Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior
Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior
Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior
Topics to be Discussed
- Consumer Preferences
- Budget Constraints
- Consumer Choice
- Revealed Preferences
- Marginal Utility and Consumer Choices
Consumer Behavior
There are three steps involved in the study of consumer behavior.
1) We will study consumer preferences.
- To describe how and why people prefer one good to another.
2) Then we will turn to budget constraints.
- People have limited incomes.
3) Finally, we will combine consumer preferences and budget constraints to determine
consumer choices.
What combination of goods will consumers buy to maximize their satisfaction?
o
Consumer Preferences
- A market basket is a collection of one or more commodities.
- One market basket may be preferred over another market basket containing a different
combination of goods.
Consumer Preferences
Three Basic Assumptions
1) Preferences are complete.
2) Preferences are transitive.
3) Consumers always prefer more of any good to less.
4) Along an indifference curve there is a diminishing marginal rate of substitution.
Consumer Preferences
- Indifference curves represent all combinations of market baskets that provide the same
level of satisfaction to a person.
Indifference Curves
- Indifference curves slope downward to the right.
- If it sloped upward it would violate the assumption that more of any commodity is
preferred to less.
- Any market basket lying above and to the right of an indifference curve is preferred to
any market basket that lies on the indifference curve.
Consumer Preferences
- An indifference map is a set of indifference curves that describes a persons preferences
for all combinations of two commodities.
- Each indifference curve in the map shows the market baskets among which the person is
indifferent.
- Finally, indifference curves cannot cross. This would violate the assumption that more is
preferred to less.
Consumer Preferences
The marginal rate of substitution (MRS) quantifies the amount of one good a consumer
will give up to obtain more of another good.
It is measured by the slope of the indifference curve.
o
MRS =
C
F
Consumer Preferences
- Indifference curves are convex because as more of one good is consumed, a consumer
would prefer to give up fewer units of a second good to get additional units of the first
one.
Perfect Substitutes and Perfect Complements
- Two goods are perfect substitutes when the marginal rate of substitution of one good for
the other is constant.
- Two goods are perfect complements when the indifference curves for the goods are
shaped as L.
-
Utility
- Utility: Numerical score representing the satisfaction that a consumer gets from a given
market basket.
- If buying 3 copies of Microeconomics makes you happier than buying one shirt, then we
say that the books give you more utility than the shirt.
Utility Functions
Assume: The utility function for food (F) and clothing (C)
U(F,C) = F + 2C
Market Baskets: F units
C units
A
8
3
B
6
4
C
4
4
- The consumer is indifferent to A & B
- The consumer prefers A & B to C
U(F,C) = F + 2C
8 + 2(3) = 14
6 + 2(4) = 14
4 + 2(4) = 12
Consumer Preferences
Budget Constraints
- Preferences do not explain all of consumer behavior.
- Budget constraints also limit an individuals ability to consume in light of the prices they
must pay for various goods and services.
Budget Line
- The budget line indicates all combinations of two commodities for which total money
spent equals total income.
- Let F equal the amount of food purchased, and C is the amount of clothing.
Price of food = PF and price of clothing = PC
o
Then PFF is the amount of money spent on food, and PCC is the amount of money
o
spent on clothing.
- The budget line then can be written:
PFF + PCC = Income
The slope of the line measures the relative cost of food and clothing.
The slope is the negative of the ratio of the prices of the two goods.
C
F
PF
PC
Therefore, it can be said that satisfaction is maximized where:
PF
C
MRS =
=
PC
F
It can be said that satisfaction is maximized when marginal rate of substitution (of F and
C) is equal to the ratio of the prices (of F and C).
Consumer Choice
- A corner solution exists if a consumer buys in extremes, and buys all of one category of
good and none of another.
- This exists where the indifference curves are tangent to the horizontal and/or vertical
axis.
- MRS is not equal to the relative price ratio of two products.
Total utility is maximized when the budget is allocated so that the marginal utility
per dollar of expenditure is the same for each good.
This is referred to as the equal marginal principle.