Chapter 6 Flashcards

1
Q

What is utility?

A

Utility is the satisfaction that a consumer receives
from consuming some good or service.

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2
Q

What is total utility?

A

Total utility is the consumer’s total satisfaction
resulting from the consumption of a given product

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3
Q

What is marginal utility?

A

Marginal utility is the additional satisfaction obtained
from consuming one additional unit of a product.

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4
Q

What causes the utility that any consumer derives from successive units of a particular product consumed over some period of time to diminish the marginal utility?

A

The increasing total consumption of the product

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5
Q

How can a consumer maximize their total utility?

A

By noting their constraints: their income and market price

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6
Q

What does a utility-maximizing consumer do to maximize their utility?

A

They allocate their expenditures so that the marginal utility obtained from the last dollar spent on each product is equal

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7
Q

When is total utility maximized?

A

When the marginal utility of product a is equal to the marginal utility of product b

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8
Q

How do you calculate the utility-maximizing condition (MUx=MUy)

A

MUx/MUy = px/py

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9
Q

What do economists assume consumers are when observing how they adjust their behaviour to maximize utility?

A

That they are “rational”

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10
Q

What does evidence tell us about the true nature of consumer behaviour in relation to maximizing utility?

A

That consumers may deviate “rational” behaviour if available choices are “framed” differently

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11
Q

What has the finding of “framing” available choices differently lead to?

A

It has lead to the idea of policy “nudges” - interventions that preserve freedom of choice, but that also steer people in certain directions

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12
Q

What happens when there is a change in the price of a product? What does the consumer do in order to restore the equality?

A

If the price of the product (X) rises, then at the previous utility maximizing point:
MUx/MUy < px/py

In order to restore the equality, the consumer reduces their consumption of juice because consuming less of the product (X) causes MUx to decrease so there will be more money to purchase more y causing consumption of y to increase so MUy increases

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13
Q

What does the hypothesis of diminishing marginal utility tell us?

A

It tells us that as a consumer buys less of a product, the marginal utility rises

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14
Q

What prediction does the hypothesis of diminishing marginal utility lead us to?

A

It leads us to the basic prediction of demand theory

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15
Q

What is the basic prediction of demand theory?

A

A rise in the price of a product leads each utility-maximizing consumer to reduce the quantity demanded of the product

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16
Q

What are indifference curves?

A

They are curves that represent all the bundles of goods which give the same utility to a consumer (make the consumer indifferent)

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17
Q

What are the characteristics of the indifference curve?

A

Indifference curves are negatively sloped and are convex (because of decreasing marginal utility)

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18
Q

Special Utility functions: What does a curve look like when it is representing the relationship between perfect compliments?

A

Like an L

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19
Q

Special Utility functions: What does a curve look like when it is representing the relationship between perfect substitutes?

A

Like a downward sloping straight line

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20
Q

Is utility constant along the indifference curve?

A

Yes it is, so ΔU=0

21
Q

What happens at the optimal consumption?

A

The slope of the budget line is the same as the slope of the indifference curve so MUy/py = MUx/px

22
Q

What does Slutsky decomposition show?

A

It shows the link between normal or inferior goods and ordinary goods

23
Q

What does the theory of consumer behaviour predict?

A

It predicts a negatively sloped market demand curve as well as a negatively sloped demand curve for each individual consumer
(Aggregating consumer demands to get demand)
We add up the quantities demanded by all consumers for each price point
Note: We NEVER add prices (on the vertical axis), we always add quantities

24
Q

What are the 2 distinct effects of a change in price?

A

It alters the relative price and changes consumers’ real income

25
Q

In what terms is real income expressed in?

A

It is expressed in terms of purchasing power of money income - that is, the quantity of goods and services that can be purchased with the money income

26
Q

What is the substitution effect?

A

It is the change in the quantity of a product demanded resulting from a change in its relative price

27
Q

What does the substitution effect do?

A

It increases the quantity demanded of a product whose price has fallen and reduces the quantity demanded of a product price has risen

28
Q

What is the income effect?

A

The income effect is the change in the quantity of a product demanded resulting from a change in real income (holding relative prices constant)

29
Q

What does the income effect lead consumers to do?

A

It leads them to buy more of a product whose price has fallen, provided that the product is a normal good

30
Q

What does the size of the income effect depend on?

A

It depends on the amount of income spent on the product whose price changes and on the amount by which the price changes

31
Q

What does the substitution effect lead consumers to do for all normal goods whose prices fall?

A

To increase their demand

32
Q

What does the income effect lead consumers to do for all normal goods whose prices fall?

A

To buy more of all normal goods whose prices fall

33
Q

Because of the combined operation of the income and substitution effects, the demand curve for any normal good will be [positively/negatively] sloped

A

Negatively

34
Q

What will a fall in price do to the demand curve?

A

It will increase the quantity demanded

35
Q

What are giffen goods?

A

Giffen goods are products with a positively sloped demand curve
They are extremely inferior goods that occupy a large part of the budget such that the income effect outweighs the substitution effect)

36
Q

What are the 2 characteristics of giffen goods?

A
  1. The good must be an inferior good - a reduction in real income leads households to purchase more of that good
  2. The good must take a large proportion of total household expenditure and therefore have a large income effect
37
Q

What is conspicuous consumption of goods?

A

They are goods that are consumed because they have “snob appeal”

38
Q

How does the behaviour related to the conspicuous consumption of goods violate the theory of utility maximization?

A

Snobs would still buy more at a lower price as long as other people thought they had paid a higher price (what matters is not what you paid, but what others think you paid)
If such consumption exists, it is unlikely the market demand curve is positively sloped. Lower-income consumers would buy inexpensive diamonds or BMWs. Their behaviour would likely offset the behaviour of relatively few higher-income “snobs”

39
Q

What is consumer surplus?

A

It is the difference between the total value that consumers place on all units consumed of a product and the payment that they actually make to purchase that amount of the product
It is like a “profit” for consumers because they can purchase a product for less than the maximum amount they are prepared to pay

40
Q

What does the area under the demand curve show us?

A

It shows us the total value a consumer places on a good

41
Q

What does the market demand curve show?

A

It shows the valuation that consumers place on each unit of the product

42
Q

What does the area under the demand curve and above the price line show for any given quantity?

A

It shows the consumer surplus received from consuming those units

43
Q

Where is the total consumer surplus located?

A

It is located in the area under the demand curve and above the price line

44
Q

What does the area under the demand curve show?

A

It shows the total valuation that consumers place on all units consumed

45
Q

What is the paradox of value?

A

It is a view that questions why products that are essential to life have a low price while products that are not essential to life have a high price

46
Q

What does the paradox of value ignore?

A

It ignores 2 important aspects of the determination of price:
1. Supply plays just as an important role as demand in determining price
2. Consumers purchase units of a good until the marginal value of the last unit purchased is equal to its market price
Ex: Water has a plentiful supply so it has a low price. Diamonds have a relatively scarce supply and therefore have a high price

47
Q

Since water has a low price, consumers buy water to the point where the [marginal/total] value placed on the last unit consumed is very low, and the [marginal/total] value is high

A

Marginal
Total

48
Q

Since diamonds have a high price, consumers buy diamonds to the point where the [marginal/total] value placed on the last unit consumed is very high, and the [marginal/total] value is low

A

Marginal
Total