Consumer Behaviour Presentation
Consumer Behaviour Presentation
Consumer Behaviour Presentation
Utility -Cardinal versus Ordinal utility Total, average and Marginal Utility Law of diminishing marginal utility Consumer equilibrium Consumer surplus Indifference Curve and its properties Budget line Consumer equilibrium Effect of change in income and prices on consumer equilibrium Price , Income and Substitution effect Income consumption curve and Price consumption curve
Index
The want satisfying power of commodity is utility. Same commodity gives different utility to different consumers. Even for the same consumer, utility varies from unit to unit, from time to time and from place to place. We measure utility in units called utils
Utility
MEASUREMENT OF UTILITY
Total Utility
Meaning:
amount of utility a person derives from the consumption of a particular product in a given period. The sum total of satisfaction which a consumer derives by consuming the various units of a commodity.
Marginal Utility
Defined as the change in total utility resulting from 1 unit change in the consumption of the good. MU x = TU x / Qx MU x -- Marginal utility TU x change in total utility Qx change in quantity of good X respectively
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15
Utility
30 20 10
10 5
10
10
Assumptions
1) Various units of the goods are homogeneous. 2) No time gap between consumption of the different units 3) Tastes, preferences and fashions remain unchanged 4) Consumer is rational ( i.e has complete knowledge and maximizes utility) If the above conditions holds good, law holds good universally.
Maximizing Utility
Equilibrium for one product: (consumption of all other product remains constant) The consumer will adjust her purchases until the marginal utility of last unit purchased equal to the price of a unit of that product. MU = P, Or, MU/P = 1 Equilibrium for many products: (Equi Marginal Utility) consumers allocate expenditure among products so that equal utility is derived from the last unit of money spent on each commodity. MUx/Px = MUy/Py = -------------- =MUn/ Pn
Consumer Surplus
The concept of consumer surplus was pioneered by
Marshall. According to him, the excess of the price which a consumer would be willing to pay rather than go without a thing over which he actually does pay, is the economic measure of his surplus satisfaction. Thus, consumer surplus can be defined as the difference between what consumers would like to pay for a product and what they actually pay.
Clothing
30 18 13 10 8 7
Food
5 10 15 20 25 30
An Indifference Curve
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Quantity of clothing per week
30 25 20 15 10 5 5
b c
d h T
f I
10
Quantity of food
15
20
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30
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An Indifference Map
A set of indifference curves is called an indifference map. The further the curve from the origin, the higher the level of satisfaction it represents.
Consumer equilibrium
when the price of any product rises, consumers substitute the product with a low priced product.
Income effect:
change in price of a product has an effect on the purchasing power of the customer. The decrease in the price enables to buy more of the same commodity or some other. Hence, the quantity demanded increases
An Income-consumption Line
Income-consumption line
a Price-consumption line E1 E2 E3