeness => each basket lies on only one indifference curve

    23. 23 Properties of Indifferences Maps

    24. 24 Monotonicity: Consumers like both goods.

    25. 25 Monotonicity:

    26. 26 Indifference Curves Cannot Cross

    27. 27 Averages Preferred to Extremes

    28. 28

    29. 29

    30. 30 Marginal Rate of Substitution The marginal rate of substitution: is the maximum rate at which the consumer would be willing to substitute a little more of good x for a little less of good y…or… It is the increase in good x that the consumer would require in exchange for a decrease in good y in order to leave the consumer indifferent between consuming the old basket or the new basket…or…

    31. 31 Marginal Rate of Substitution

    32. 32

    33. 33

    34. 34 Graphing an Indifference Curve

    35. 35

    36. 36 STOP HERE LECTURE 3STOP HERE LECTURE 3

    37. 37

    38. 38 Marginal Utility and Marginal Rate of Substitution

    39. 39 Marginal Utility and Marginal Rate of Substitution Positive marginal utility implies the indifference curve has a negative slope (implies monotonicity) Diminishing marginal utility implies the indifference curves are convex to the origin (implies averages preferred to extremes

    40. 40

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    42. 42

    43. 43

    44. 44

    45. 45

    46. 46

    47. 47 Special Functional Forms

    48. 48

    49. 49

    50. 50

    51. 51

    52. 52

    53. 53 Quasi-Linear Preferences

    54. 54

    55. 55

    56. 56 Summary 1. Described consumer preferences without any restrictions imposed by budget 2. Minimal assumptions on preferences to get interesting conclusions on demand…seem to be satisfied for most people. (ordinal utility function)

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