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How Consumers Make Choices Under Income Constraints

The document discusses how consumers make choices under income constraints based on the concept of utility. It defines utility as the satisfaction or pleasure derived from consuming goods and services. Consumers aim to maximize their utility but are constrained by their incomes. They allocate their incomes across different goods up until the point where the marginal utility per rupee is equal for all goods, allowing them to obtain the highest possible satisfaction given their budget. Indifference curves and budget constraints can also be used to illustrate a consumer's optimal choice.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
86 views

How Consumers Make Choices Under Income Constraints

The document discusses how consumers make choices under income constraints based on the concept of utility. It defines utility as the satisfaction or pleasure derived from consuming goods and services. Consumers aim to maximize their utility but are constrained by their incomes. They allocate their incomes across different goods up until the point where the marginal utility per rupee is equal for all goods, allowing them to obtain the highest possible satisfaction given their budget. Indifference curves and budget constraints can also be used to illustrate a consumer's optimal choice.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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How Consumers Make Choices under Income Constraints

Utility
 The value a consumer places on a unit of a good or
service depends on the pleasure or satisfaction he or she
expects to derive form having or consuming it at the
point of making a consumption (consumer) choice.

 In economics the satisfaction or pleasure consumers


derive from the consumption of consumer goods is
called “utility”.

 Consumers, however, cannot have every thing they


wish to have. Consumers’ choices are constrained by
their incomes.

 Within the limits of their incomes, consumers make


their consumption choices by evaluating and comparing
consumer goods with regard to their “utilities.”
FEATURES of UTILITY

 Subjective
 Relative
 Utility is not essentially useful-Liquor and
cigarette
Our basic assumptions about
a “rational” consumer:
 Consumers are utility maximizers
 Consumers prefer more of a good (thing) to less of it.
 Facing choices X and Y, a consumer would either prefer
X to Y or Y to X, or would be indifferent between them.
 Transitivity: If a consumer prefers X to Y and Y to Z, we
conclude he/she prefers X to Z
 Diminishing marginal utility: As more and more of good
is consumed by a consumer, ceteris paribus, beyond a
certain point the utility of each additional unit starts to
fall.
How to Measure Utility

Measuring utility in “utils” (Cardinal):


 Jack derives 10 utils from having one slice of pizza but only 5 utils from
having a burger.

 In many introductory microeconomics textbooks this approach to


measuring utility is still considered effective for teaching purposes.

Measuring utility by comparison (Ordinal):


 Jill prefers a burger to a slice of pizza and a slice of pizza to a hotdog.
Often consumers are able to be more precise in expressing their preferences.
For example, we could say:
 Jill is willing to trade a burger for four hotdogs but she will give up only
two hotdogs for a slice of pizza.
 We can infer that to Jill, a burger has twice as much utility as a slice of
pizza, and a slice of pizza has twice as much utility as a hotdog.
Utility and Money
 Because we use money (rather than hotdogs!) in just
about all of our trade transactions, we might as well use it
as our comparative measure of utility.
(Note: This way of measuring utility is not much different
from measuring utility in utils)
 Jill could say: I am willing to pay $4 for a burger, $2 for a
slice of pizza and $1 for a hotdog.
Note: Even though Jill obviously values a burger more (four
times as much) than a hot dog, she may still choose to buy a
hotdog, even if she has enough money to buy a burger, or a
slice of pizza, for that matter. (We will see why and how
shortly.)
Total Utility versus Marginal
Utility
 Marginal utility is the utility a consumer
derives from the last unit of a consumer good
she or he consumes (during a given
consumption period), ceteris paribus.
 Total utility is the total utility a consumer
derives from the consumption of all of the
units of a good or a combination of goods
over a given consumption period, ceteris
paribus.

Total utility = Sum of marginal utilities


The Law of Diminishing
Marginal Utility
 Over a given consumption period, the more of a good
a consumer has, or has consumed, the less marginal
utility an additional unit contributes to his or her
overall satisfaction (total utility).

 Alternatively, we could say: over a given consumption


period, as more and more of a good is consumed by a
consumer, beyond a certain point, the marginal utility
of additional units begins to fall.
Total and Marginal Utility for
Ice Cream
Q ($) TU ($) MU
0 0
1 40 40
2 85 45
3 120 35
4 140 20
5 150 10
6 157 7
7 160 3
8 160 0
9 155 -5
10 145 -10
145
Why this law applies ?

 Commodities are Imperfect substitutes


 Alternative Uses
Total Utility
Q ($) TU ($) MU
200
0 0
150
1 40 40
100
2 85 45
50
3 120 35
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 4 140 20
($) M U
5 150 10
50
6 157 7
40 7 160 3
30

20
8 160 0
10 9 155 -5
0

-10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 11 10 145 -10
-2 0 145
Importance of the Law

 Price Determination
 Base of Progressive Taxation
 Variety in production and consumption
 Basis of the law of consumption
Utility Maximizing Rules
 A rational consumer would buy an additional unit
of a good as long as the perceived dollar value of
the utility of one additional unit of that good
(say, its marginal dollar utility) is greater than its
market price.
 The Two-Good Rule

MUI MUH
--------- = ----------
$PI $PH
Utility Maximization under
An Income constraint
 Consumers’ spending on consumer goods is constrained
by their incomes:
Income = Px Qx + Py Qy + Pw Ow + ….+Pz Qz
 While the consumer tries to equalize MUx/Px , MUy/ Py,
MUw/Pw,………. and MUz/Pz , to maximize her utility her
total spending cannot exceed her income.

For example, with an and income of $86 Jill is trying to


decide how much ice cream and how much hamburger she
should buy.
Jill’s income = 5x10 + 6 x 6 = 86
LAW OF EQUIMARGINAL UTILITY
This law is also known as

 Law of substitution
 Law of maximum satisfaction
 Law of Indifference
 Proportionality rule
 Gossen’s second law
Statement of the Law

 This law states that the consumer


maximizing his total utility will allocate his
income among various commodities in such
a way that his marginal utility of the last
rupee spent on each commodity is equal. Or
 The consumer will spend his money income
on different goods in such a way that
marginal utility of each good is proportional
to its price
EQUILIBRUIM CONDITION

 MUa/Pa=MUb/Pb

 MUa/MUb=Pa/Pb
Consumer
P Surplus

Price
P’
D D’
Qx
0
An Alternative Approach to
the Consumer Theory
 Indifference curves
An indifference curve is a line drawn in a two-
dimensional space showing different combinations of
two goods from which the consumer draws the same
amount of utility and therefore he/she is “indifferent”
about.
 Budget lines
A budget line is a line drawn in a two-dimensional
space representing a certain level of income with
which the consumer can purchase various
combinations of two goods at given prices.
Properties of Indifference
 curves
Indifference curves for two “goods” are generally
negatively sloped
 The slope of an indifference curve reflects the degree
of substitutability of two goods for one another
 Indifference curves are generally convex, reflecting
the principle of diminishing returns
 Indifference curves never cross
 Indifference curves that are farther from the origin
represent higher levels of utility
 Indifference curves for a “good” and a “bad” are
positively sloped
Indifference Curves
Y
Slope = Change in Y/Change in X
= MUx/MUy

U4
U3
U2
U1 X
O
Budget Line
Y

Income = Px .Qx + Py. Qy


I/Py

Slope = Px/Py

X
O I/Px
Indifference Curves
Y

MRS = MUx/MUy= Px/Py


a
b

c
U4
U3
d
U2
e U1
X
O
A change in the price of X: Income and
substitution effects
Y

a
b

Y1 C’ U5
c
Yo c” U4
U3
d
U2
e
U1 X
O Xo X1
A change in the price of X: Income and
substitution effects
Y

a
b
C’ U5
Y1 c U4
Yo c”
U3
d
U2
e
U1 X
O Xo X1

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