1 / 116

Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Consumer Behavior. Introduction. How are consumer preferences used to determine demand? How do consumers allocate income to the purchase of different goods? How do consumers with limited income decide what to buy?. Introduction.

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3 Consumer Behavior

  2. Introduction • How are consumer preferences used to determine demand? • How do consumers allocate income to the purchase of different goods? • How do consumers with limited income decide what to buy? Chapter 3

  3. Introduction • How can we determine the nature of consumer preferences for observations of consumer behavior? • How can cost of living indexes measure well-being of consumers Chapter 3

  4. Consumer Behavior - Applications • How would General Mills determine the price to charge for a new cereal before it went to the market? • To what extent did the food stamp program provide individuals with more food versus merely subsidizing food they bought anyway? Chapter 3

  5. Consumer Behavior • The theory of consumer behavior can be used to help answer these and many more questions • Theory of consumer behavior • The explanation of how consumers allocate income to the purchase of different goods and services Chapter 3

  6. Consumer Behavior • There are three steps involved in the study of consumer behavior • Consumer Preferences • To describe how and why people prefer one good to another • Budget Constraints • People have limited incomes Chapter 3

  7. Consumer Behavior • Given preference sand limited incomes, what amount and type of goods will be purchased? • What combination of goods will consumers buy to maximize their satisfaction? Chapter 3

  8. Consumer Preferences • How might a consumer compare different groups of items available for purchase? • A market basket is a collection of one or more commodities. • Individuals can choose between market baskets containing different goods Chapter 3

  9. Consumer Preferences – Basic Assumptions • Preferences are complete. • Consumers can rank market baskets • Preferences are transitive. • If prefer A to B, and B to C, the must prefer A to C • Consumers always prefer more of any good to less. • More is better Chapter 3

  10. Consumer Preferences • Consumer preferences can be represented graphically using indifference curves • Indifference curves represent all combinations of market baskets that the person is indifferent to • A person will be equally satisfied with either choice Chapter 3

  11. Indifference Curves: An Example Chapter 3

  12. Indifference Curves: An Example • Graph the points with one good on the x-axis and one good on the y-axis • Plotting the points we can make some immediate observations about preferences • More is better Chapter 3

  13. B 50 Clothing H E 40 A 30 D G 20 10 Food 10 20 30 40 Indifference Curves: An Example The consumer prefers A to all combinations in the blue box, while all those in the pink box are preferred to A. Chapter 3

  14. Indifference Curves: An Example • Points such as B & D have more of one good but less of another compared to A • Need more information about consumer ranking • Consumer may decide they are indifference between B, A and D • We can then connect those points with an indifference curve Chapter 3

  15. B 50 Clothing H E 40 A 30 D 20 G U1 10 Food 10 20 30 40 Indifference Curves: An Example • Indifferent between B, A, & D • E is preferred to U1 • U1is preferred to H & G Chapter 3

  16. Indifference Curves • Any market basket lying northeast of an indifference curve is preferred to any market basket that lies on the indifference curve. • Points on the curve are preferred to points southwest of the curve Chapter 3

  17. Indifference Curves • Indifference curves slope downward to the right. • If it sloped upward it would violate the assumption that more is preferred to less. • Some points that had more of both goods would be indifferent to a basket with less of both goods Chapter 3

  18. Indifference Curves • To describe preferences for all combinations of goods/services, we have a set of indifference curves – an indifference map • Each indifference curve in the map shows the market baskets among which the person is indifferent. Chapter 3

  19. Clothing D B A U3 U2 U1 Food Indifference Map Market basket A is preferred to B. Market basket B is preferred to D. Chapter 3

  20. Indifference Maps • Indifference maps give more information about shapes of indifference curves • Indifference curves can not cross • Violates assumption that more is better • Why? What if we assume they can cross. Chapter 3

  21. U1 U2 Clothing A B U2 D U1 Food Indifference Maps • B is preferred to D • A is indifferent to B & D • B must be indifferent to D but that can’t be if B is preferred to D Chapter 3

  22. Indifference Curves • The shapes of indifference curves describes how a consumer is willing to substitute one good for another • A to B, give up 6 clothing to get 1 food • D to E, give up 2 clothing to get 1 food • The more clothing and less food a person has, the more clothing they will give up to get more food Chapter 3

  23. A 16 Clothing 14 12 -6 B 10 1 8 -4 D 6 E 1 G -2 4 1 -1 1 2 Food 1 2 3 4 5 Indifference Curves Observation: The amount of clothing given up for 1 unit of food decreases from 6 to 1 Chapter 3

  24. Indifference Curves • We measure how a person trades one good for another using the marginal rate of substitution (MRS) • It quantifies the amount of one good a consumer will give up to obtain more of another good. • It is measured by the slope of the indifference curve. Chapter 3

  25. A Clothing 16 14 -6 12 B 10 1 -4 8 D 1 6 E -2 G 4 1 -1 1 2 Food 1 2 3 4 5 Marginal Rate of Substitution MRS = 6 MRS = 2 Chapter 3

  26. Marginal Rate of Substitution • Indifference curves are convex • As more of one good is consumed, a consumer would prefer to give up fewer units of a second good to get additional units of the first one. • Consumers generally prefer a balanced market basket Chapter 3

  27. Marginal Rate of Substitution • The MRS decreases as we move down the indifference curve • Along an indifference curve there is a diminishing marginal rate of substitution. • The MRS went from 6 to 4 to 1 Chapter 3

  28. Marginal Rate of Substitution • Indifference curves with different shapes imply a different willingness to substitute • Two polar cases are of interest • Perfect substitutes • Perfect complements Chapter 3

  29. Marginal Rate of Substitution • Perfect Substitutes • Two goods are perfect substitutes when the marginal rate of substitution of one good for the other is constant. • Example: a person might consider apple juice and orange juice perfect substitutes • They would always trade 1 glass of OJ for 1 glass of Apple Juice Chapter 3

  30. Apple Juice (glasses) 4 3 2 1 Orange Juice (glasses) 0 1 2 3 4 Consumer Preferences Perfect Substitutes Chapter 3

  31. Consumer Preferences • Perfect Complements • Two goods are perfect complements when the indifference curves for the goods are shaped as right angles. • Example: If have 1 left shoe and 1 right shoe, you are indifferent between having more left shoes only • Must have one right for one left Chapter 3

  32. Left Shoes 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 Right Shoes Consumer Preferences Perfect Complements Chapter 3

  33. Consumer Preferences • We have assumed all our commodities are “goods” • There are commodities we don’t want more of - bads • Things for which less is preferred to more • Examples • Air pollution • Asbestos Chapter 3

  34. Consumer Preferences • How do we account for bads in our preference analysis? • We redefine the commodity • Clean air • Pollution reduction • Asbestos removal Chapter 3

  35. Consumer Preferences: An Application • In designing new cars, automobile executives must determine how much time and money to invest in restyling versus increased performance • Higher demand for car with better styling and performance • Both cost more to improve Chapter 3

  36. Consumer Preferences: An Application • An analysis of consumer preferences would help to determine where to spend more on change: performance or styling • Some consumers will prefer better styling and some will prefer better performance Chapter 3

  37. Styling Performance Consumer Preferences: An Application These consumers place a greater value on performance than styling Chapter 3

  38. Styling Performance Consumer Preferences: An Application These consumers place a greater value on styling than performance Chapter 3

  39. Consumer Preferences: An Application • Knowing which groups dominates the market will help decide where redesigning dollars should go • A recent study in the US shows that over the past two decades most consumers have preferred styling over performance. Chapter 3

  40. Consumer Preferences • The theory of consumer behavior does not required assigning a numerical value to the level of satisfaction • Although ranking of market baskets are good, sometimes numerical value are useful Chapter 3

  41. Consumer Preferences • Utility • A numerical score representing the satisfaction that a consumer gets from a given market basket. • If buying 3 copies of Microeconomics makes you happier than buying one shirt, then we say that the books give you more utility than the shirt. Chapter 3

  42. Utility • Utility function • Formula that assigns a level of utility to individual market baskets • If the utility function is U(F,C) = F + 2C A market basket with 8 units of food and 3 units of clothing gives a utility of 14 = 8 + 2(3) Chapter 3

  43. Utility - Example Consumer is indifferent between A & B and prefers both to C Chapter 3

  44. Utility - Example • Baskets for each level of utility can be plotted to get an indifference curve • To find the indifference curve for a utility of 14, we can change the combinations of food and clothing that give us a utility of 14 Chapter 3

  45. Clothing 15 C 10 U3 = 100 A 5 B U2 = 50 U1 = 25 Food 0 5 10 15 Utility - Example Basket U = FC C 25 = 2.5(10) A 25 = 5(5) B 25 = 10(2.5) Chapter 3

  46. Utility • Although we numerically rank baskets and indifference curves, numbers are ONLY for ranking • A utility of 4 is not necessarily twice as good as utility of 2 • There are two types of ranking • Ordinal ranking • Cardinal ranking Chapter 3

  47. Utility • Ordinal Utility Function • Places market baskets in the order of most preferred to least preferred, but it does not indicate how much one market basket is preferred to another. • Cardinal Utility Function • Utility function describing the extent to which one market basket is preferred to another. Chapter 3

  48. Utility • The actual unit of measurement for utility is not important. • An ordinal ranking is sufficient to explain how most individual decisions are made. Chapter 3

  49. Budget Constraints • Preferences do not explain all of consumer behavior. • Budget constraints also limit an individual’s ability to consume in light of the prices they must pay for various goods and services. Chapter 3

  50. Budget Constraints • The Budget Line • Indicates all combinations of two commodities for which total money spent equals total income. • We assume only 2 goods are consumed, so we do not consider savings Chapter 3

More Related