Demand Analysis: Diovie T. Cabenta BSA 1-3
Demand Analysis: Diovie T. Cabenta BSA 1-3
Demand Analysis: Diovie T. Cabenta BSA 1-3
DIOVIE T. CABENTA
BSA 1-3
UTILITY THEORY
The ability of goods and services to satisfy
consumer wants is the basis for consumer
demand.
It is a theory postulated in economics to explain
behavior of individuals based on the premise
people can consistently rank order their choices
depending upon their preferences.
CONSUMER BEHAVIOR THEORY – THREE
BASIC ASSUMPTIONS
1. More is Better – consumer always prefer more to less of
any good or service. Economists refer to this as the
nonsatiation principle.
2. Preferences are complete – when preferences are
complete, consumers are able to compare and rank the
benefits tied go consumption.
3. Preference are transitive – when preferences are
transitive, the consumers are able to rank order the
desirability of various goods and services.
• Is a descriptive statement that
relates satisfaction or well-being
to the consumption of goods and
UTILITY services.
FUNCTIONS
• Utility = f(Goods,Services)
MARGINAL UTILITY
0
TOTAL UTILITY MARGINAL UTILITY
5 4 3 2 1
INDIFFERENCE CURVE
Represent all market basket that provide a given consumer the
same level of utility or satisfaction.
Basic Characteristics
1) Higher indifference curves
are better – consumers prefer
more to less, so they prefer
higher indifference curves that
represent greater combinations
of goods and services.
• 2) Indifference curves do not intersect – holding
goods constant, an indifference curve involving a
greater amount of services must give greater
satisfaction. Holding services constant, an
indifference curve involving a greater amount of
goods must give greater satisfaction. This stems from
the fact that goods and services both provide
consumer benefits, and reflect the “more is better”
principle. If indifference curves crossed, this principle
would be violated.
• 3) Indifference curves slope downward –
the slope of an indifference curve shows
the trade-off involved between goods and
services. Because consumers like both
goods and services, if the quantity of one
is reduced, the quantity of the other
must increase to maintain the same
degree of utility. As a result, indifference
curves have negative slopes.
4) Indifference curves bend inward (are
convex to the origin) – the slope of an
indifference curve shows the rate at
which consumers are willing to trade-
off goods and services. When goods are
relatively scares, the law of diminishing
marginal utility means that the added
value of another unit of goods will be
small in relation to the added value of
another unit of services. This gives
indifference curves a bowed inward, or
concave to the origin, appearance.
COMBINATION FAR 0 SLEEP
EXAMPLE
A 1 8
A.FAR O
B.SLEEP B 2 6
C 3 4
SLEEP
EXAMPLE 7
A.FAR 0 6
5
B.SLEEP 4
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 FAR 0
The demand curve for an
individual consumer depends
Individual Demand upon the size of the
consumer’s budget
consumption preferences.
Income- Utility-maximizing
combinations of goods and
consumption Curve services at every income
level.
Measures additional
Marginal Utility satisfaction from an
additional unit of
good.
Assumes consumers
wish to maximize
their utility through
Consumer Choice the optimal
combinations of
goods – given their
limited budget.
Marginal Rate of Substitution
Is the amount of a good that a
consumer is willing to give up for
another good, as long as the new
good is equally satisfying. It’s
used in indifference theory to
analyze consumer behavior. The
marginal rate of substitution is
calculated between two goods
placed on an indifference curve,
displaying a frontier of equal
utility for each combination of
“good A” and “good B”.
When making purchase
decision, a consumer
attempts to get the greatest
value possible from
expenditure of least amount
of money. His or her objective
is to maximize the total value
derived from the available
money.
UTILITY
MAXIMIZATION
DEMAND Demand analysis focuses on
SENSITIVITY measuring the sensitivity of
ANALYSIS: demand to changes in
ELASTICITY range of important factors.
Elasticity
concept
Elasticity=
𝑃𝑒𝑟𝑐𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑎𝑔𝑒 𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑔𝑒 𝑖𝑛 𝑌
Elasticity is a measurement of responsiveness
used in demand analysis. It is defined as a 𝑃𝑒𝑟𝑐𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑎𝑔𝑒 𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑔𝑒 𝑖𝑛 𝑋
percentage change in a dependent variable Y,
resulting from a percentage change in the
value of an independent variable, X.
The concept of Elasticity simply
involves the percentage change in one
variable associated with a given
percentage change in another variable.
Consumer Interviews(Survey)
Questioning customers to estimate demand relations.
Market Experiments
Demand estimation in a controlled environment.
Simple Demand Curve Estimation
𝑷 = 𝒂 + 𝒃𝑸
Example:
TR = P X Q
Market Demand Curve Estimation
Rigid
Not Flexible
Limited Choices
ELASTIC
Flexibility
Can easily change
A lot of choices
Inelastic demand and revenue
PRICES REVENUE
GO DOWN GOES UP ELASTIC
GO DOWN GOES DOWN INELASTIC
GO DOWN NO CHANGE UNITARY
PRICES REVENUE
GO UP GOES DOWN ELASTIC
GO UP GOES UP INELASTIC
GO UP NO CHANGE UNITARY
ed % D Qd
%DP
Example:
PED 20
40
PED 1
2
PED 0.5
Assume that we will
get the elasticity of
point c.
PED 40
20
PED
2
e=∞
e>1
e=1
e<1
e=0
Arc elasticity
6
∆q – Change in quantity
∆p – Change in price
P1 + P2 – Initial Price + New 2 4
Price
Q1 + Q2 – Initial Quantity + New
Quantity
Arc elasticity
Ed 2-4 6+ 2
6
x
6-2 2+4
2
Ed -2 8
x
4 6
Ed -16 -2
=
24 3 2 4