Consumers
Consumers
Fall 2024
LECTURE 6
Consumers and Utility Maximization
I. INTRODUCTION TO CONSUMER OPTIMIZATION
Why Consumer Optimization Is Important
• It has implications for how we view the desirability
of market outcomes.
• It can help us to understand the many choices that
consumers make.
II. THE BUDGET CONSTRAINT
A Household’s Budget Constraint
• In words: The total amount the household spends
cannot exceed its income.
• In symbols:
qclothing
Budget Constraint for the Case of Two Goods
Pfood•qfood + Pclothing•qclothing = Income
qfood !"#$%&
Intercept =
'!""#
Budget constraint
'$%"&'()*
Slope = −
'!++,
!"#$%&
Intercept =
'$%"&'()*
qclothing
A Rise in the Household’s Income
qfood
Budget constraint1
qclothing
A Rise in the Household’s Income
qfood
Budget constraint2
Budget constraint1
qclothing
A Rise in the Price of Clothing
qfood
Budget constraint1
qclothing
A Rise in the Price of Clothing
qfood
Budget constraint1
Budget constraint2
qclothing
Recall that the slope of the budget constraint is −Pclothing /Pfood .
What point does the consumer choose on the
budget constraint?
qfood
Budget constraint1
qclothing
III. UTILITY MAXIMIZATION
What do we think consumers maximize?
What do we think consumers maximize?
• Happiness, satisfaction, utility.
q
Diminishing Marginal Utility
marginal
utility
mu
q
Relationship between
Total Utility and Marginal Utility
• Suppose
u = f(q)
• Then
mu = f’(q)
f’(x)=(f(x+1)-f(x))/1
q
marginal
utility Marginal utility is
the derivative of
utility (slope of
utility function)
q
Marginal Utility Likely Declines at Different
Rates for Different Goods
Good a Good b
mua mub
qa qb
Marginal Utility Likely Declines at Different
Rates for Different Goods
Good a (food) Good b (clothes)
mua mub
mub
mua
qa qb
The Condition for Utility Maximization
(the Rational Spending Rule)
• A household is doing the best that it can—that is,
it is maximizing its utility—if:
$1 $1
𝑚𝑢( = 𝑚𝑢)
𝑃( 𝑃)
mu
q
A Rise in the Price of Clothing
• Suppose the household starts with:
𝑚𝑢! 𝑚𝑢"
=
𝑃! 𝑃"
• If Pc rises, and the household didn’t change its
purchases, then:
𝑚𝑢( 𝑚𝑢)
<
𝑃( 𝑃)
• The household will need to buy less clothing (and
more food) until:
𝑚𝑢( 𝑚𝑢)
=
𝑃( 𝑃)
Why Demand Curves Slope Down
• Substitution effect: When the price of a good
rises, a household wants less of the good and
more of other goods, because the good becomes
relatively more expensive.
A Rise in the Price of Clothing
qfood
Budget constraint1
Budget constraint2
qclothing
Why Demand Curves Slope Down
• Substitution effect: When the price of a good
rises, a household wants less of the good and
more of other goods, because the good is
relatively more expensive.
q Q
Demand Curves
d
q Q
Household and Market Demand Curves
• The market demand curve is the horizontal sum of
each individual household’s demand curve.
d D
q Q
Household and Market Demand Curves
• The market demand curve is the horizontal sum of
each individual household’s demand curve.
mu1
q
Positive News about Blueberries
mu
mu1 mu2
q1 q
Positive News about Blueberries
• An optimizing consumer sets:
𝑚𝑢#$%&#&''(&) 𝑚𝑢&*&'+,-(./ &$)&
=
𝑃#$%&#&''(&) 𝑃&*&'+,-(./ &$)&
• A rise in the mublueberries causes:
𝑚𝑢*+,-*-../-0 𝑚𝑢-1-.234/56 -+0-
>
𝑃*+,-*-../-0 𝑃-1-.234/56 -+0-
mu1 mu2
q1 q
Effect of Positive News on the Demand Curve
P
d1
q
Effect of Positive News on the Demand Curve
P
d1 d2
q
Utility of Income
• Consumer has income c that is used to buy all
sorts of goods: Pa•qa + Pb•qb + Pc•qc + … + Pz•qz = c
where c is total amount spent on consumption.
0 $ consumption c
Utility Function
u(c) is increasing
Utility u(c) is concave (means u’(c) is decreasing)
u(c)
Example:
u(c)=log(c)
u’(c)=1/c
10% increase in c gives
same utility whether c is
high or low
0 $ consumption c
Utility of Income
• Even though consumer satiates with any specific
good, you never satiate with total income c
because there are always more expensive goods
to start consuming (fancier house, car, etc.)