Theory of consumer Behaviour Chapter 2 Flashcards
What is law of demand?
The inverse relationship between price of a commodity and quantity demand is referred to as Law of demand.
What is demand
The ability to pay as well the willingness and desire to pay is called demand.
What cannot be explained by law of demand?
Why people buy more when price of a commodity increases or why people buy less when the price of a commodity decreases.
For this there is three schools of thought for this purpose
Cardinal utility analysis
Ordinal Utility analysis
revealed preference theory.
What is utility?
It is the power or capacity of a commodity to satisfy a want.
The benefit or satisfaction from a commodity, the commodity is said to have a utility.
Who coined the term utility?
W.S Jevons.
Who developed Cardinal Utility theory?
By classical economists.
Gossen,
William Stanley Jevons,
Leon Walras
Karl Menger
Alfred Marshall later made significant refinements
What is cardinal utility theory?
Cardinal Utility theory states that utility is measurable just like height, weight and temperature.
Utility is measurable cardinally or quantitatively
Other Names for cardinal utility theory?
Think Alfred Marshall?
Neo-classical utility theory
Marshallian utility theory
Compare assumption of cardinal utility theory vs its limitations?
(Check the numbers) Rest read page 26 and 27
Assumptions/features
1. Utility is measurable in numerical terms
2. Utilities are independent of substitutes or complements(depends on the commodity itself)
3. The marginal utility of money remains constant
4. Man is rational
- Utility gained from successive units of a commodity goes on diminishing.(law of diminishing marginal utility)
Limitations.
1.Utility is a psychological concept hence cannot be measured cardinally.
2.This assumption is wrong it depends on availability of substitutes and complements
3.This is not true. The law of diminishing marginal utility does not apply on money.
4. Incorrect. No consumers compare utility and disutility of each unit of commodity while buying it.
- Unable to explain the existence of Giffen Goods.
- Does not study income effect, substitution effect and price effect.
What is marginal utility?
The utility derived from consuming the additional unit of a commodity.
What is total utility?
Utility derived from consuming all units of a commodity.
What is law of diminishing marginal utility?
When a consumer consumes the more of the same commodity, each successive units give lesser and lesser satisfaction.
the more of the same commodity is consumed the total utility from a commodity increases at a diminishing rate and may become negative.
What is negative utility called?
Disutility
Read Page 28 for graph on diminishing marginal utility.
Basically when consuming a commodity continuously the total utility diminishes and marginal utility diminishes at higher rate.
The graph is like a wave originating from 0 and moving along x axis.
Y= total/marginal utility
x= units of the same commodity (usually mangoes)
From starting of page 28 to page 29.
Also read relationship between marginal utility and total utility.(till there)
Assumptions of the marginal utility law?
(What are the assumptions of the marginal utility law after learning about the graph?)
(These are assumption we make before drawing the graph)
- The units of commodity are identical or homogenous
- Consumer tastes remain constant/unchanged. (as they need to consume the same commodity for this shit to work)
- There is no time interval between two units of a commodity. The consumption is continuous.
- The units of the commodity are normal sized (not too small or large)
5.The price of the goods and the income of the consumer must remain constant.
6.The law assumes that utility is measurable in terms of money
Limitations of the law of diminishing marginal utility?
1.It does not apply to antique goods and rare collectibles that increase satisfaction while having more possessions.
(E.g. Stamps, coin collection, old paintings and art)
- It does not hold good on the consumption of liquor.
(the more someone drinks the more he likes)
3.It does not apply to a miser.
(spends less saves more)
4.Law does not apply to money. Marginal utility of money never falls to zero.
- The law fails when there is a higher number of consumer for a commodity
- There are cases where a certain commodity can provide increasing marginal utility for a certain period of time.
(A man watching TV for the first time)
Practical importance of diminishing marginal utility law?
Application of the diminishing marginal utility law?
- Helpful In taxation: The principle of increasing taxation is also based on the Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility. The rate of taxes increases on a person’s income as their income increases because the marginal utility of money falls to the rise of income of the person.
(basically they (gov) think that with increase in income the satisfaction from that money decreases (bullshit).
2.Basis of the policy of equal distribution of wealth: Capitalism increase inequalities of wealth. To balance this government levy higher taxes on the rich and use the money to provide free education, medical aid etc. to the less fortunate people.
3.Helpful in regulating daily expenditure: When we buy more of the same commodity, the marginal utility decreases and puts a stop to further expenditure.
4.Determination of market prices: Price of a commodity must fall when its supply increases.
5.Helpful to the monopolist: It allows monopolists to charge different prices to different types of people with different incomes in order to make maximum profit.
6.Basis of economic laws: These laws are all derived from the law of diminishing marginal utility.
Law of Consumer Surplus
Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
Elasticity of demand
etc.
Who developed theory of consumer surplus?
It was developed by the french engineer economist
A.J Dupuit. But Marshall again refined it.
What all comes under cardinal utility approach?
Anything quantifiable