M2 L4 Basic Microeconomics
M2 L4 Basic Microeconomics
M2 L4 Basic Microeconomics
M2 L4
Dr. Mayeth T. Salandanan
Pre-task
Slido.com
What do you know about the term utility?
Objective
• All economists would agree that the consumer has gained utility by
eating the hamburger. Most economists would agree that human beings
are, by nature, utility-maximizing agents; human beings choose between
one act, or another based on each act's expected utility. The
controversial part comes in the application and measurement of utility.
Origin of Utility
• Ordinal utility refers to the concept of one good being more useful or
desirable than another.
• Cardinal utility is the idea of measuring economic value through imaginary
units, known as "utils."
• Marginal utility is the utility gained by consuming an additional unit of a
service or good.
• Total utility is the sum of the satisfaction that a person can receive from the
consumption of all units of a specific product or service.
• Economic utility can be defined as the total amount of satisfaction that
someone experiences when they consume a particular product or service. It
helps measure how much fulfillment someone requires in order to satisfy a
particular need or want.
Diminishing Marginal Utility
• It is thus, clear that when the price of the goods falls, the consumer buys
more of the goods so as to equate the marginal utility to the lower price.
It, therefore, follows that the quantity demanded of a goods varies
inversely with price; the quantity bought rises when the price falls and
vice versa, other things remaining the same. This is the famous
Marshallian Law of Demand. It is now quite evident that the law of
demand is directly derived from the law of diminishing marginal utility.
• The downward-sloping marginal utility curve is transformed into the
downward-sloping demand curve. In Fig. 1 (where price is also
measured on the Y-axis) marginal utility curve MU becomes the demand
curve. It follows, therefore, that the force working behind the law of
demand or the demand curve is the force of diminishing marginal utility.
How Do You Measure Economic Utility?
• While there is no direct way to measure the utility of a certain good for
an individual consumer, it is possible to estimate utility through indirect
observation.
• For instance, if a consumer is willing to spend $1 for a bottle of water but
not $1.50, economists can safely state that a bottle of water has
economic utility somewhere between $1 and $1.50. However, this
becomes difficult in practice because of the number of variables that are
present in a typical consumer's choices.
Util as a measurement