Chapter 7: Consumer Behavior
Law of diminishing marginal utility - Added satisfaction declines as a consumer acquires additional units of a given product
Utility - Want-satisfying power
Not the same as usefulness
Subjective - The utility of a product differs b/w people
Difficult to quantify (but measured w/ utils)
Total utility - Total amount of satisfaction/pleasure a person derives from consuming some specific quantity
Marginal utility - Extra satisfaction gained from an additional unit
Law of diminishing marginal utility explains why the demand curve for a product slopes downward
Consumer will only buy additional units of a product if its price falls
Theory of consumer behavior
Rational behavior - Consumers are rational people who use income to derive the greatest amount of utility
Preferences - Consumers have clear-cut preferences for available goods
Budget constraint - Consumers have a fixed, limited amount of money income
Prices - Every good carries a price tag
Utility-maximizing rule - To maximize satisfaction, the consumer should allocate his or her money income so that the last dollar spent on each product yields the same amount of extra (marginal) utility
Consumer equilibrium - When the consumer has balanced their margins and has no incentive to alter their spending pattern
Consumer decision-making process
Buy more of the good that provides more marginal utility per dollar
Must choose a combination within the constraints of a consumer’s income
Can obtain other combinations, but none will be as good as the one that provides the most total utility
Utility-maximizing rule
Marginal utility of product A / Price of A = Marginal utility of product B / Price of B
Equation not fulfilled → Reallocation of consumer expenditures will increase total utility
Utility maximization + the demand curve
Product price + quantity demanded are inversely related
Income effect - Impact that a change in the price of a product has on a consumer’s real income and the quantity demanded
Substitution effect - Impact that a change in a product’s price has on its relative expensiveness and the quantity demanded
Substitute purchases towards goods that yield greater utility in order to restore consumer equilibrium
Law of diminishing marginal utility - Added satisfaction declines as a consumer acquires additional units of a given product
Utility - Want-satisfying power
Not the same as usefulness
Subjective - The utility of a product differs b/w people
Difficult to quantify (but measured w/ utils)
Total utility - Total amount of satisfaction/pleasure a person derives from consuming some specific quantity
Marginal utility - Extra satisfaction gained from an additional unit
Law of diminishing marginal utility explains why the demand curve for a product slopes downward
Consumer will only buy additional units of a product if its price falls
Theory of consumer behavior
Rational behavior - Consumers are rational people who use income to derive the greatest amount of utility
Preferences - Consumers have clear-cut preferences for available goods
Budget constraint - Consumers have a fixed, limited amount of money income
Prices - Every good carries a price tag
Utility-maximizing rule - To maximize satisfaction, the consumer should allocate his or her money income so that the last dollar spent on each product yields the same amount of extra (marginal) utility
Consumer equilibrium - When the consumer has balanced their margins and has no incentive to alter their spending pattern
Consumer decision-making process
Buy more of the good that provides more marginal utility per dollar
Must choose a combination within the constraints of a consumer’s income
Can obtain other combinations, but none will be as good as the one that provides the most total utility
Utility-maximizing rule
Marginal utility of product A / Price of A = Marginal utility of product B / Price of B
Equation not fulfilled → Reallocation of consumer expenditures will increase total utility
Utility maximization + the demand curve
Product price + quantity demanded are inversely related
Income effect - Impact that a change in the price of a product has on a consumer’s real income and the quantity demanded
Substitution effect - Impact that a change in a product’s price has on its relative expensiveness and the quantity demanded
Substitute purchases towards goods that yield greater utility in order to restore consumer equilibrium