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Schedule of Classes

Schedule of Classes. September, 3 September, 10 September, 17 – in-class#1 September, 19 – in-class#2 September, 24 – in-class#3 (open books) September, 25, 4-30 p.m. – test September, 26, 10-45 a.m. – results . Topic 2. Demand and Supply. Topic 2.1. Individua l Consumer Demand.

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Schedule of Classes

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  1. Schedule of Classes • September, 3 • September, 10 • September, 17 – in-class#1 • September, 19 – in-class#2 • September, 24 – in-class#3 (open books) • September, 25, 4-30 p.m. – test • September, 26, 10-45 a.m. – results

  2. Topic 2.Demand and Supply Topic 2.1. Individual Consumer Demand

  3. Utility • The decision to buy is based upon two considerations: • The utility that you derive from the commodity • The ability to pay for it • Def.: Utility – the pleasure or satisfaction associated with having, using, or consuming goods or services • The cardinal approach to consumer equilibrium • The ordinal approach to consumer equilibrium

  4. The Cardinal Approach to Consumer Equilibrium

  5. Utility Function • Utility can be measured in units called utils • A utility function is obtained by attaching a number to each market basket, so that if market basket is preferred to market basket B, the number will be higher for A than for B

  6. Marginal Utility • Marginal utility is defined as the change in total utility that results from a one-unit change in consumption

  7. The Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility • Marginal utility diminishes as quantity of the commodity consumed increases • The assumption of diminishing marginal utility is one of the most important cornerstones of economic theory • The saturation point at which TU is maximum is determined as the point where MU=0

  8. The Model of Consumer Behavior (Assumptions) • Consumers are free to spend their incomes as they please • Consumers have perfect knowledge of all factors that may affect their decision • The sales units of commodities are divisible • The consumer’s tastes and preferences are well established • The marginal utility of each commodity diminishes for the consumer as the quantity consumed increases • More is better than less • Consumers always attempt to maximize utility

  9. Consumer Equilibrium at Maximum Utility • ?: How does a consumer decide what to buy? • Consumers always try to get the most for their money • Maximum utility is a position of equilibrium • The cost of consumption (the utility of money) is balanced against the utility to be gained from the purchase (see next slide)

  10. Consumer’s Equilibrium • Each commodity purchased provides marginal utility that diminishes as consumption increases • and each can be purchased at a particular price • At this point the consumer can no longer increase total utility by buying more or less • The marginal utility per last dollar spent is equal for all commodities

  11. Effects of Advertising and Promotion • Ex:suppose beef sales are rising at the expense of pork sales • How can the producers of pork halt the decline in their sales? • Reduce the price of pork to equalize the ratios • Change the marginal utility of pork • The utility of commodity exists only in the consumer’s mind • Marginal utility may be changed by persuasive advertising and promotion

  12. Marginal Utility and Demand Curves • A consumer’s demand curve can be derived from marginal utility data • E.g.: • MUM=2; MUX= 200 – 4QX • Calculating of price from information on marginal utility of commodity X and marginal utility of money

  13. The Ordinal Approach to Consumer Equilibrium

  14. The Characteristics of the Consumer’s Preferences • Given three bundles of goods (A, B, and C), if an individual prefers A to B and B to C, he must prefer A to C • If an individual is indifferent between A and B and between B and C, he must be indifferent between A and C • If an individual can rank any pair of bundles chosen at random from all conceivable bundles, he can rank all conceivable bundles • If bundle A contains at least as many units of each commodity as bundle B, and more units of at least one commodity, A must be preferred to B

  15. Indifference Curves • Def.:An indifference curve is the set of all combinations of commodities X and Y that yield the same level of total utility or satisfaction • An indifference map is a graph that shows a set of indifference curves

  16. Characteristics of Indifference Curves • They are infinite in number and every point in the commodity space lies on an indifference curve • They are continuous and downward sloping • They are concave from above (convex to the origin) • The farther away from the origin an indifference curve is, the higher the level of utility it represents • They cannot intersect, since each curve represents a different and unique level of utility

  17. Marginal Rate of Substitution (1) • Def.: the marginal rate of substitution, X for Y, (written MRSXY) indicates the number of units of Y that must be given up to acquire one additional unit of X while satisfying the condition of constant total utility • MRSXY is defined as the slope of the indifference curve at a certain point • When the MRSXY diminishes along the indifference curve, the indifference curve is convex

  18. Perfect Substitutes and Perfect Complements • The two goods are perfect substitutes when the marginal rate of substitution of one good for another is a constant • The indifference curves are straight lines • The two goods are perfect complements when the marginal rate of substitution of one good for another is infinite • The indifference curves are shaped as right angles

  19. The Budget Line • Def.: the budget line or line of attainable combinations is the set of all combinations of commodities X and Y that can be purchased when all available income is spent on X and Y

  20. Marginal Rate of Substitution (2) • Relationship between MU and MRSXY • MRSXY and the exchange of goods

  21. Consumer Equilibrium • Utility maximization is achieved when the budget is allocated so that the marginal utility per dollar of expenditure is the same for each good

  22. Individual Demand • Price-consumption curve for X • Traces the utility-maximizing combinations of goods X and Y associated with each and every price of good X • The demand curve relates the quantity of good X that the consumer will buy to the price of X • The lower the price of the product, the higher the level of utility • At every point at the demand curve, the consumer is maximizing utility • Ordinary vs. Giffen goods

  23. Income Changes • Income-consumption curve • Traces the utility-maximizing combinations of goods X and Y associated with different levels of income • Engel curves • Relate the quantity of a good consumed to income • Normal vs. inferior goods

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