individual economic decision-making Flashcards

1
Q

Utility:

A

Utility: the amount of satisfaction or benefit that a consumer gains from consuming a good or service.

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2
Q

Rational consumer:

A

Rational consumer: an assumption of traditional economic theory that consumers act in such a way as to always maximise satisfaction, or utility, when
they spend money on goods and services.

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3
Q

Marginal utility:

A

Marginal utility: the satisfaction gained from consuming an additional unit of a good or service.

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4
Q

Diminishing marginal utility:

A

Diminishing marginal utility: as individuals consume more units of a good or service, the additional units give successively smaller increases in total satisfaction.

modelled on downward sloping demand curve

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5
Q

how behavioural economic theory differs from traditional economic theory

A

It differs from traditional economic theory in the sense that it questions the assumption of individuals as rational decision makers.

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6
Q

Bounded Rationality:

A

Bounded rationality: when people try to behave rationally but are restricted by factors such as lack of time to make decisions.

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6
Q

Rules of thumb:

A

Rules of thumb: thinking shortcuts, or informed guesses, that individuals use to make decisions in order to save time and effort.

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7
Q

Anchoring:

A

Anchoring: the tendency of individuals to rely on particular pieces of information when making choices between different goods and services.

  • especially in situations where they lack knowledge or experience
    -may focus on the price of a car instead of its features
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8
Q

Availability bias:

A

Availability bias: when people make judgements about the probability of events by recalling recent instances.
- there will be a long queue for ice creams first day of summer
- don’t gamble as someone else lost all their money

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9
Q

Social norms:

A

Social norms: when individuals are influenced by others when making decisions.

  • ex: peer pressure
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10
Q

Altruism and fairness:

A

Altruism and fairness: individuals are motivated to do the right thing, even if this means paying more for a good or service.

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11
Q

Choice architecture:

A

Choice architecture: influencing consumer choices by the way the choices are presented.

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12
Q

Framing:

A

Framing: influencing consumer choices by the way words and numbers are used.
- type of choice architecture

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13
Q

Nudges:

A

Nudges: influencing consumer behaviour via the use of gentle suggestions and positive reinforcement.
- type of choice architecture

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14
Q

Default choice:

A

Default choice: influencing consumer behaviour by setting socially desirable choices as default options.
- type of choice architecture

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15
Q

Mandated choice:

A

Mandated choice: where people are legally required to make a choice.

16
Q

Restricted choice:

A

Restricted choice: giving consumers a limited number of options when making a choice.

17
Q

restrictions of bounded rationality

A
  • The human mind has limited ability to process and evaluate information.
  • The available information is incomplete and often unreliable (and rapidly out of date).
  • The time available to make decisions is limited.