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Importance of Economics utility
Value of economic products with reference to price &
wealth
Classification of wants with reference to necessaries,
luxury and comforts
Characteristics of wants
2
Economics means…?
Economics is a study of the economic problems of the people living in a community. Hence, Economics is a
Social Sciences which deals with human activities for satisfying their needs by consuming their available
wealth.
Economic utility
Economic utility
to Engineers and
managers
Difference Between Economics and Economy
BASIS FOR COMPARISON ECONOMICS ECONOMY
Determines How human beings make
decisions when there is
scarcity of resources?
How resources are allocated
among different members of
society?
Focuses on The way in which economic
agents behave and interact
and the way in which
economies work.
The way in which country's
economic affairs are
organized and conducted.
3
Basically, economics is the study of an economy, i.e. its structure,
condition, working, performance, issues, remedies, etc. It includes the analysis
of the different types of the economic system and economic decisions.
On the other hand, an economy indicates a region, a particular area or
country, concerning production, distribution, consumption, and exchange of
goods and services, and supply of money.
GOODS
• Anything material or immaterial, which can satisfy human wants are
goods.
4
Free goods Economic Goods
Supply is unlimited and infact more than
required.
Eg: water of the ocean, sand of the
desert
Transferable goods, the supply of which
is scarce in relation to demand are
economic goods.
Scarcity is not a fixed quantity.
Definitions:
• Adam Smith: Economics is a science of wealth. Its nature and
uses.
• Alfred Marshal: Economics is a study of men’s actions in the
ordinary business life. i.e; the study of science of human welfare.
• Lionel Robbins: The Science which studies human behaviour as a
relationship between wants or ends and scarce resources which
have a alternative uses.
5
Salient features of Robbins definition:
• Unlimited wants: Wants are unlimited in number and it is difficult to satisfy all
those.
• Scarce resources: The resources are said to be scarce when they are limited in
supply with relation to the total demand.
Economic problems arise only because of scarce resources.
• Alternative uses: A commodity or goods can be put into different alternative uses.
• Choice: of all the alternative uses, decision has to be made to satisfy the unlimited wants
with the available scarce resources.
6
Types of Economics
1. Micro-Economics:
It is the microscopic view of the economy, wherein the economic activity of small individual
units and their decisions related to production, exchange, distribution and consumption are
studied so as to know how prices and quantities of goods and wage rate of the workers are
determined.
These small individual units, i.e. person, household, firm, industry, government, etc. when
taken together, make up the entire economy.
Microeconomics discusses the choices made by the people in an economy and the factors
which influence those choices. Further, it studies, how the decisions of the economic agents
regulate the utilization and distribution of scarce resources and how these decisions influences
the demand and supply of the commodity, which determines its price.
7
SUBJECT MATTER OF MICROECONOMICS
• Consumer Behavior
• Product Pricing
• Factor Pricing
• Production Costs
• Demand
• Supply
• Location of Industry
• Behavior of Firms
• Economic condition of people of the economy.
• Market Equilibrium
• Market Structure
• Non-Competitive Market
The primary aim of the microeconomic analysis is reaching the state of
equilibrium, from the perspective of individual economic units. 8
2. Macro-Economics
 The word “Macro” is derived from Greek word “Makros”, “large or very big”.
The Macro economics studies the economy as a single unit. It does not deal
with Individual units. It deals with the aggregates ‘or’ totals and averages.
Eg: Total national income, total employment of the nation, overall output of a
business organisation, total investment and aggregate consumption.
Macro economics is concerned with such variables as a aggregate volume of
output of a economy with the extend to this resources are employed with the size
of the national Income and with the general price level.
9
The Macro economics analyzes some problems of
the economy
● Level of output and employment
● Fluctuations in level of output, employment and National Income
● Changes in the general price level
● Economic growth and economic development
● Theories of distribution
Significance of Macro economics:
● Understanding the working of an economy
● Formulating policies
● Prepare the economics plans
● Take the remedial measures of trade cycles & Inflation
10
GDP vs. GNP: An Overview
Gross domestic product (GDP) is the value of a nation's finished
domestic goods and services during a specific time period.
gross national product (GNP), is the value of all finished goods and
services owned by a country's residents over a period of time.
Both GDP and GNP are most commonly used measures of a country's
economy, both of which represent the total market value of all goods
and services produced over a defined period.
There are differences between how each one defines the scope of the
economy. While GDP limits its interpretation of the economy to the
geographical borders of the country, GNP extends it to include the net
overseas economic activities performed by its nationals.
11
Subject Matter of Economics
In economics, a want is something that is desired.
Want is the starting point of economic activity.
Wants leads to efforts. An effort leads to satisfaction.
This is the subject matter of economics. This subject
matter of economics is divided into four parts. They
are called economic activities.
1. Production
2. Exchange
3. Distribution
4. Consumption
12
1.Production: In economics, Production involves the
creation of goods and services by using resources. It is
a process to change the raw materials into
final/finished goods. It is nothing but creation of utility.
To produce anything, so many factors are essential. All
these factors are classified into four categories. They
are:
● Land
● Labor
● Capital
● Organization
13
2.Exchange: It means change of the goods from one person to another person. Once upon a
time goods are exchanged for goods. It is called “Barter system”.
To overcome the Inconveniences in the barter system, currency was invented. Now the goods
are exchanged for money. Price is essential for the exchange of goods for money.
3. Distribution: Distribution means sharing of the income among the factors of production.
The total income which is generated by selling of these goods and services in the market
must be distributed among the factors of production in the form of rent, wages, interest and
profits.
4. Consumption: It is an act to use the goods or service to satisfy the wants.
Whenever we make use of any commodity or service for the satisfaction of our wants, the
act is called consumption.
14
UTILITY (value in use)
The capacity of a commodity to satisfy human wants is known as its Utility.
Utility is a measure of satisfaction an individual gets from the consumption of
the commodities. In other words, it is a measurement of usefulness that a
consumer obtains from any good.
A utility is a measure of how much one enjoys a movie, favourite food, or other
goods. It varies with the amount of desire.
Utility of an article is not inherent in a commodity, it is the relationship existing
between the consumer and commodity.
Utility of a product is not fixed and varies according to the urgency of the human
wants that it satisfies.
Eg: Water, AC’s in summer & winter, etc.
Characteristics of utility:
● Utility is a subjective concept: It is a psychological concept. It is the mental
assessment of a commodity. So utility differs from person to person because
of difference in taste, preferences, likes and dislikes of a person.
E.g., chalks have more utility to a teacher than a student.
● Utility is a relative term: It is related to time and place. With change in time
and place, utility of the same commodity changes.
Cold drinks have more utility during summer than winter. Woolen clothes
have more utility in Kashmir than Jaipur.
● Utility depends on the intensity of want: More urgent or intense the want,
more will be the utility.
E.g. Books have more utility to students just before the exams.
Characteristics of utility Contd...
● Utility differs from usefulness: Utility indicates the power of a good to satisfy
human wants irrespective of whether it is good or bad or harmful. While
usefulness means that the commodity is beneficial or desirable. A commodity may
have utility but may not be useful.
E.g., cigarette is injurious to health, it is not useful but it has utility to a smoker.
● Utility cannot be measured: Utility is psychological and subjective. It is intangible.
So it cannot be measured numerically. It can only be expressed ordinally or
cardinally.
Eg 1: first slice of bread will have very high utility for a very hungry person than
the 2nd slice. (ordinally)- Ranking or preference or comparision
Eg 2: Consuming first slice of bread is giving 20 utils, then consuming second slice
of bread is giving 15 utils. (cardinally)- satisfaction levels in terms of some scalable
numbers.
● Utility differs from satisfaction: Utility and satisfaction are related but there is a
difference. Utility is expected satisfaction and is measured before the use of
commodity while satisfaction is actual realisation which comes after consumption.
VALUE
• It is the power of a commodity to command other commodities in
its exchange.
• Value express the relationship or ratio between two commodities
and depends like utility upon external circumstances and it is not
determined by internal characteristics.
• An article possessing utility may or may not have value but no article
can have value unless it possess utility.
• To possess value in exchange, a commodity must be only in use or
possess utility, but also it must be limited in supply.
• The more the supply is limited, the greater is the value.
18
19
Value
Measured as Price
(value expressed in
terms of money)
Measured in terms of Wealth
Product should have
utility/consumption by
consumers
Product availability
should have
scarcity, thereby its
value increase
Product should be in
position to be
transferred as per the
owner’s choice
Value of a product exists, if it can be utilized to get another product in exchange……
Eg: Money/Gold/Assets has more value than most of the manufacturing products, as
they are capable of generating another product of our choice of same value in exchange.
Learning outcome: Define utility and time value of economic goods. [L1]
WEALTH
• Wealth is synonymous with economic goods.
• Wealth consists of all those commodities which are exchangeable.
Attributes of Wealth:
1. Utility: An article can have value only if it is capable of satisfying some human
want, i.e.; if it has utility and without which no article can become wealth.
2. Scarcity: It must be scarce in relation to demand as no article can have value if
it is in excess of demand.
3. Transferability: It must be transferrable as none would demand a commodity
of which he can not be owner. But it is not to confused with portability.
• Thus the term wealth includes not only those material goods which are
transferrable and external (eg: buildings, machinery, etc.), but also non
material goods which are external to men and are transferrable. (eg: good will
of the business, copyright of a book, etc.) 20
Classification of wealth
Personal or Private wealth: It is the wealth which belongs to certain person.
It includes all those economic goods which belongs to him and which he can sell.
Eg: The debts which an individual owes to the others may be regarded as his negative wealth and they
must be subtracted from his good possessions to arrive at his true net wealth.
Collective or communal wealth: It is the wealth owned by municipal boards or provincial and central
governments.
Eg: Public buildings, public parks, roads, harbours, etc.
Municipal government bodies represents the community and their wealth may be regarded as the
wealth collectively owned by the citizens.
National wealth: It is still wider and it includes:
a) Personal wealth of all citizens of country.
b) Collective wealth of the nation.
c) Natural advantages possessed by a country. Eg: Geographical position, climatic conditions,
mineral resources, etc.
d) Non-material elements like characteristics of members of the nation and reputation of the
country.
Cosmopolitan or International wealth: It includes the wealth belongs to all the nations of world plus
the wealth shared by all of them in common.
Eg: Oceans, scientific knowledge, mechanical and atomic inventions, etc:
21
WANTS
• Want is the desire, ability and willingness to consume a product.
Essentials of a want:
• There ought to be desire for an article.
• There ought be the ability to satisfy it or in other words, the possession of the
means of its satisfaction.
• There must be a willingness of spare the means for the purpose.
When desire is backed by ability and willingness to satisfy, it is called effective
desire or want.
Circle of wants and activities:
Wants and economic are very closely related and infact, wants are the real motive
force which sets the entire economic mechanism into motion.
22
CHARACTERISTICS OF WANTS:
• Wants in general are unlimited.
• Each particular want is capable of complete satisfaction.
• Wants vary in intensities.
• Wants are competitive.
• Wants are recurrent.
• Some wants are compulsory.
• Present wants are more important than future wants knowledge increases
wants.
• Wants are determined by social standards of tastes and is particularly true for
wants for clothing, shelter and amusements, etc.
23
Classification of Wants
24
Wants
Preliminary wants Secondary wants
Physiological
needs
(Necessaries for
existence)
Manipulative skills
(Necessaries for
efficiency)
Social/convective
needs
(Necessaries for
social being)
Comforts
(Necessaries for
pleasure)
Luxury
(Necessaries for
great pleasure)
(1) Necessaries: Necessaries are those wants which are very important
and if they remain unsatisfied, more pain is caused and satisfaction is necessary for
the preservation of life, efficiency or social prestige.
Necessaries for existence:
• The articles which are just necessary for the preservation of life are known as
necessaries for existence.
Eg: food, clothing and shelter, without which life can’t be preserved.
• These are not the same in all the countries, climates and all the time to time.
Necessaries for efficiency:
• The articles which are necessary for the preservation of one’s efficiency in the
occupation he is engaged in.
• He has consume certain things over and above the bare necessaries of existence,
which are known as necessaries for efficiency.
Eg: well-balanced food, good clothing’s, and furniture, airy, well-ventilated house
for shelter, good children’s education, medical treatments, etc.
Conventional necessaries:
• These are consumed for social convention and prestige because man as a
member of society has to follow certain set of conventions and traditions to
avoid a bad name and ex-communication.
Eg: Pan, tobacco, alcohol, etc. 25
(2) Comforts: The consumption of these articles affords appreciable pleasure and also
increases consumer’s efficiency slightly, while their neither non consumption causes much
pain nor decreases actual efficiency are known as comforts and are necessary for decent
living.
Eg: Cosmetics, Good shoes and branded cloths, etc.
(3) Luxuries: These are the articles whose consumption affords very great pleasure, but
does not contribute to our efficiency and whose non consumption neither causes any pain
nor decreases our efficiency.
Eg: Duplex houses or villas, costly cars, etc.
 There are certain articles of luxury like wine which gives us only fleeting pleasure but
decreases our efficiency quite considerably and are known as extravagancies.
 Learning outcome: Distinguish between necessities, comforts and luxuries. [L2]
 Session quiz:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1ZRpdbMnrMad6gzEO8DtETo8ZkwpP4blm-
toqkyfgdFI/edit?usp=sharing 26
Theory of Consumption
Engel’s Law of consumption:
Categories families
(i) The labour class
(ii) The middle class
(iii) The well-to-do class
Items of expenditure:
(i) Food (ii) Clothing (iii) Lodging (iv) Heat, Light & Fuel (v) Education, Health, Servants & Miscllaneous,
etc.
27
Items of expenditure
Percentage of its income spent by
Labour class Middle class Well-to-do-class
Food 60 55 50
Clothing 18 18 18
Lodging 12 12 12
Heat, Light & Fuel 5 5 5
Education, Health, Servants
& Miscellaneous, etc.
5 10 15
Total 100 100 100
Theory of Consumption
Assumptions:
 Range of products available
 Prices of all products
 Capacity of products to satisfy
 Income
Utility - The benefit or satisfaction that a person gets from the consumption of a
good or service.
Utility Analysis: Numerical score represents the satisfaction.
Eg: (i) buying 3 copies of books gives more happiness than buying a shirt.
(ii) Comparison between two food items A&B, A>B OR B>A, Relationship between
two goods.
Utility Function:
U= F(X, Y)
Total Utility= U(X) + U (Y)
28
Utility Measurement
Basis for comparison Cardinal Ordinal
1. Meaning Expressed numerically (Utils) Can’t be expressed numerically,
can do ranking or comparison
2. Approach Quantitative Qualitative
3. Realistic Less More
4. Analysis Marginal Utility Analysis Indifference curve analysis
5. Promoted by Classical & Neo-Classical
Economics
Modern Economics
29
Eg 1: Food in three restaurants
Total satisfaction: 1- 10 Utils, 2- 12-Utils, 3- 18 Utils---- cardinal
Total satisfaction: 3-2-1----- Ordinal
Eg 2: Goods Utils (Cardinal) Rank order (Ordinal)
X1 14 2nd
X2 03 5th
X3 10 3rd
X4 08 4th
X5 17 1st
TOTAL UTILITY
• It is the total utility of a
consumer derives from the
consumption of all the utils
of a good or a combination of
goods over a given
consumption period.
MARGINAL UTILITY
• It refers to the additional utility
derived from consumption of an
additional unit.
• Marginal Utility is the slope of the
total utility curve.
• MU= (Change in TU)/ Change in Q
30
31
Theory of Consumption
• A household’s consumption choices are determined by
• Budget constraint
• Preferences.
1. Law of Diminishing Marginal utility: States that “The marginal
utility derived from every additional unit increase in the quantity of a good consumed
goes on decreasing, while other things remains the same.
Conditions:
(1) The unit must of consumption (nature, size & quality) must be standard one.
(2) Consumption must be continuous i.e.; zero time interval between two levels of consumption.
(3) The tastes & preferences of the consumer should remain unchanged during the course of
consumption.
(4) The goods should be normal & should not be addicted in nature.
(5) Prices of related goods.
Eg:
(1) Consumption of coffee or tea
(2) Watching a movie
(3) Reading a book
QUANTITY TOTAL UTILITY MARGINAL UTILITY
1 20 ---
2 35 15
3 47 12
4 55 8
5 55 0
6 48 -7
32
Eg: Consumption of No” of sweets
 Exceptions of this Law: Any violation of the factors like Taste, preference, price, time
interval, quality, quantity, etc violates this law.
 E.g: Consumption of water by a thirsty person increases his marginal utility for every
additional unit, if he is been given water in drop by drop to drink rather than with a jug of
water.
 E.g: A cricket batsman gets more marginal satisfaction when he obtains last runs when he is
near to his half-centaury or centaury.
 Note: (1) This law describes about consumption pattern of the consumer.
(2) It forms basis for many decisions related to production, pricing & investment.
2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
The idea of equi-marginal principle was first mentioned by H.H.Gossen (1810-1858)
of Germany. Hence it is called Gossen's second Law.
The law of equi-marginal utility explains the behaviour of a consumer when he
consumers more than one commodity.
Wants are unlimited but the income which is available to the consumers to satisfy all
his wants is limited.
This law explains how the consumer spends his limited income on various
commodities to get maximum satisfaction.
• Every consumer allocates his income equally to all the product he requires for his
wants, so Equi-Marginal Utility states that, “The consumer will be in a state of
equilibrium, when he gets marginal utility from the products bought are equal”.
• (Marginal utility of product X/ Price of X) = (Marginal utility of product Y/ Price
of Y)
Symbolically
𝑀𝑈𝑥
𝑃𝑥
=
𝑀𝑈𝑦
𝑃𝑦
= 𝑀𝑈𝑚
33
2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
Marginal utility of money expenditure
Marginal utility of goods X and Y Px=Rs 5 and Py=Rs 4 then
Suppose the marginal utility of money is constant and it is 5 units then the total
expenditure will be Rs (5x6+5x4) = Rs 50/- on both commodities.
34
Units
Marginal Utility
obtained from x and y
𝑀𝑈𝑥 𝑀𝑈𝑦
1 50 36
2 45 32
3 40 28
4 35 24
5 30 20
6 25 16
7 20 12
8 15 8
Units 𝑀𝑈𝑥
𝑃𝑥
𝑀𝑈𝑦
𝑃𝒚
1 10 9
2 9 8
3 8 7
4 7 6
5 6 5
6 5 4
7 4 3
8 3 2
2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
Limitations of the Law
The law of equi-marginal utility bristles with the following difficulties.
1. Indivisibility of Goods
The theory is weakened by the fact that many commodities like a car, a house
etc. are indivisible. In the case of indivisible goods, the law is not applicable.
2. The Marginal Utility of Money is Not Constant
The theory is based on the assumption that the marginal utility of money is
constant. But that is not really so.
3. The Measurement of Utility is not Possible
Marshall states that the price a consumer is willing to pay for a commodity is
equal to its marginal utility.
But modern economists argue that, if two persons are paying an equal price
for given commodity, it does not mean that both are getting the same level of
utility.
Thus utility is a subjective concept, which cannot be measured, in
quantitative terms. 35
2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
Limitations of the Law
The law of equi-marginal utility bristles with the following difficulties.
4. Utilities are Interdependent
This law assumes that commodities are independent and therefore their
marginal utilities are also independent.
But in real life commodities are either substitutes or complements.
Their utilities are therefore interdependent.
5. Indefinite Budget Period
According to Prof. K.E. Boulding, indefinite budget period is another
difficulty in the law.
Normally the budget period is assumed to be a year. But there are certain
commodities which are available in several succeeding accounting periods.
It is difficult to calculate marginal utility for such commodities.
36
2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
Importance
According to Marshall, 'the applications of this principle extend over almost
every field of economic activity.’
1.It applies to consumption
Every rational human being wants to get maximum satisfaction with his
limited means. The consumer arranges his expenditure in such a way that,
𝑀𝑈𝑥
𝑃𝑥
=
𝑀𝑈𝑦
𝑃𝑦
=
𝑀𝑈𝑧
𝑃𝑧
=
𝑀𝑈𝑟
𝑃𝑟
so that he will get maximum satisfaction.
2. It applies to production
The aim of the producer is to get maximum output with least-cost, so that his
profit will be maximum.
3. Distribution of Earnings Between Savings and Consumption
According to Marshall, a prudent person will endeavor to distribute his
resources between his present needs and future needs in such a way that the
marginal utility of the last rupee put in savings is equal to the marginal utility
of the last rupee spent on consumption. 37
2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
Importance
According to Marshall, 'the applications of this principle extend over almost
every field of economic activity.’
4. It applies to distribution
The general theory of distribution involves the principle of substitution. In
distribution, the rewards to the various factors of production, that is their
relative shares, are determined by the principle of equi-marginal utility.
5. It Applies to Public Finance
The revenue should be distributed in such a way that the last unit of
expenditure on various programmes brings equal welfare, so that social
welfare is maximised.
6. Expenditure of Time
A person should spend his limited time among alternative uses such as
reading; studying and gardening, in such a way that the marginal utility from
all these uses are equal.
38
3. Consumer Surplus:
• Consumer will be prepared to buy a product at its original price and gets
maximum marginal utility. If, he pays more or less to the actual price of
the product, then consumer marginal utility either goes down or up,
respectively.
 Consumer Surplus is a state of situation, where “the difference
between the price that consumer is prepared to pay and the price
that he is exactly paying”.
 In other words, “It is the value a consumer gets from a product
without paying for it”.
 The concept of consumer’s surplus is very significant for the
monopolist or the trader to assess where the consumer is prepared to
pay a higher price and at what point exactly he is paying a low
price.
 In such cases, the trader can marginally increases the price without
loosing the demand. 39
4. The Indifference Curves:
It states that, “the indifference to a
particular combination of goods or
services, as every combination yields
him the same marginal utility.
The said curve is called as
“Indifference Curve”. Therefore, an
indifference curve is the locus of all
combinations of commodities from
which the consumer derives the same
level of satisfaction.
It is also called “Iso-Utility Curve”
or” Equal Satisfaction Curve”.
Indifference Curve is illustrated in
diagram, X axis represents apple and
Y axis represents orange. 40
4. The Indifference Curves:
An Indifference Map
One can draw several indifference curves
each representing an indifference
schedule. Hence, an Indifference Map is a
family or collection or set of indifference
curves corresponding to different levels
of satisfaction. The Indifference Map is
illustrated in Diagram.
Marginal Rate of Substitution
The marginal rate of substitution of x for
y (MRSxy) is defined as the maximum
amount of y the consumer is willing to
give up for getting an additional unit of x
and still remaining on the same
indifference curve. 41
the indifference Curves
IC1,IC2 and IC3 represent
the Indifference Map,
Upper IC representing
higher level of
satisfaction compared to
lower IC
4. The Indifference Curves:
• Assumptions:
 The consumer behaves rationally to maximise his
satisfaction.
 The prices and incomes of the consumer are defined
for analysis.
 The tastes & preferences of the consumer do not change during the analysis
Properties of Indifference Curves:
 It slopes downwards from left to right.
 It is convex to the origin. (marginal rate of substitution)
 No two indifference curves are not intersected to each other.
42
5. Consumer equilibrium:
 It is a situation in which “a
consumer has allocated his/her
income in the way that, given the
prices of goods and services,
maximizes his/her total utility”.
 In other words, “It is a situation
where consumer gets maximum
satisfaction with his limited
budget. This happens at a point
of income, where the budget line
is tangential to the indifference
curves.
Slope of budget line= (Income/Px)/
(Income/Py) = Py/Px
43
The consumer reaches
equilibrium at the point where
the budget line is tangent on the
indifference curve.
T is the point of equilibrium as
budget line AB is tangent on
indifference curve

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economics-utility-wealthcomforts -Module I-1 PPT.pptx

  • 1. 1 Importance of Economics utility Value of economic products with reference to price & wealth Classification of wants with reference to necessaries, luxury and comforts Characteristics of wants
  • 2. 2 Economics means…? Economics is a study of the economic problems of the people living in a community. Hence, Economics is a Social Sciences which deals with human activities for satisfying their needs by consuming their available wealth. Economic utility Economic utility to Engineers and managers
  • 3. Difference Between Economics and Economy BASIS FOR COMPARISON ECONOMICS ECONOMY Determines How human beings make decisions when there is scarcity of resources? How resources are allocated among different members of society? Focuses on The way in which economic agents behave and interact and the way in which economies work. The way in which country's economic affairs are organized and conducted. 3 Basically, economics is the study of an economy, i.e. its structure, condition, working, performance, issues, remedies, etc. It includes the analysis of the different types of the economic system and economic decisions. On the other hand, an economy indicates a region, a particular area or country, concerning production, distribution, consumption, and exchange of goods and services, and supply of money.
  • 4. GOODS • Anything material or immaterial, which can satisfy human wants are goods. 4 Free goods Economic Goods Supply is unlimited and infact more than required. Eg: water of the ocean, sand of the desert Transferable goods, the supply of which is scarce in relation to demand are economic goods. Scarcity is not a fixed quantity.
  • 5. Definitions: • Adam Smith: Economics is a science of wealth. Its nature and uses. • Alfred Marshal: Economics is a study of men’s actions in the ordinary business life. i.e; the study of science of human welfare. • Lionel Robbins: The Science which studies human behaviour as a relationship between wants or ends and scarce resources which have a alternative uses. 5
  • 6. Salient features of Robbins definition: • Unlimited wants: Wants are unlimited in number and it is difficult to satisfy all those. • Scarce resources: The resources are said to be scarce when they are limited in supply with relation to the total demand. Economic problems arise only because of scarce resources. • Alternative uses: A commodity or goods can be put into different alternative uses. • Choice: of all the alternative uses, decision has to be made to satisfy the unlimited wants with the available scarce resources. 6
  • 7. Types of Economics 1. Micro-Economics: It is the microscopic view of the economy, wherein the economic activity of small individual units and their decisions related to production, exchange, distribution and consumption are studied so as to know how prices and quantities of goods and wage rate of the workers are determined. These small individual units, i.e. person, household, firm, industry, government, etc. when taken together, make up the entire economy. Microeconomics discusses the choices made by the people in an economy and the factors which influence those choices. Further, it studies, how the decisions of the economic agents regulate the utilization and distribution of scarce resources and how these decisions influences the demand and supply of the commodity, which determines its price. 7
  • 8. SUBJECT MATTER OF MICROECONOMICS • Consumer Behavior • Product Pricing • Factor Pricing • Production Costs • Demand • Supply • Location of Industry • Behavior of Firms • Economic condition of people of the economy. • Market Equilibrium • Market Structure • Non-Competitive Market The primary aim of the microeconomic analysis is reaching the state of equilibrium, from the perspective of individual economic units. 8
  • 9. 2. Macro-Economics  The word “Macro” is derived from Greek word “Makros”, “large or very big”. The Macro economics studies the economy as a single unit. It does not deal with Individual units. It deals with the aggregates ‘or’ totals and averages. Eg: Total national income, total employment of the nation, overall output of a business organisation, total investment and aggregate consumption. Macro economics is concerned with such variables as a aggregate volume of output of a economy with the extend to this resources are employed with the size of the national Income and with the general price level. 9
  • 10. The Macro economics analyzes some problems of the economy ● Level of output and employment ● Fluctuations in level of output, employment and National Income ● Changes in the general price level ● Economic growth and economic development ● Theories of distribution Significance of Macro economics: ● Understanding the working of an economy ● Formulating policies ● Prepare the economics plans ● Take the remedial measures of trade cycles & Inflation 10
  • 11. GDP vs. GNP: An Overview Gross domestic product (GDP) is the value of a nation's finished domestic goods and services during a specific time period. gross national product (GNP), is the value of all finished goods and services owned by a country's residents over a period of time. Both GDP and GNP are most commonly used measures of a country's economy, both of which represent the total market value of all goods and services produced over a defined period. There are differences between how each one defines the scope of the economy. While GDP limits its interpretation of the economy to the geographical borders of the country, GNP extends it to include the net overseas economic activities performed by its nationals. 11
  • 12. Subject Matter of Economics In economics, a want is something that is desired. Want is the starting point of economic activity. Wants leads to efforts. An effort leads to satisfaction. This is the subject matter of economics. This subject matter of economics is divided into four parts. They are called economic activities. 1. Production 2. Exchange 3. Distribution 4. Consumption 12
  • 13. 1.Production: In economics, Production involves the creation of goods and services by using resources. It is a process to change the raw materials into final/finished goods. It is nothing but creation of utility. To produce anything, so many factors are essential. All these factors are classified into four categories. They are: ● Land ● Labor ● Capital ● Organization 13
  • 14. 2.Exchange: It means change of the goods from one person to another person. Once upon a time goods are exchanged for goods. It is called “Barter system”. To overcome the Inconveniences in the barter system, currency was invented. Now the goods are exchanged for money. Price is essential for the exchange of goods for money. 3. Distribution: Distribution means sharing of the income among the factors of production. The total income which is generated by selling of these goods and services in the market must be distributed among the factors of production in the form of rent, wages, interest and profits. 4. Consumption: It is an act to use the goods or service to satisfy the wants. Whenever we make use of any commodity or service for the satisfaction of our wants, the act is called consumption. 14
  • 15. UTILITY (value in use) The capacity of a commodity to satisfy human wants is known as its Utility. Utility is a measure of satisfaction an individual gets from the consumption of the commodities. In other words, it is a measurement of usefulness that a consumer obtains from any good. A utility is a measure of how much one enjoys a movie, favourite food, or other goods. It varies with the amount of desire. Utility of an article is not inherent in a commodity, it is the relationship existing between the consumer and commodity. Utility of a product is not fixed and varies according to the urgency of the human wants that it satisfies. Eg: Water, AC’s in summer & winter, etc.
  • 16. Characteristics of utility: ● Utility is a subjective concept: It is a psychological concept. It is the mental assessment of a commodity. So utility differs from person to person because of difference in taste, preferences, likes and dislikes of a person. E.g., chalks have more utility to a teacher than a student. ● Utility is a relative term: It is related to time and place. With change in time and place, utility of the same commodity changes. Cold drinks have more utility during summer than winter. Woolen clothes have more utility in Kashmir than Jaipur. ● Utility depends on the intensity of want: More urgent or intense the want, more will be the utility. E.g. Books have more utility to students just before the exams.
  • 17. Characteristics of utility Contd... ● Utility differs from usefulness: Utility indicates the power of a good to satisfy human wants irrespective of whether it is good or bad or harmful. While usefulness means that the commodity is beneficial or desirable. A commodity may have utility but may not be useful. E.g., cigarette is injurious to health, it is not useful but it has utility to a smoker. ● Utility cannot be measured: Utility is psychological and subjective. It is intangible. So it cannot be measured numerically. It can only be expressed ordinally or cardinally. Eg 1: first slice of bread will have very high utility for a very hungry person than the 2nd slice. (ordinally)- Ranking or preference or comparision Eg 2: Consuming first slice of bread is giving 20 utils, then consuming second slice of bread is giving 15 utils. (cardinally)- satisfaction levels in terms of some scalable numbers. ● Utility differs from satisfaction: Utility and satisfaction are related but there is a difference. Utility is expected satisfaction and is measured before the use of commodity while satisfaction is actual realisation which comes after consumption.
  • 18. VALUE • It is the power of a commodity to command other commodities in its exchange. • Value express the relationship or ratio between two commodities and depends like utility upon external circumstances and it is not determined by internal characteristics. • An article possessing utility may or may not have value but no article can have value unless it possess utility. • To possess value in exchange, a commodity must be only in use or possess utility, but also it must be limited in supply. • The more the supply is limited, the greater is the value. 18
  • 19. 19 Value Measured as Price (value expressed in terms of money) Measured in terms of Wealth Product should have utility/consumption by consumers Product availability should have scarcity, thereby its value increase Product should be in position to be transferred as per the owner’s choice Value of a product exists, if it can be utilized to get another product in exchange…… Eg: Money/Gold/Assets has more value than most of the manufacturing products, as they are capable of generating another product of our choice of same value in exchange. Learning outcome: Define utility and time value of economic goods. [L1]
  • 20. WEALTH • Wealth is synonymous with economic goods. • Wealth consists of all those commodities which are exchangeable. Attributes of Wealth: 1. Utility: An article can have value only if it is capable of satisfying some human want, i.e.; if it has utility and without which no article can become wealth. 2. Scarcity: It must be scarce in relation to demand as no article can have value if it is in excess of demand. 3. Transferability: It must be transferrable as none would demand a commodity of which he can not be owner. But it is not to confused with portability. • Thus the term wealth includes not only those material goods which are transferrable and external (eg: buildings, machinery, etc.), but also non material goods which are external to men and are transferrable. (eg: good will of the business, copyright of a book, etc.) 20
  • 21. Classification of wealth Personal or Private wealth: It is the wealth which belongs to certain person. It includes all those economic goods which belongs to him and which he can sell. Eg: The debts which an individual owes to the others may be regarded as his negative wealth and they must be subtracted from his good possessions to arrive at his true net wealth. Collective or communal wealth: It is the wealth owned by municipal boards or provincial and central governments. Eg: Public buildings, public parks, roads, harbours, etc. Municipal government bodies represents the community and their wealth may be regarded as the wealth collectively owned by the citizens. National wealth: It is still wider and it includes: a) Personal wealth of all citizens of country. b) Collective wealth of the nation. c) Natural advantages possessed by a country. Eg: Geographical position, climatic conditions, mineral resources, etc. d) Non-material elements like characteristics of members of the nation and reputation of the country. Cosmopolitan or International wealth: It includes the wealth belongs to all the nations of world plus the wealth shared by all of them in common. Eg: Oceans, scientific knowledge, mechanical and atomic inventions, etc: 21
  • 22. WANTS • Want is the desire, ability and willingness to consume a product. Essentials of a want: • There ought to be desire for an article. • There ought be the ability to satisfy it or in other words, the possession of the means of its satisfaction. • There must be a willingness of spare the means for the purpose. When desire is backed by ability and willingness to satisfy, it is called effective desire or want. Circle of wants and activities: Wants and economic are very closely related and infact, wants are the real motive force which sets the entire economic mechanism into motion. 22
  • 23. CHARACTERISTICS OF WANTS: • Wants in general are unlimited. • Each particular want is capable of complete satisfaction. • Wants vary in intensities. • Wants are competitive. • Wants are recurrent. • Some wants are compulsory. • Present wants are more important than future wants knowledge increases wants. • Wants are determined by social standards of tastes and is particularly true for wants for clothing, shelter and amusements, etc. 23
  • 24. Classification of Wants 24 Wants Preliminary wants Secondary wants Physiological needs (Necessaries for existence) Manipulative skills (Necessaries for efficiency) Social/convective needs (Necessaries for social being) Comforts (Necessaries for pleasure) Luxury (Necessaries for great pleasure) (1) Necessaries: Necessaries are those wants which are very important and if they remain unsatisfied, more pain is caused and satisfaction is necessary for the preservation of life, efficiency or social prestige.
  • 25. Necessaries for existence: • The articles which are just necessary for the preservation of life are known as necessaries for existence. Eg: food, clothing and shelter, without which life can’t be preserved. • These are not the same in all the countries, climates and all the time to time. Necessaries for efficiency: • The articles which are necessary for the preservation of one’s efficiency in the occupation he is engaged in. • He has consume certain things over and above the bare necessaries of existence, which are known as necessaries for efficiency. Eg: well-balanced food, good clothing’s, and furniture, airy, well-ventilated house for shelter, good children’s education, medical treatments, etc. Conventional necessaries: • These are consumed for social convention and prestige because man as a member of society has to follow certain set of conventions and traditions to avoid a bad name and ex-communication. Eg: Pan, tobacco, alcohol, etc. 25
  • 26. (2) Comforts: The consumption of these articles affords appreciable pleasure and also increases consumer’s efficiency slightly, while their neither non consumption causes much pain nor decreases actual efficiency are known as comforts and are necessary for decent living. Eg: Cosmetics, Good shoes and branded cloths, etc. (3) Luxuries: These are the articles whose consumption affords very great pleasure, but does not contribute to our efficiency and whose non consumption neither causes any pain nor decreases our efficiency. Eg: Duplex houses or villas, costly cars, etc.  There are certain articles of luxury like wine which gives us only fleeting pleasure but decreases our efficiency quite considerably and are known as extravagancies.  Learning outcome: Distinguish between necessities, comforts and luxuries. [L2]  Session quiz: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1ZRpdbMnrMad6gzEO8DtETo8ZkwpP4blm- toqkyfgdFI/edit?usp=sharing 26
  • 27. Theory of Consumption Engel’s Law of consumption: Categories families (i) The labour class (ii) The middle class (iii) The well-to-do class Items of expenditure: (i) Food (ii) Clothing (iii) Lodging (iv) Heat, Light & Fuel (v) Education, Health, Servants & Miscllaneous, etc. 27 Items of expenditure Percentage of its income spent by Labour class Middle class Well-to-do-class Food 60 55 50 Clothing 18 18 18 Lodging 12 12 12 Heat, Light & Fuel 5 5 5 Education, Health, Servants & Miscellaneous, etc. 5 10 15 Total 100 100 100
  • 28. Theory of Consumption Assumptions:  Range of products available  Prices of all products  Capacity of products to satisfy  Income Utility - The benefit or satisfaction that a person gets from the consumption of a good or service. Utility Analysis: Numerical score represents the satisfaction. Eg: (i) buying 3 copies of books gives more happiness than buying a shirt. (ii) Comparison between two food items A&B, A>B OR B>A, Relationship between two goods. Utility Function: U= F(X, Y) Total Utility= U(X) + U (Y) 28
  • 29. Utility Measurement Basis for comparison Cardinal Ordinal 1. Meaning Expressed numerically (Utils) Can’t be expressed numerically, can do ranking or comparison 2. Approach Quantitative Qualitative 3. Realistic Less More 4. Analysis Marginal Utility Analysis Indifference curve analysis 5. Promoted by Classical & Neo-Classical Economics Modern Economics 29 Eg 1: Food in three restaurants Total satisfaction: 1- 10 Utils, 2- 12-Utils, 3- 18 Utils---- cardinal Total satisfaction: 3-2-1----- Ordinal Eg 2: Goods Utils (Cardinal) Rank order (Ordinal) X1 14 2nd X2 03 5th X3 10 3rd X4 08 4th X5 17 1st
  • 30. TOTAL UTILITY • It is the total utility of a consumer derives from the consumption of all the utils of a good or a combination of goods over a given consumption period. MARGINAL UTILITY • It refers to the additional utility derived from consumption of an additional unit. • Marginal Utility is the slope of the total utility curve. • MU= (Change in TU)/ Change in Q 30
  • 31. 31 Theory of Consumption • A household’s consumption choices are determined by • Budget constraint • Preferences. 1. Law of Diminishing Marginal utility: States that “The marginal utility derived from every additional unit increase in the quantity of a good consumed goes on decreasing, while other things remains the same. Conditions: (1) The unit must of consumption (nature, size & quality) must be standard one. (2) Consumption must be continuous i.e.; zero time interval between two levels of consumption. (3) The tastes & preferences of the consumer should remain unchanged during the course of consumption. (4) The goods should be normal & should not be addicted in nature. (5) Prices of related goods. Eg: (1) Consumption of coffee or tea (2) Watching a movie (3) Reading a book
  • 32. QUANTITY TOTAL UTILITY MARGINAL UTILITY 1 20 --- 2 35 15 3 47 12 4 55 8 5 55 0 6 48 -7 32 Eg: Consumption of No” of sweets  Exceptions of this Law: Any violation of the factors like Taste, preference, price, time interval, quality, quantity, etc violates this law.  E.g: Consumption of water by a thirsty person increases his marginal utility for every additional unit, if he is been given water in drop by drop to drink rather than with a jug of water.  E.g: A cricket batsman gets more marginal satisfaction when he obtains last runs when he is near to his half-centaury or centaury.  Note: (1) This law describes about consumption pattern of the consumer. (2) It forms basis for many decisions related to production, pricing & investment.
  • 33. 2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility The idea of equi-marginal principle was first mentioned by H.H.Gossen (1810-1858) of Germany. Hence it is called Gossen's second Law. The law of equi-marginal utility explains the behaviour of a consumer when he consumers more than one commodity. Wants are unlimited but the income which is available to the consumers to satisfy all his wants is limited. This law explains how the consumer spends his limited income on various commodities to get maximum satisfaction. • Every consumer allocates his income equally to all the product he requires for his wants, so Equi-Marginal Utility states that, “The consumer will be in a state of equilibrium, when he gets marginal utility from the products bought are equal”. • (Marginal utility of product X/ Price of X) = (Marginal utility of product Y/ Price of Y) Symbolically 𝑀𝑈𝑥 𝑃𝑥 = 𝑀𝑈𝑦 𝑃𝑦 = 𝑀𝑈𝑚 33
  • 34. 2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility Marginal utility of money expenditure Marginal utility of goods X and Y Px=Rs 5 and Py=Rs 4 then Suppose the marginal utility of money is constant and it is 5 units then the total expenditure will be Rs (5x6+5x4) = Rs 50/- on both commodities. 34 Units Marginal Utility obtained from x and y 𝑀𝑈𝑥 𝑀𝑈𝑦 1 50 36 2 45 32 3 40 28 4 35 24 5 30 20 6 25 16 7 20 12 8 15 8 Units 𝑀𝑈𝑥 𝑃𝑥 𝑀𝑈𝑦 𝑃𝒚 1 10 9 2 9 8 3 8 7 4 7 6 5 6 5 6 5 4 7 4 3 8 3 2
  • 35. 2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility Limitations of the Law The law of equi-marginal utility bristles with the following difficulties. 1. Indivisibility of Goods The theory is weakened by the fact that many commodities like a car, a house etc. are indivisible. In the case of indivisible goods, the law is not applicable. 2. The Marginal Utility of Money is Not Constant The theory is based on the assumption that the marginal utility of money is constant. But that is not really so. 3. The Measurement of Utility is not Possible Marshall states that the price a consumer is willing to pay for a commodity is equal to its marginal utility. But modern economists argue that, if two persons are paying an equal price for given commodity, it does not mean that both are getting the same level of utility. Thus utility is a subjective concept, which cannot be measured, in quantitative terms. 35
  • 36. 2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility Limitations of the Law The law of equi-marginal utility bristles with the following difficulties. 4. Utilities are Interdependent This law assumes that commodities are independent and therefore their marginal utilities are also independent. But in real life commodities are either substitutes or complements. Their utilities are therefore interdependent. 5. Indefinite Budget Period According to Prof. K.E. Boulding, indefinite budget period is another difficulty in the law. Normally the budget period is assumed to be a year. But there are certain commodities which are available in several succeeding accounting periods. It is difficult to calculate marginal utility for such commodities. 36
  • 37. 2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility Importance According to Marshall, 'the applications of this principle extend over almost every field of economic activity.’ 1.It applies to consumption Every rational human being wants to get maximum satisfaction with his limited means. The consumer arranges his expenditure in such a way that, 𝑀𝑈𝑥 𝑃𝑥 = 𝑀𝑈𝑦 𝑃𝑦 = 𝑀𝑈𝑧 𝑃𝑧 = 𝑀𝑈𝑟 𝑃𝑟 so that he will get maximum satisfaction. 2. It applies to production The aim of the producer is to get maximum output with least-cost, so that his profit will be maximum. 3. Distribution of Earnings Between Savings and Consumption According to Marshall, a prudent person will endeavor to distribute his resources between his present needs and future needs in such a way that the marginal utility of the last rupee put in savings is equal to the marginal utility of the last rupee spent on consumption. 37
  • 38. 2. Law of Equi-Marginal Utility Importance According to Marshall, 'the applications of this principle extend over almost every field of economic activity.’ 4. It applies to distribution The general theory of distribution involves the principle of substitution. In distribution, the rewards to the various factors of production, that is their relative shares, are determined by the principle of equi-marginal utility. 5. It Applies to Public Finance The revenue should be distributed in such a way that the last unit of expenditure on various programmes brings equal welfare, so that social welfare is maximised. 6. Expenditure of Time A person should spend his limited time among alternative uses such as reading; studying and gardening, in such a way that the marginal utility from all these uses are equal. 38
  • 39. 3. Consumer Surplus: • Consumer will be prepared to buy a product at its original price and gets maximum marginal utility. If, he pays more or less to the actual price of the product, then consumer marginal utility either goes down or up, respectively.  Consumer Surplus is a state of situation, where “the difference between the price that consumer is prepared to pay and the price that he is exactly paying”.  In other words, “It is the value a consumer gets from a product without paying for it”.  The concept of consumer’s surplus is very significant for the monopolist or the trader to assess where the consumer is prepared to pay a higher price and at what point exactly he is paying a low price.  In such cases, the trader can marginally increases the price without loosing the demand. 39
  • 40. 4. The Indifference Curves: It states that, “the indifference to a particular combination of goods or services, as every combination yields him the same marginal utility. The said curve is called as “Indifference Curve”. Therefore, an indifference curve is the locus of all combinations of commodities from which the consumer derives the same level of satisfaction. It is also called “Iso-Utility Curve” or” Equal Satisfaction Curve”. Indifference Curve is illustrated in diagram, X axis represents apple and Y axis represents orange. 40
  • 41. 4. The Indifference Curves: An Indifference Map One can draw several indifference curves each representing an indifference schedule. Hence, an Indifference Map is a family or collection or set of indifference curves corresponding to different levels of satisfaction. The Indifference Map is illustrated in Diagram. Marginal Rate of Substitution The marginal rate of substitution of x for y (MRSxy) is defined as the maximum amount of y the consumer is willing to give up for getting an additional unit of x and still remaining on the same indifference curve. 41 the indifference Curves IC1,IC2 and IC3 represent the Indifference Map, Upper IC representing higher level of satisfaction compared to lower IC
  • 42. 4. The Indifference Curves: • Assumptions:  The consumer behaves rationally to maximise his satisfaction.  The prices and incomes of the consumer are defined for analysis.  The tastes & preferences of the consumer do not change during the analysis Properties of Indifference Curves:  It slopes downwards from left to right.  It is convex to the origin. (marginal rate of substitution)  No two indifference curves are not intersected to each other. 42
  • 43. 5. Consumer equilibrium:  It is a situation in which “a consumer has allocated his/her income in the way that, given the prices of goods and services, maximizes his/her total utility”.  In other words, “It is a situation where consumer gets maximum satisfaction with his limited budget. This happens at a point of income, where the budget line is tangential to the indifference curves. Slope of budget line= (Income/Px)/ (Income/Py) = Py/Px 43 The consumer reaches equilibrium at the point where the budget line is tangent on the indifference curve. T is the point of equilibrium as budget line AB is tangent on indifference curve