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Consumer Behaviour

The document summarizes key concepts in consumer behavior and consumer theory, including: 1) Consumers aim to maximize total satisfaction subject to their budget constraint. 2) Indifference curves illustrate bundles that provide equal satisfaction. Budget constraints show affordable bundles. 3) Utility is maximized where the indifference curve is tangent to the budget line, equalizing marginal utility per dollar spent.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views28 pages

Consumer Behaviour

The document summarizes key concepts in consumer behavior and consumer theory, including: 1) Consumers aim to maximize total satisfaction subject to their budget constraint. 2) Indifference curves illustrate bundles that provide equal satisfaction. Budget constraints show affordable bundles. 3) Utility is maximized where the indifference curve is tangent to the budget line, equalizing marginal utility per dollar spent.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MM/EBM 2143 – Managerial Economics

03.
Consumer Behaviour

Ms. Sanduni Dilanka

1
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

2
Consumer Optimization
(Marginal Utility Interpretation)
I = $ 11, PX = $ 1, PY = $ 2

Q Marginal Utility MU per dollar spent


X Y MUX MUY
1 100 85
2 50 45
3 40 40
4 30 35
5 20 10
6 10 5
7 5 2
8 2 1
9 1 0.5 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

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 A
must 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

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

Y MU X
MRS   
X MUY
10
Slope of an Indifference Curve & the MRS

A
600
Quantity of good Y

C (360,320)
320

I
T’

B
0 360 800
Quantity of good X

11
Two Polar Cases

• Two goods are perfect substitutes when the marginal rate


of substitution of one good for the other is constant
• Ex: A person might consider apple juice and orange juice perfect
substitutes
• Two goods are perfect complements when the
indifference curves for the goods are shaped as right
angles
• Ex: If you have 1 left shoe and 1 right shoe, you are indifferent
between having more left shoes only

12
Product Attributes and Indifference
Curves

• In designing automobiles firms must identify consumer


preference on style versus performance
• Risk and return preference of investors in financial
investments
• Price and quality consciousness of consumers

13
Indifference Map

Quantity of Y

IV

III

II

Quantity of X
14
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

MU  U X

15
Consumer’s Budget Line

• Shows all possible commodity bundles that can be


purchased at given prices with a fixed money income

M  PX X  PY Y
or
M PX
Y   X
PY PY
16
Consumer’s Budget Constraint

17
Typical Budget Line
M
PY
•A

M PX
Y 
Quantity of Y

X
PY PY

B

M
Quantity of X PX 18
Shifting Budget Lines

R
120
A A

Quantity of Y
Quantity of Y

100 100
F
80

Z B N C B D
160 200 240 125 200 250

Quantity of X Quantity of X

Panel A – Changes in money income Panel B – Changes in price of X

19
Utility Maximization
• The benefits of consumption are described by the
utility function.
• The costs of consumption are described by the budget
constraint.
• 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.

Y MU X PX
MRS    
X MUY PY 20
Utility Maximization

• Consumer allocates income so that the marginal utility per


dollar spent on each good is the same for all commodities
purchased

MU X MUY

PX PY

21
Constrained Utility Maximization

50
45 •A
40 •B •D
Quantity of pizzas

E IV
30
R

III
20

15 •C II
T
10 I

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Quantity of burgers

22
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

23
Deriving a Demand Curve
100
Quantity of Y

Px=$10

Px=$8

Px=$5

0
50 65 90 100 125 200
Quantity of X

10
Price of X ($)

Demand for X

0 50 65 90 24
Quantity of X
Substitution & Income Effects
• When price changes, total change in quantity demanded is
composed of two parts
• Substitution effect
• Income effect
• 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

25
Income & Substitution Effects: Decrease in
Px
Total effect of = Substitution + Income Total effect of = Substitution + Income
price decrease effect effect price decrease effect effect
9 = 5 + 4 3 = 5 + (-2)

26
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

27
Thank you…!!!

28

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