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Utility: A Measure of the Amount of SATISFACTION A Consumer Derives from Units of a Good Chapter 5: Utility Analysis.

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Presentation on theme: "Utility: A Measure of the Amount of SATISFACTION A Consumer Derives from Units of a Good Chapter 5: Utility Analysis."— Presentation transcript:

1 Utility: A Measure of the Amount of SATISFACTION A Consumer Derives from Units of a Good Chapter 5: Utility Analysis

2 Utility as a basis for Demand David's Utility Schedule for Hamburgers 0 1 6 2 11 3 15 4 18 5 20 6 21 7 21.1 Number Total Utility

3 Diminishing Marginal Utility: Each ADDITIONAL hamburger Produces Less and Less ADDITIONAL SATISFACTION

4 David's Utility Schedule for Hamburgers 0 1 6 2 11 3 15 4 18 5 20 6 21 7 21.1 Total Utility Marginal Utility (6-0)/1 = 6 (11-6)/1 = 5 (15-11)/1 = 4 (18-15)/1 = 3 (20-18)/1 = 2 (21-20)/1 = 1 (21.1-21)/1 = 0.1 Each additional hamburger produces less and less additional utility Number

5 Indifference Curve: All Possible Combinations of Two Goods that Produce the Same Amount of Total Utility

6 An Indifference Curve: The consumer is equally happy (satisfied) at any of the points along a single curve

7 An Indifference Curve represents the same amount of utility everywhere

8 Indifference Curve for One Utility Level "Convex to the Origin" Preference For some of both Hamburgers and French Fries

9 Indifference Curves for each Utility Level Indifference curves never touch or intersect each other

10 Indifference Map utility level 1 utility level 2 utility level 3 utility level 4 More Utility

11 Budget Line Assume: Price of Hamburger is $1.00 Price of French Fries is $.50 Income is 7.50 Could Purchase 7.5 Hamburgers 0 French Fries or 15 French Fries, 0 Hamburgers 9 French Fries, 3 Hamburgers or Many other feasible combinations with the $7.50of income

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13 Budget Line for $7.50 Income Combinations of Hamburgers & French Fries that can be Purchased for $7.50

14 An Indifference Curve and Budget Line Specific utility level

15 3 Point of Tangency between Budget Line and Indifference Curve Determines Optimum Quantities of Hamburgers and French Fries

16 utility level 2 utility level 3 utility level 4 utility level 5 Indifference Curve Map utility level 1 9

17 Price of Hamburgers /Price of French Fries = Slope of Budget Line Marginal Rate of Substitution of Hamburgers for French Fries = Slope of Indifference Curve

18 Optimum Combination: 3 Hamburgers, 9 French Fries where Price of Hamburgers/Price of French Fries = Marginal Rate of Substitution of Hamburgers for French Fries

19 Impact of More Income A new, higher budget line with the same slope but reaches a higher indifference curve

20 Budget Line for $7.50 and $12.50 Income $12.50 $7.50

21 Impact of Price Change for Hamburgers Hamburgers Special Today All you can eat 50 cents each Hamburgers $3.75 each

22 Price of Hamburgers decreases to $.50 9 Hamburgers x $.50 = 4.50 6 French Fries x $.50 = $3.00 still spent $7.50 total 9 6

23 Price of Hamburgers now $3.75 How many French Fries ?? Quantity of Hamburgers now taken: 1

24 Tracing the Demand Curve for Hamburgers Price Quantity Demanded 3.75 1 1.00 3 0.50 9.5 1.00 3.75 1 3 9 Price of Quantity Demanded per unit of time Demand A Demand Schedule for Hamburgers Hamburgers

25 Consumer demand has its roots in consumer utility theory Price Quantity/ unit of time D


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