1 / 29

Theory of Consumer Behavior: Maximizing Satisfaction through Optimization

This chapter explores the theory of consumer behavior, which states that consumers aim to maximize satisfaction while spending their limited income on goods and services. It discusses consumer preferences, utility, indifference curves, marginal utility, budget lines, and utility maximization.

trejos
Download Presentation

Theory of Consumer Behavior: Maximizing Satisfaction through Optimization

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. Chapter 5 Theory of Consumer Behavior

  2. The Consumer’s Optimization Problem • Individual consumption decisions are made with the goal of maximizing total satisfaction from consuming various goods and services • Subject to the constraint that spending on goods exactly equals the individual’s money income

  3. Consumer Theory • Assumes buyers are completely informed about: • Range of products available • Prices of all products • Capacity of products to satisfy • Their income • Requires that consumers can rank all consumption bundles based on the level of satisfaction they would receive from consuming the various bundles

  4. Typical Consumption Bundles for Two Goods, X & Y (Figure 5.1)

  5. Properties of Consumer Preferences • Completeness • For every pair of consumption bundles, A and B, the consumer can say one of the following: • A is preferred to B • B is preferred to A • The consumer is indifferent between A and B • Transitivity • If A is preferred to B, and B is preferred to C, then Amust be preferred to C • Nonsatiation • More of a good is always preferred to less

  6. Utility • Benefits consumers obtain from goods & services they consume is utility • A utility function shows an individual’s perception of the utility level attained from consuming each conceivable bundle of goods

  7. Indifference Curves • Locus of points representing different bundles of goods, each of which yields the same level of total utility • Negatively sloped & convex

  8. Typical Indifference Curve (Figure 5.2)

  9. Marginal Rate of Substitution • MRS shows the rate at which one good can be substituted for another while keeping utility constant • Negative of the slope of the indifference curve • Diminishes along the indifference curve as X increases & Y decreases • Ratio of the marginal utilities of the goods

  10. A 600 T 320 I T’ B 360 800 Slope of an Indifference Curve & the MRS (Figure 5.3) Quantity of good Y C (360,320) 0 Quantity of good X

  11. IV III II I Indifference Map (Figure 5.4) Quantity of Y Quantity of X

  12. Marginal Utility • Addition to total utility attributable to the addition of one unit of a good to the current rate of consumption, holding constant the amounts of all other goods consumed

  13. Consumer’s Budget Line • Shows all possible commodity bundles that can be purchased at given prices with a fixed money income

  14. Consumer’s Budget Constraint (Figure 5.5)

  15. A B • Typical Budget Line (Figure 5.6) Quantity of Y Quantity of X

  16. R 120 A 100 F 80 C D B Z N 125 160 250 200 240 Panel B – Changes in price of X Shifting Budget Lines (Figure 5.7) A 100 Quantity of Y Quantity of Y B 200 Quantity of X Quantity of X Panel A – Changes in money income

  17. Utility Maximization • Utility maximization subject to a limited money income occurs at the combination of goods for which the indifference curve is just tangent to the budget line

  18. Utility Maximization • Consumer allocates income so that the marginal utility per dollar spent on each good is the same for all commodities purchased

  19. A 45 • B • D E • IV R III C • II 15 T I Constrained Utility Maximization (Figure 5.8) 50 Quantity of pizzas 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 70 80 90 100 50 60 Quantity of burgers

  20. Individual Consumer Demand • An individual’s demand curve for a specific commodity relates utility-maximizing quantities purchased to market prices • Money income & prices held constant • Slope of demand curve illustrates law of demand—quantity demanded varies inversely with price

  21. Deriving a Demand Curve (Figure 5.9) 100 Quantity of Y Px=$10 Px=$8 Px=$5 0 50 65 90 100 125 200 Quantity of X 10 8 Price of X ($) 5 Demand for X 0 50 65 90 Quantity of X

  22. Market Demand & Marginal Benefit • List of prices & quantities consumers are willing & able to purchase at each price, all else constant • Derived by horizontally summing demand curves for all individuals in market • Because prices along market demand measure the economic value of each unit of the good, it can be interpreted as the marginal benefit curve for a good

  23. 3 0 0 0 5 1 8 1 3 4 5 10 6 7 12 8 10 13 Derivation of Market Demand (Table 5.1) 3 $6 6 5 12 4 19 3 25 2 31 1

  24. Derivation of Market Demand Figure (5.10)

  25. Substitution & Income Effects • When price changes, total change in quantity demanded is composed of two parts • Substitution effect • Income effect

  26. Substitution & Income Effects • Substitution effect • Change in consumption of a good after a change in its price, when the consumer is forced by a change in money income to consume at some point on the original indifference curve • Income effect • Change in consumption of a good resulting strictly from a change in purchasing power

  27. Total effect of price decrease Income effect Substitution effect Total effect of price decrease Income effect Substitution effect + = + = 9 + 4 = 5 3 + (-2) = 5 Income & Substitution Effects: A Decrease in Px(Figure 5.12)

  28. Substitution & Income Effects • Consider the substitution effect alone: • Amount of good consumed must vary inversely with price • Income effect reinforces the substitution effect for a normal good & offsets it for an inferior good

  29. Summary of Substitution & Income Effects (Table 5.2) X rises X rises X falls X rises X falls X falls X falls X rises

More Related