chapter 20 – consumer choice

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20-1 Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice There have been shifts in air travel away from facilities located in larger metro areas. San Francisco International Airport saw a decline in air passenger traffic, while Oakland International Airport had a gain. At Cleveland Hopkins International Airport passenger volume also fell, while Ohio’s Akron-Canton Airport saw volume rise.

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Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice. There have been shifts in air travel away from facilities located in larger metro areas. San Francisco International Airport saw a decline in air passenger traffic, while Oakland International Airport had a gain. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

20-1

Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

There have been shifts in air travel away from facilities located in larger metro areas.

San Francisco International Airport saw a decline in air passenger traffic, while Oakland International Airport had a gain.

At Cleveland Hopkins International Airport passenger volume also fell, while Ohio’s Akron-Canton Airport saw volume rise.

Page 2: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

20-2

Learning Objectives

• Distinguish between total utility and marginal utility

• Discuss why marginal utility at first rises but ultimately tends to decline as a person consumes more of a good or service

• Explain why an individual’s optimal choice of how much to consume of each good or service entails equalizing the marginal utility per dollar spent across all goods and services

Page 3: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

20-3

Learning Objectives

• Describe the substitution effect of a price change on the quantity demanded of a good or service

• Understand how the real-income effect of a price change affects the quantity demanded a good or service

• Evaluate why the price of diamonds is so much higher than the price of water even though people cannot survive long without water

Page 4: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Did You Know That...

• There has been a proliferation of choices at U.S. grocery stores, which now stock an average of 40,000 items?

• One way of deriving the law of demand involves an analysis of the logic of consumer choice in a world of limited resources?

• In this chapter we discuss what is called utility analysis.

Page 5: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Utility Theory

• Utility The want-satisfying power of a good or service

• Utility Analysis The analysis of consumer decision making based

on utility maximization

• Util A representative unit by which utility is measured

Page 6: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Utility Theory

• Marginal Utility

The change in total utility due to a one-unit change in the quantity of a good or service consumed

Marginal utility =Change in total utility

Change in number of units consumed

Page 7: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Graphical Analysis

• We can appreciate total and marginal utility by using graphical analysis.

Page 8: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Figure 20-1 Total and Marginal Utility of Downloading and Listening to Digital Music Albums, Panel (a)

Page 9: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Figure 20-1 Total and Marginal Utility of Downloading and Listening to Digital Music Albums, Panel (b)

Page 10: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Figure 20-1 Total and Marginal Utility of Downloading and Listening to Digital Music Albums, Panel (c)

Page 11: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Figure 20-1Total and Marginal Utility of Downloading and Listening to Digital Music Albums, Panels (b) and (c)

Total utility ismaximized...

…where marginalutility equals zero.

Page 12: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Graphical Analysis

• Observations

Marginal utility falls as more is consumed.

Marginal utility equals zero when total utility is at its maximum.

Page 13: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Example: The High Cost of Certain Sources of Negative Marginal Utility

• Conventional wisdom says that it is impossible to put a price tag on happiness.

• Economists usually attempt to attach dollar values to economic goods.

• What is the amount of compensation required for economic “bads?”

Page 14: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Diminishing Marginal Utility

• Diminishing Marginal Utility

The principle that as more of any good or service is consumed, its extra benefit declines

Increases in total utility from consumption of a good or service become smaller and smaller as more is consumed during a given time period.

Page 15: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Example: Newspaper Vending Machines versus Candy Vending Machines

• How many people take more than one paper from the vending machine?

• Why not dispense candy the same way?

• The answer is found in the concept of diminishing marginal utility.

Page 16: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Optimizing Consumption Choices

• Consumer Optimum

A choice of a set of goods and services that maximizes the level of satisfaction for each consumer, subject to limited income

Page 17: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Table 20-1 Total and Marginal Utility from Consuming Music Album Downloads and Sandwiches on an Income of $26

Page 18: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Table 20-1 Total and Marginal Utility from Consuming Music Album Downloads and Sandwiches on an Income of $26

Page 19: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Table 20-1 Total and Marginal Utility from Consuming Music Album Downloads and Sandwiches on an Income of $26

Page 20: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Optimizing Consumption Choices

• A consumer’s money income should be allocated so that the last dollar spent on each good purchased yields the same amount of marginal utility (when all income is spent), because this rule yields the largest possible total utility.

Page 21: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Optimizing Consumption Choices

• A little math

The rule of equal marginal utilities per dollar spentA consumer maximizes personal satisfaction

when allocating money income in such a way that the last dollars spent on good A, good B, good C, and so on, yield equal amounts of marginal utility.

Page 22: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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• A little math The rule of equal marginal utilities per

dollar spent

Optimizing Consumption Choices

MU of good APrice of good A

=MU of good B

Price of good BMU of good Z

Price of good Z= =...

Page 23: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

Recall from Table 20-1 Income = $26

Qd = 4MUd

Pd

36.55

= = 7.3

Qs = 2MUs

Ps

223

= = 7.3

Page 24: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

Assume Price of Music Falls to $4

Qd = 4MUd

Pd

36.54

= = 9.125

Qs = 2MUs

Ps

223

= = 7.3

Page 25: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

Assume Price of Music Falls to $4

Result Buy more downloads and MUd falls

NowMUd

Pd

>MUs

Ps

Page 26: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

• Consumption decisions are summarized in the law of demand The amount purchased is inversely related

to price.

• A consumer’s response to a price change At higher consumption rate, marginal

utility falls.

Page 27: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Figure 20-3 Digital Music Download Prices and Marginal Utility

Page 28: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

• The Substitution Effect

The tendency of people to substitute cheaper commodities for more expensive commodities

Page 29: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

• The Principle of Substitution

Consumers and producers shift away from goods and resources that become priced relatively higher in favor of goods and resources that are now priced relatively lower.

Page 30: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

• Purchasing Power

The value of money for buying goods and services

Page 31: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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How a Price Change Affects Consumer Optimum

• Real-Income Effect

The change in people’s purchasing power that occurs when, other things being constant, the price of one good that they purchase changes

When that price goes up (down), real income, or purchasing power, falls (increases).

Page 32: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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The Demand Curve Revisited

• Question How is the demand curve derived?

• Answer By presuming income, tastes,

expectations, and the price of related goods are not changing as the price of the good changes

Page 33: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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The Demand Curve Revisited

• Marginal utility, total utility, and the diamond-water paradox

Water is essential to life but cheap.

Diamonds are not essential to life but expensive.

Page 34: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Figure 20-4 The Diamond-Water Paradox

Page 35: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Issues and Applications: The Upside of Taking Off from a Less Convenient Airport

• According to the principle of substitution, people shift away from consuming items that become priced relatively higher in favor of items that are now priced relatively lower.

• In recent years, the principle of substitution has applied to the services offered by several major airports.

• Many consumers of air travel are choosing to drive some distance before they depart to their ultimate destinations by plane.

Page 36: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Issues and Applications: The Upside of Taking Off from a Less Convenient Airport

• Weighing relative marginal utilities and prices

• Opting to avoid hassles that reduce marginal utility

• Responding to price changes

Page 37: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Table 20-3 Selected Substitute Airport Pairs in the United States

Page 38: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Summary Discussionof Learning Objectives

• Total utility versus marginal utility Total utility is total satisfaction

from consumption.

Marginal utility is the additional satisfaction from consuming an additional unit.

• Law of diminishing marginal utility Marginal utility ultimately declines as a

person consumes more and more of a good or service.

Page 39: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Summary Discussionof Learning Objectives

• The consumer optimum Occurs when the marginal utility per

dollar spent on the last unit consumed is equalized

• The substitution effect of a price change A person will substitute among goods

by buying less of a good when its price increases.

Page 40: Chapter 20 – Consumer Choice

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Summary Discussionof Learning Objectives

• The real-income effect of a price change A price change affects the purchasing

power of an individual’s available income.

• Why the price of diamonds exceeds the price of water even though people cannot long survive without water Marginal utility, not total utility, determines

how much people are willing to pay.