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THEORY OF CONSUMPTION
A STUDY
20/02/15
1
MEANING
• Consumption is a broader term and it is the essence of economics.
Economists generally consider consumption to be the final purpose of
economic activity, hence consumption per person is a central measure of
an economy’s productive success.
• Consumption in economics means utilization of a product or a commodity
and to derive benefits from the same. The utility of a product will help us
in satisfying our needs and hence it is consumption.
• Consumption can be defined in different ways, but is usually best
described as the final purchase of goods and services by individuals. The
purchase of a new pair of shoes, a burger at the fast food restaurant, or
the service of getting your house cleaned are all examples of
consumption.
2
Contd…
• It is also often referred to as consumer spending. Many topics in
economics explore how the income of families and individuals
affects consumption and spending habits.
• Consumption is distinct from consumption expenditure, which is the
purchase of goods and services for use by households.
Consumption differs from consumption expenditure primarily
because durable goods, such as automobiles, computers, mobiles
etc. generate an expenditure mainly in the period when they are
purchased, but they generate “consumption services” (for example,
an automobile provides transportation services) until they are
replaced or scrapped. 3
FRAMEWORK
• It deals with the household consumption and household budget.
• Basis of household expenditure and income
• Basis for the study of aggregate demand and supply (macro economics)
• It tries to focus on root level problems of poverty and unemployment.
• Study of consumption behavior helps in studying household functions.
• It is a test for other theories like production, price, market structure and
retail competition of firms.
• It is based on common human rational
• Consumers choice, preference and further utility from a product is
interrelated with each other.
4
DETERMINANTS OF
CONSUMPTION
5
• INCOME- current real income is the most important determinant of
consumption in the short run. We spend according to the income coming
in. This is the basis for most consumption theory. The term 'real' refers to
how our income is affected by inflation, or the natural rise in prices of
goods and services. Inflation and disposable income are interrelated with
each other.
• PRICES - if prices are higher, then a person's total level of consumption
will be lower, because consuming will use up a higher percentage of a
person's income.
• TAXES - as taxes on goods and services rise, people may not be able to
afford as much as they used to and as a result will consume less. The
income tax rates will also affect our ability and decision to consume.
Higher tax rates lead to less disposable income left.
6
• SAVING - people generally have two things they can do with their money.
They can save or they can spend. The more money people save, the less
they have to consume in the short-run.
• CONSUMER PREFERENCES- consumer choice, taste and preferences
also affects our consumption pattern. Sudden panic, rumours also affects
our consumption pattern.
• CONSUMER CONFIDENCE - if people are worried about the economy or
their own future income, they may delay making purchases in order to
provide some safety and extra cash for future expenses. They will save or
delay their consumption until they feel better about what lies ahead.
7
• SOCIAL ARRANGEMENTS- Distribution of income by business units,
regional framework, social events and behavioural practices adopted by
units also affects our arrangement of consumption.
• GOVERNMENT POLICIES- Various policies can also affect our
consumption pattern.
• OTHERS- age, family status, sex, family size etc. can also determine
consumption.
8
CONSUMPTION FUNCTION
“ Consumption is the sole end and purpose of all
production”
ADAM SMITH
It is a functional relationship between two aggregates-
consumption and income. As income increases so is the
consumption level.
The consumption function is also derived by setting a
relationship between various variables/ determinants of
consumption.
C = a+ b (Y-T) 9
EXAMPLE
S.NO DISPOSAB
LE
INCOME IN
Rs.
CONSUMPTI
ON IN Rs.
APC (in%) SAVINGS
1 100 40 40% 60
2 180 80 44.44% 100
3 250 160 64% 90
4 400 210 52.5% 190
5 750 360 48% 390
10
PROPERTIES OF CONSUMPTION FUNCTION
 Average propensity to consume (APC)
 Expressed in percentage or in ratio with income
 The total APC starts declining as income increases
 The average propensity to save increases
 APS= 1- APC
 The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is
MPC= ∆C/∆Y
 The economic significance of MPC lies in filling the gap between
income and consumption through planned investment to maintain a
desired level of income.
11
DIVISION
THEORY OF
CONSUMPTION
UTILITY
ANALYSIS
CARDINAL
APPROACH
ORDINAL
APPROACH
12
UTILITY ANALYSIS
A STUDY
24/02/15
13
MEANING
• It is the ultimate advantage a person receives from consuming a commodity
• Utility is an observable quantity which have a relative value. Total utility is
the aggregate sum of satisfaction or benefit that an individual gains from
consuming a given amount of goods or services in an economy. Usually,
the more the person consumes, the larger his or her total utility will be.
Marginal utility is the additional satisfaction, or amount of utility, gained
from each extra unit of consumption.
• Although total utility usually increases as more of a good is consumed,
marginal utility usually decreases with each additional increase in the
consumption of a good. This decrease demonstrates the law of diminishing
marginal utility. In other words, total utility will increase at a slower pace as
an individual increases the quantity consumed.
• Economist turn to consumer demand theory to understand utility.
14
VARIOUS UTILITIES
15
APPROACHES
UTILITY ANALYSIS
Cardinal
analysis
Ordinal
analysis
 Law of
diminishing
marginal utility
 Law of equi-
marginal theory
 Propounded:
Marshall, Pigou,
Robertson
 Measurable
 Law of
indifference
curve
 Propounded by
J.R. Hicks, R.G.D
Allen
 Non- measurable
but comparable 16
CARDINAL UTILITY ANALYSIS
 It is one of the methodologies to measure the consumer satisfaction.
Cardinal utility states that the satisfaction the consumer derives by consuming
goods and services can be measured with numbers. Cardinal utility is measured in
terms of ‘utils’ (the units on a scale of utility or satisfaction) on a device named
utilometer.
According to cardinal utility the goods and services that are able to derive a higher
level of satisfaction to the customer will be assigned higher scale rate and goods
that result in a lower level of satisfaction will be assigned lower scale rate. Cardinal
utility is a quantitative method that is used to measure consumption satisfaction.
It is assumed that the level of satisfaction will be measured by the income spent
on consumption of certain goods and services.
 EXAMPLE; A fruit, pulses, vegetables will have measurable utility which will
determine the satisfaction level of the consumers.
17
EXPLANATION OF THE THEORY
 It is an oldest theory which provides an explanation of
consumer demand for a product.
It stresses on law of demand which establishes an inverse
relationship between price and quantity demanded of a
product.
The demand for a product is affected by various determinants,
which affects the consumption and in return affects the level of
utility (satisfaction)
Developed by Marshall hence it is neo-classical in nature and
is subjected to severe criticisms.
It is a quantitative measure (based on cardinal scales).
It is also based on certain assumptions. 18
ASSUMPTIONS
• The consumer is assumed to be rational. He tries to maximize his total utility
under the income constraint. A consumer tries o get maximum satisfaction
from a set up income slab.
• The utility of each commodity is measurable. Utility is cardinal concept. The
most convenient measure is money. Thus utility can be measured
quantitatively in monetary units or cardinal units.
• The utility derived from commodities are measured in terms of money. So,
money is a unit of measurement in cardinal approach. Hence, marginal utility
of money should be constant.
• If the stock of commodities increases with the consumer, each additional
stock or unit of the commodity gives him less and less satisfaction. It means
utility increases at a decreasing rate.
• Utility from a commodity remains static. It is not affected by the consumption
of other commodities.
19
RATIONALITY MEASURABILITY
CONSTANCY INDIVIDUAL
UTILITIES
INDEPENDENCE
20
LAW OF DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY
A STUDY
25/02/15
21
LAW OF DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY
“ THE ADDITIONAL BENEFIT WHICH A PERSON DERIVES FROM A GIVEN
INCREASE OF HIS STOCK OF A THING DIMINISHES WITH EVERY
INCREASE IN THE STOCK THAT HE ALREADY HAS”
MARSHALL
MEANING
The law states that the marginal utility of a good or service diminishes as
an individual consumes more units of a same good or service.
A law states that as a person increases consumption of a product - while
keeping consumption of other products constant - there is a decline in the
marginal utility that person derives from consuming each additional unit
of that product.
22
DESCRIPTION
• An individual's wants are unlimited in number yet each individual's want is
satiable. Because of this, the more we have a commodity, the less we want to
have more of it.
• This law state that as the amount consumed of a commodity increases, the
utility derived by the consumer from the additional units, i.e. The marginal
utility goes on decreasing.
• It is based on general psychological, physical and emotional satisfaction of a
human being. The moving averages in satisfaction will be related to the
marginal satisfaction of the human being.
• Example: consumption of pizza will give us highest utility at the first bite but
consequently the utility level will come down with further bites. Same with the
use of services of like banking etc. Induction of employees in the
organization. Use of their services etc. 23
ASSUMPTIONS
• All the units of a commodity must be homogeneous.
• The unit of the good must be standard
• There should be no change in taste, preferences or fashion
during the process of consumption
• There must be continuity in consumption
• There should be no change in the price of the substitute goods
• Consumer is rational
• Utilities of various products are interrelated with each other
24
EXPLANATION
• As more and more quantity of a commodity is consumed the intensity of
desire decreases and also the utility derived from the additional unit.
• Let’s take an example of coco-cola
No. of bottles/ cans Total utility Marginal utility
1 100 utils 100
2 140 utils 40
3 150 utils 10
4 135 utils -15 25
APPLICATIONS
DETERMINATION OF PRICES
CONCEPT OF ‘PARADOX OF WEALTH’ IS RESOLVED (WATER AND
DIAMOND)
LAW OF DEMAND
ECONOMIC POLICIES, FISCAL POLICIES, ECONOMIC PROBLEMS ETC.
THEORY OF SOCIAL WELFARE
 REGIONAL GROWTH
FINANCIAL STABILITY AND GROWTH
26
CRITICISM/ CRITICAL EVALUATION
Measurability of utility is unrealistic
More subjective
Individual utility of goods is not possible
Assumption of constancy is not possible
The concept of ‘human greed’ cannot be overlooked
Intoxicants
Giffen paradox
27
LAW OF EQUI-MARGINAL UTILITY
26/02/15
28
MEANING
The law states that the consumer will distribute his money income
between the goods in such a way that the utility derived from the
last rupee spent on each good is equal.
This principle states that to get maximum utility from the
expenditure of his limited income, the consumer purchases such
amount of each commodity that the last unit of money spent on
each of them affords him the same marginal utility.
A person is given an amount of money, he will spend it in such a
way where is satisfaction is maximum and marginal utility will
match up in proportion with the income spent. 29
EXPLANATION
• Most urgent wants needs to be satisfied first as resources are
limited and scarce.
• Limited supply of money or income
• Commodities which satisfies us the most and least will have
different marginal utilities. Hence, a consumer will have to come at
an equi level to get maximum satisfaction
• Also known as Law of Substitution, Law of Marginal Satisfaction or
Gossen’s second law (as propounded by H. H. Gossen)
• We obtain maximum satisfaction when we equalize marginal
utilities by substituting some units of the more useful for the less
useful commodity. 30
ASSUMPTIONS
The marginal utilities of the different commodities are
independent of each other and diminish with more and
more purchases
Limited income to spend
Measurability is cardinal
Marginal utility of money remains constant as the
consumer purchases more or less of a commodity
The goods are neither complements nor substitutes
31
EXAMPLE
Units of money (in Rs.) Marginal utility of
oranges (in utils)
Marginal utility of grapes
(in utils)
50 30 35
60 28 32
70 22 28
80 18 23
90 15 18 32
DIAGRAMMATIC REPRESENTATION
33
GENERALIZATION
• THE MARGINAL UTILITY OF EXPENDITURE OF THE LAST UNIT OF MONEY ON
ALL OF THEM MUST BE SAME.
• IT IS ALSO KNOWN AS WEIGHTED MARGINAL UTILITY
MARGINAL UTILITY OF A = MARGINAL UTILITY OF B = MARGINAL UTILITY
OF C
PRICE OF A PRICE OF B PRICE OF C
• THE ECONOMIC MEANING OF THIS EQUATION MEANS THAT UTILITY OF
COMMODITY A MUST BE EQUAL FOR OTHER COMMODITY WHICH A CONSUMER
IS PURCHASING. HENCE,
MARGINAL UTILITY OF A = PRICE OF A
MARGINAL UTILITY OF B PRICE OF B 34
IMPORTANCE
• ALLOCATION OF SCARCE RESOURCES
• FACTORS OF PRODUCTION OR PRODUCTION THEORY
OF SUBSTITUTES PRODUCT
• THEORY OF DISTRIBUTION
• SAVINGS
• BALANCE OF CONSUMPTION, INCOME AND PRICE
• MULTIPLE GAINS
• VALID FOR REAL WORLD
35
LIMITATIONS
• ROLE OF TASTE AND PREFERENCE, FASHION AND
CUSTOMS
• ALL GOODS ARE NOT DIVISIBLE ALWAYS
(COMPLEMENTARY GOODS)
• SCARCITY OF SOME GOODS
• CONTINUOUS INCOME AND PRICES
• DURABLE GOODS
• UTILITY IS PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECT
36
INDIFFERENCE CURVE ANALYSIS
AN ORDINAL APPROACH
27/02/15
37
INTRODUCTION
• The theory is earlier propounded by classical theorist and
economist Edgeworth.
• Later on J. R. Hicks and R.G.D. Allen have criticized Marshall’s
cardinal approach theory. In 1939 hicks reproduced the
indifference curve theory in his book ‘ value and capital’
• It focusses on ordinal approach
• The utility is termed to be ‘psychic’ in nature and so is not
measurable
• The theory is consumer based or consumer centered. The
consumer can only decide what, how, when, where
• It can said be said to be judge mental theory 38
MEANING
This ordinal analysis starts with rejecting the idea that utility can be
cardinally measured. The consumer always acts logically and he will
make a choice over the various combinations of commodities.
The consumer can actually rank up the various combinations of
commodities according to their taste, preference, habits or choice.
It is supposed to be more realistic compared to Marshall’s law because
commodities of same nature are actually related with each other
rather than independent in nature.
‘That means a consumer will remain indifferent with various
combinations of products. Thus, an indifference curve is the locus of
all those points representing various combinations of two
commodities giving the same satisfaction to the consumer’
39
ASSUMPTIONS
• Rational consumer
• Assumption of consistency
• Preferences or indifferences of a consumer are transitive. Scale of
preference
• Concept of ordinal utility
• Diminishing marginal rate of substitution
• Scales of preferences is independent of the market prices
• Weak ordering
• Transitivity
• Continuity
• More is better
40
EXAMPLE
a
b
c
d
e
f
a combination can be a only
a+b
a+b+d
or e+d
and so on
41
AN INDIFFERENCE SCHEDULE
VARIOUS
COMBINATIONS
CANS OF COKE (IN
UNITS)
BURGERS (IN UNITS)
A 5 20
B 10 15
C 15 12
D 20 10
E 25 07
42
DIAGRAMMATIC REPRESENTATION
Y
20
BURGERS
15
10
IC
05
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 X
CANS OF COKE
43
PROPERTIES OF INDIFFERENCE CURVE
02/03/2015
44
‘PREFERENCE’ V/S ‘ INDIFFERENCE’
• Consumer behavior is sufficient enough to rank up the
preferences. Known as scale of preferences
• A consumer is able to mark up the various combinations
according to his preference but cannot exactly tell us ‘how
much he prefers’. Hence, he’s being indifferent.
• A consumer cannot tell us the ‘quantitative differences’
between various levels of satisfaction
• A consumer is capable enough to tell us which goods give
him greater, equal or less satisfaction
• Preference and indifferent relations are transitive 45
MARGINAL RATE OF SUBSTITUTION
• It states the rate at which the consumer is prepared to exchange
goods from A to B
• It focusses on the loss of one product to the another product’s
gain
• Marginal rate of substitution of A will diminish as more of good A
is substituted for good B
• E.G. It is quite possible that increase in price of Colgate will
motivate people to purchase more of pepsodent. If it continues
over a period of time, then the marginal rate of substitution of
Colgate will diminish as more and more people will purchase
Pepsodent.
46
PROPERTIES OF INDIFFERENCE CURVE
I. III.
II. IV.
INDIFFERENCE
CURVE SLOPE
DOWNWARD TO
THE RIGHT
INDIFFERENCE
CURVES ARE
CONVEX TO THE
ORIGIN
INDIFFERENCE
CURVES CANNOT
INTERSECT EACH
OTHER
A HIGHER INDIFFERENCE
CURVE REPRESENTS A
HIGHER LEVEL OF
SATISFACTION THAN A
LOWER INDIFFERENCE
CURVE
47
I. INDIFFERENCE CURVE SLOPE DOWNWARD
TO THE RIGHT
• This property implies on that an indifference curve has a negative
slope.
• This property is based on the assumption that if the amount of one
commodity is increased in one combination the amount of other
one will reduce.
• The commodities in one combination will give the same
satisfaction as of the combination of another one.
• This curve represents those combinations which give the same
amount of satisfaction to the consumer at a same level, hence,
making him indifferent between them.
48
ASSUMPTIONS/ REASONS
• The consumer prefers to have more of a commodity
• Other things given remains unchanged or constant
• A consumer being rational remains indifferent with various
combinations of goods
49
EXCEPTIONS OF PROPERTY NO.1
a) Indifference curve cannot be straight or horizontal : if a
consumer prefers larger amount of good x, then he will not
prefer the same amount of good y, but will prefer various
combinations of x series. E.G. Food(x) with various combinations
like cereals, pulses, sweets etc. And drinks(y) like water, juice,
cold drinks etc.
Y
A B C D E IC
0 X 50
EXCEPTIONS OF PROPERTY NO.1
b) Indifference curve cannot be vertically straight : if the amount of y
increases the amount of good x remains same. The combinations in good x
will not give the same amount satisfaction. i.e. increase in drinks (good y)
will lower down the satisfaction level of combinations of good x
y IC
d
c
b
a
0 M x
51
EXCEPTIONS OF PROPERTY NO. 1
c) The indifference curve cannot move upwards : a consumer being
rational and the two different products (x and y ) will not give him the same
satisfaction level. I. E. A consumer will take smaller portion of various
combination of two goods x and y and will get good satisfaction from both,
which itself held invalid with our indifference curve theory.
y
IC
d
c
b
a
0 x
52
II. INDIFFERENCE CURVES ARE CONVEX TO THE
ORIGIN
 The marginal rate of substitution between the commodities
diminishes as we move from left down to right. The consumer can
move from product to other one (substitution effect)
 It deals with the fact that consumer will have the same product in
large quantity rather than having variety of goods.
y y
c
concave b convex
a IC ii
ICi
0 IC x 0 x
53
A HIGHER INDIFFERENCE CURVE REPRESENTS A
HIGHER LEVEL OF SATISFACTION THAN A LOWER
INDIFFERENCE CURVE
• Higher the curve, higher the satisfaction levels. Shift from one curve to another
shows preferred combination of commodities, which will give us high
satisfaction.
y
Commodity (B)
B
IC ii
IC i
0 A1 A2 x
commodity (A)
54
INDIFFERENCE CURVES CANNOT
INTERSECT EACH OTHER
• Indifference curve can never meet or intersect so that only one
indifference curve can pass through any one point in the curve. One
combination of commodities can lie only on one indifference curve.
y
Good (B)
0 A B x
good (A)
55
CONSUMER SURPLUS
04/03/2015
56
MEANING
“ Excess of price which a consumer would be willing to pay rather than
go without a thing over that which he actually does pay is the economic
measure of this surplus satisfaction……it may be called as consumer
surplus”
Marshall
First formulated by Dupuit in 1844.
Greater the payment, highest the utility and highest the satisfaction
People get more satisfaction from goods rather than they actually pay
for them
57
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
• The total of utilities which a person gets from a good is given by the sum
of marginal utilities of the units of a good purchased and the total price
he actually pays is equal to the price per unit of the good multiplied by
the number of units of it purchased.
Consumer surplus = what a consumer is willing to pay – what he actually
pays
i.e.
Consumer Surplus = ∑ Marginal Utility- Amount spent
• Derived from diminishing marginal utility 58
EQUILIBRIUM LEVELS
• The consumer will be in equilibrium when marginal utility from a
commodity becomes equal to its given price.*
*The margin that a consumer is ready to pay is at par or equal level
when he actually pays the price
59
CONSUMER SURPLUS AND ITS VARIATIONS
In the context
of demand
curve
In the
context of
change in
price
60
In the context of change in price
Y Y
CS-D
P S P CS- P S
P1 T MU
MU
0 MQ X 0 MQ MQ1 X
In the context of demand curve
61

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Theory of consumption

  • 1. THEORY OF CONSUMPTION A STUDY 20/02/15 1
  • 2. MEANING • Consumption is a broader term and it is the essence of economics. Economists generally consider consumption to be the final purpose of economic activity, hence consumption per person is a central measure of an economy’s productive success. • Consumption in economics means utilization of a product or a commodity and to derive benefits from the same. The utility of a product will help us in satisfying our needs and hence it is consumption. • Consumption can be defined in different ways, but is usually best described as the final purchase of goods and services by individuals. The purchase of a new pair of shoes, a burger at the fast food restaurant, or the service of getting your house cleaned are all examples of consumption. 2
  • 3. Contd… • It is also often referred to as consumer spending. Many topics in economics explore how the income of families and individuals affects consumption and spending habits. • Consumption is distinct from consumption expenditure, which is the purchase of goods and services for use by households. Consumption differs from consumption expenditure primarily because durable goods, such as automobiles, computers, mobiles etc. generate an expenditure mainly in the period when they are purchased, but they generate “consumption services” (for example, an automobile provides transportation services) until they are replaced or scrapped. 3
  • 4. FRAMEWORK • It deals with the household consumption and household budget. • Basis of household expenditure and income • Basis for the study of aggregate demand and supply (macro economics) • It tries to focus on root level problems of poverty and unemployment. • Study of consumption behavior helps in studying household functions. • It is a test for other theories like production, price, market structure and retail competition of firms. • It is based on common human rational • Consumers choice, preference and further utility from a product is interrelated with each other. 4
  • 6. • INCOME- current real income is the most important determinant of consumption in the short run. We spend according to the income coming in. This is the basis for most consumption theory. The term 'real' refers to how our income is affected by inflation, or the natural rise in prices of goods and services. Inflation and disposable income are interrelated with each other. • PRICES - if prices are higher, then a person's total level of consumption will be lower, because consuming will use up a higher percentage of a person's income. • TAXES - as taxes on goods and services rise, people may not be able to afford as much as they used to and as a result will consume less. The income tax rates will also affect our ability and decision to consume. Higher tax rates lead to less disposable income left. 6
  • 7. • SAVING - people generally have two things they can do with their money. They can save or they can spend. The more money people save, the less they have to consume in the short-run. • CONSUMER PREFERENCES- consumer choice, taste and preferences also affects our consumption pattern. Sudden panic, rumours also affects our consumption pattern. • CONSUMER CONFIDENCE - if people are worried about the economy or their own future income, they may delay making purchases in order to provide some safety and extra cash for future expenses. They will save or delay their consumption until they feel better about what lies ahead. 7
  • 8. • SOCIAL ARRANGEMENTS- Distribution of income by business units, regional framework, social events and behavioural practices adopted by units also affects our arrangement of consumption. • GOVERNMENT POLICIES- Various policies can also affect our consumption pattern. • OTHERS- age, family status, sex, family size etc. can also determine consumption. 8
  • 9. CONSUMPTION FUNCTION “ Consumption is the sole end and purpose of all production” ADAM SMITH It is a functional relationship between two aggregates- consumption and income. As income increases so is the consumption level. The consumption function is also derived by setting a relationship between various variables/ determinants of consumption. C = a+ b (Y-T) 9
  • 10. EXAMPLE S.NO DISPOSAB LE INCOME IN Rs. CONSUMPTI ON IN Rs. APC (in%) SAVINGS 1 100 40 40% 60 2 180 80 44.44% 100 3 250 160 64% 90 4 400 210 52.5% 190 5 750 360 48% 390 10
  • 11. PROPERTIES OF CONSUMPTION FUNCTION  Average propensity to consume (APC)  Expressed in percentage or in ratio with income  The total APC starts declining as income increases  The average propensity to save increases  APS= 1- APC  The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is MPC= ∆C/∆Y  The economic significance of MPC lies in filling the gap between income and consumption through planned investment to maintain a desired level of income. 11
  • 14. MEANING • It is the ultimate advantage a person receives from consuming a commodity • Utility is an observable quantity which have a relative value. Total utility is the aggregate sum of satisfaction or benefit that an individual gains from consuming a given amount of goods or services in an economy. Usually, the more the person consumes, the larger his or her total utility will be. Marginal utility is the additional satisfaction, or amount of utility, gained from each extra unit of consumption. • Although total utility usually increases as more of a good is consumed, marginal utility usually decreases with each additional increase in the consumption of a good. This decrease demonstrates the law of diminishing marginal utility. In other words, total utility will increase at a slower pace as an individual increases the quantity consumed. • Economist turn to consumer demand theory to understand utility. 14
  • 16. APPROACHES UTILITY ANALYSIS Cardinal analysis Ordinal analysis  Law of diminishing marginal utility  Law of equi- marginal theory  Propounded: Marshall, Pigou, Robertson  Measurable  Law of indifference curve  Propounded by J.R. Hicks, R.G.D Allen  Non- measurable but comparable 16
  • 17. CARDINAL UTILITY ANALYSIS  It is one of the methodologies to measure the consumer satisfaction. Cardinal utility states that the satisfaction the consumer derives by consuming goods and services can be measured with numbers. Cardinal utility is measured in terms of ‘utils’ (the units on a scale of utility or satisfaction) on a device named utilometer. According to cardinal utility the goods and services that are able to derive a higher level of satisfaction to the customer will be assigned higher scale rate and goods that result in a lower level of satisfaction will be assigned lower scale rate. Cardinal utility is a quantitative method that is used to measure consumption satisfaction. It is assumed that the level of satisfaction will be measured by the income spent on consumption of certain goods and services.  EXAMPLE; A fruit, pulses, vegetables will have measurable utility which will determine the satisfaction level of the consumers. 17
  • 18. EXPLANATION OF THE THEORY  It is an oldest theory which provides an explanation of consumer demand for a product. It stresses on law of demand which establishes an inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded of a product. The demand for a product is affected by various determinants, which affects the consumption and in return affects the level of utility (satisfaction) Developed by Marshall hence it is neo-classical in nature and is subjected to severe criticisms. It is a quantitative measure (based on cardinal scales). It is also based on certain assumptions. 18
  • 19. ASSUMPTIONS • The consumer is assumed to be rational. He tries to maximize his total utility under the income constraint. A consumer tries o get maximum satisfaction from a set up income slab. • The utility of each commodity is measurable. Utility is cardinal concept. The most convenient measure is money. Thus utility can be measured quantitatively in monetary units or cardinal units. • The utility derived from commodities are measured in terms of money. So, money is a unit of measurement in cardinal approach. Hence, marginal utility of money should be constant. • If the stock of commodities increases with the consumer, each additional stock or unit of the commodity gives him less and less satisfaction. It means utility increases at a decreasing rate. • Utility from a commodity remains static. It is not affected by the consumption of other commodities. 19
  • 21. LAW OF DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY A STUDY 25/02/15 21
  • 22. LAW OF DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY “ THE ADDITIONAL BENEFIT WHICH A PERSON DERIVES FROM A GIVEN INCREASE OF HIS STOCK OF A THING DIMINISHES WITH EVERY INCREASE IN THE STOCK THAT HE ALREADY HAS” MARSHALL MEANING The law states that the marginal utility of a good or service diminishes as an individual consumes more units of a same good or service. A law states that as a person increases consumption of a product - while keeping consumption of other products constant - there is a decline in the marginal utility that person derives from consuming each additional unit of that product. 22
  • 23. DESCRIPTION • An individual's wants are unlimited in number yet each individual's want is satiable. Because of this, the more we have a commodity, the less we want to have more of it. • This law state that as the amount consumed of a commodity increases, the utility derived by the consumer from the additional units, i.e. The marginal utility goes on decreasing. • It is based on general psychological, physical and emotional satisfaction of a human being. The moving averages in satisfaction will be related to the marginal satisfaction of the human being. • Example: consumption of pizza will give us highest utility at the first bite but consequently the utility level will come down with further bites. Same with the use of services of like banking etc. Induction of employees in the organization. Use of their services etc. 23
  • 24. ASSUMPTIONS • All the units of a commodity must be homogeneous. • The unit of the good must be standard • There should be no change in taste, preferences or fashion during the process of consumption • There must be continuity in consumption • There should be no change in the price of the substitute goods • Consumer is rational • Utilities of various products are interrelated with each other 24
  • 25. EXPLANATION • As more and more quantity of a commodity is consumed the intensity of desire decreases and also the utility derived from the additional unit. • Let’s take an example of coco-cola No. of bottles/ cans Total utility Marginal utility 1 100 utils 100 2 140 utils 40 3 150 utils 10 4 135 utils -15 25
  • 26. APPLICATIONS DETERMINATION OF PRICES CONCEPT OF ‘PARADOX OF WEALTH’ IS RESOLVED (WATER AND DIAMOND) LAW OF DEMAND ECONOMIC POLICIES, FISCAL POLICIES, ECONOMIC PROBLEMS ETC. THEORY OF SOCIAL WELFARE  REGIONAL GROWTH FINANCIAL STABILITY AND GROWTH 26
  • 27. CRITICISM/ CRITICAL EVALUATION Measurability of utility is unrealistic More subjective Individual utility of goods is not possible Assumption of constancy is not possible The concept of ‘human greed’ cannot be overlooked Intoxicants Giffen paradox 27
  • 28. LAW OF EQUI-MARGINAL UTILITY 26/02/15 28
  • 29. MEANING The law states that the consumer will distribute his money income between the goods in such a way that the utility derived from the last rupee spent on each good is equal. This principle states that to get maximum utility from the expenditure of his limited income, the consumer purchases such amount of each commodity that the last unit of money spent on each of them affords him the same marginal utility. A person is given an amount of money, he will spend it in such a way where is satisfaction is maximum and marginal utility will match up in proportion with the income spent. 29
  • 30. EXPLANATION • Most urgent wants needs to be satisfied first as resources are limited and scarce. • Limited supply of money or income • Commodities which satisfies us the most and least will have different marginal utilities. Hence, a consumer will have to come at an equi level to get maximum satisfaction • Also known as Law of Substitution, Law of Marginal Satisfaction or Gossen’s second law (as propounded by H. H. Gossen) • We obtain maximum satisfaction when we equalize marginal utilities by substituting some units of the more useful for the less useful commodity. 30
  • 31. ASSUMPTIONS The marginal utilities of the different commodities are independent of each other and diminish with more and more purchases Limited income to spend Measurability is cardinal Marginal utility of money remains constant as the consumer purchases more or less of a commodity The goods are neither complements nor substitutes 31
  • 32. EXAMPLE Units of money (in Rs.) Marginal utility of oranges (in utils) Marginal utility of grapes (in utils) 50 30 35 60 28 32 70 22 28 80 18 23 90 15 18 32
  • 34. GENERALIZATION • THE MARGINAL UTILITY OF EXPENDITURE OF THE LAST UNIT OF MONEY ON ALL OF THEM MUST BE SAME. • IT IS ALSO KNOWN AS WEIGHTED MARGINAL UTILITY MARGINAL UTILITY OF A = MARGINAL UTILITY OF B = MARGINAL UTILITY OF C PRICE OF A PRICE OF B PRICE OF C • THE ECONOMIC MEANING OF THIS EQUATION MEANS THAT UTILITY OF COMMODITY A MUST BE EQUAL FOR OTHER COMMODITY WHICH A CONSUMER IS PURCHASING. HENCE, MARGINAL UTILITY OF A = PRICE OF A MARGINAL UTILITY OF B PRICE OF B 34
  • 35. IMPORTANCE • ALLOCATION OF SCARCE RESOURCES • FACTORS OF PRODUCTION OR PRODUCTION THEORY OF SUBSTITUTES PRODUCT • THEORY OF DISTRIBUTION • SAVINGS • BALANCE OF CONSUMPTION, INCOME AND PRICE • MULTIPLE GAINS • VALID FOR REAL WORLD 35
  • 36. LIMITATIONS • ROLE OF TASTE AND PREFERENCE, FASHION AND CUSTOMS • ALL GOODS ARE NOT DIVISIBLE ALWAYS (COMPLEMENTARY GOODS) • SCARCITY OF SOME GOODS • CONTINUOUS INCOME AND PRICES • DURABLE GOODS • UTILITY IS PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECT 36
  • 37. INDIFFERENCE CURVE ANALYSIS AN ORDINAL APPROACH 27/02/15 37
  • 38. INTRODUCTION • The theory is earlier propounded by classical theorist and economist Edgeworth. • Later on J. R. Hicks and R.G.D. Allen have criticized Marshall’s cardinal approach theory. In 1939 hicks reproduced the indifference curve theory in his book ‘ value and capital’ • It focusses on ordinal approach • The utility is termed to be ‘psychic’ in nature and so is not measurable • The theory is consumer based or consumer centered. The consumer can only decide what, how, when, where • It can said be said to be judge mental theory 38
  • 39. MEANING This ordinal analysis starts with rejecting the idea that utility can be cardinally measured. The consumer always acts logically and he will make a choice over the various combinations of commodities. The consumer can actually rank up the various combinations of commodities according to their taste, preference, habits or choice. It is supposed to be more realistic compared to Marshall’s law because commodities of same nature are actually related with each other rather than independent in nature. ‘That means a consumer will remain indifferent with various combinations of products. Thus, an indifference curve is the locus of all those points representing various combinations of two commodities giving the same satisfaction to the consumer’ 39
  • 40. ASSUMPTIONS • Rational consumer • Assumption of consistency • Preferences or indifferences of a consumer are transitive. Scale of preference • Concept of ordinal utility • Diminishing marginal rate of substitution • Scales of preferences is independent of the market prices • Weak ordering • Transitivity • Continuity • More is better 40
  • 41. EXAMPLE a b c d e f a combination can be a only a+b a+b+d or e+d and so on 41
  • 42. AN INDIFFERENCE SCHEDULE VARIOUS COMBINATIONS CANS OF COKE (IN UNITS) BURGERS (IN UNITS) A 5 20 B 10 15 C 15 12 D 20 10 E 25 07 42
  • 44. PROPERTIES OF INDIFFERENCE CURVE 02/03/2015 44
  • 45. ‘PREFERENCE’ V/S ‘ INDIFFERENCE’ • Consumer behavior is sufficient enough to rank up the preferences. Known as scale of preferences • A consumer is able to mark up the various combinations according to his preference but cannot exactly tell us ‘how much he prefers’. Hence, he’s being indifferent. • A consumer cannot tell us the ‘quantitative differences’ between various levels of satisfaction • A consumer is capable enough to tell us which goods give him greater, equal or less satisfaction • Preference and indifferent relations are transitive 45
  • 46. MARGINAL RATE OF SUBSTITUTION • It states the rate at which the consumer is prepared to exchange goods from A to B • It focusses on the loss of one product to the another product’s gain • Marginal rate of substitution of A will diminish as more of good A is substituted for good B • E.G. It is quite possible that increase in price of Colgate will motivate people to purchase more of pepsodent. If it continues over a period of time, then the marginal rate of substitution of Colgate will diminish as more and more people will purchase Pepsodent. 46
  • 47. PROPERTIES OF INDIFFERENCE CURVE I. III. II. IV. INDIFFERENCE CURVE SLOPE DOWNWARD TO THE RIGHT INDIFFERENCE CURVES ARE CONVEX TO THE ORIGIN INDIFFERENCE CURVES CANNOT INTERSECT EACH OTHER A HIGHER INDIFFERENCE CURVE REPRESENTS A HIGHER LEVEL OF SATISFACTION THAN A LOWER INDIFFERENCE CURVE 47
  • 48. I. INDIFFERENCE CURVE SLOPE DOWNWARD TO THE RIGHT • This property implies on that an indifference curve has a negative slope. • This property is based on the assumption that if the amount of one commodity is increased in one combination the amount of other one will reduce. • The commodities in one combination will give the same satisfaction as of the combination of another one. • This curve represents those combinations which give the same amount of satisfaction to the consumer at a same level, hence, making him indifferent between them. 48
  • 49. ASSUMPTIONS/ REASONS • The consumer prefers to have more of a commodity • Other things given remains unchanged or constant • A consumer being rational remains indifferent with various combinations of goods 49
  • 50. EXCEPTIONS OF PROPERTY NO.1 a) Indifference curve cannot be straight or horizontal : if a consumer prefers larger amount of good x, then he will not prefer the same amount of good y, but will prefer various combinations of x series. E.G. Food(x) with various combinations like cereals, pulses, sweets etc. And drinks(y) like water, juice, cold drinks etc. Y A B C D E IC 0 X 50
  • 51. EXCEPTIONS OF PROPERTY NO.1 b) Indifference curve cannot be vertically straight : if the amount of y increases the amount of good x remains same. The combinations in good x will not give the same amount satisfaction. i.e. increase in drinks (good y) will lower down the satisfaction level of combinations of good x y IC d c b a 0 M x 51
  • 52. EXCEPTIONS OF PROPERTY NO. 1 c) The indifference curve cannot move upwards : a consumer being rational and the two different products (x and y ) will not give him the same satisfaction level. I. E. A consumer will take smaller portion of various combination of two goods x and y and will get good satisfaction from both, which itself held invalid with our indifference curve theory. y IC d c b a 0 x 52
  • 53. II. INDIFFERENCE CURVES ARE CONVEX TO THE ORIGIN  The marginal rate of substitution between the commodities diminishes as we move from left down to right. The consumer can move from product to other one (substitution effect)  It deals with the fact that consumer will have the same product in large quantity rather than having variety of goods. y y c concave b convex a IC ii ICi 0 IC x 0 x 53
  • 54. A HIGHER INDIFFERENCE CURVE REPRESENTS A HIGHER LEVEL OF SATISFACTION THAN A LOWER INDIFFERENCE CURVE • Higher the curve, higher the satisfaction levels. Shift from one curve to another shows preferred combination of commodities, which will give us high satisfaction. y Commodity (B) B IC ii IC i 0 A1 A2 x commodity (A) 54
  • 55. INDIFFERENCE CURVES CANNOT INTERSECT EACH OTHER • Indifference curve can never meet or intersect so that only one indifference curve can pass through any one point in the curve. One combination of commodities can lie only on one indifference curve. y Good (B) 0 A B x good (A) 55
  • 57. MEANING “ Excess of price which a consumer would be willing to pay rather than go without a thing over that which he actually does pay is the economic measure of this surplus satisfaction……it may be called as consumer surplus” Marshall First formulated by Dupuit in 1844. Greater the payment, highest the utility and highest the satisfaction People get more satisfaction from goods rather than they actually pay for them 57
  • 58. CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK • The total of utilities which a person gets from a good is given by the sum of marginal utilities of the units of a good purchased and the total price he actually pays is equal to the price per unit of the good multiplied by the number of units of it purchased. Consumer surplus = what a consumer is willing to pay – what he actually pays i.e. Consumer Surplus = ∑ Marginal Utility- Amount spent • Derived from diminishing marginal utility 58
  • 59. EQUILIBRIUM LEVELS • The consumer will be in equilibrium when marginal utility from a commodity becomes equal to its given price.* *The margin that a consumer is ready to pay is at par or equal level when he actually pays the price 59
  • 60. CONSUMER SURPLUS AND ITS VARIATIONS In the context of demand curve In the context of change in price 60
  • 61. In the context of change in price Y Y CS-D P S P CS- P S P1 T MU MU 0 MQ X 0 MQ MQ1 X In the context of demand curve 61