Chapter 3
A Consumers
Constrained
Choice
If this is coffee, please bring me some tea; but
if this is tea, please bring me some coffee.
Abraham Lincoln
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Chapter 3 Outline
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
Preferences
Utility
Budget Constraint
Constrained Consumer Choice
Behavioral Economics
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Chapter 3: Model of Consumer
Behavior
Premises of the model:
[Link] tastes or preferences determine
the amount of pleasure people derive from
the goods and services they consume.
[Link] face constraints, or limits, on
their choices.
[Link] maximize their well-being or
pleasure from consumption subject to the
budget and other constraints they face.
Examples.
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3.1 Preferences
To explain consumer behavior, economists assume
that consumers have a set of tastes or preferences
that they use to guide them in choosing between
goods.
Goods are ranked according to how much pleasure a
consumer gets from consuming each.
Preference relations summarize a consumers ranking
is used to convey strict preference (e.g. a b)
is used to convey weak preference (e.g. a
b)
~ is used to convey indifference (e.g. a ~ b)
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3.1 Preferences
Properties of preferences:
[Link]
When facing a choice between two bundles of goods
(e.g. a and b), a consumer can rank them so that
either a b, b a, or a ~ b.
[Link]
Consumers rankings are logically consistent in the
sense that if a b and b c, then a c.
[Link] is Better
All else the same, more of a commodity is better than
less.
In this regard, a good is different than a bad.
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3.1 Preference Maps
Graphical
interpretation
of consumer
preferences
over two
goods:
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3.1 Indifference Curves
The set of all bundles of goods that a consumer views
as being equally desirable can be traced out as an
indifference curve.
Five important properties of indifference curves:
[Link] of goods on indifference curves further from
the origin are preferred to those on indifference
curves closer to the origin.
[Link] is an indifference curve through every possible
bundle.
[Link] curves cannot cross.
[Link] curves slope downward.
[Link] curves cannot be thick.
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3.1 Indifference Curves
Impossible indifference curves:
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3.2 Utility
Utility refers to a set of numerical values that reflect
the relative rankings of various bundles of goods.
The utility function is the relationship between utility
measures and every possible bundle of goods.
Given a specific utility function, you can graph a
specific indifference curve and determine exactly how
much utility is gained from specific consumption
choices.
Example: q1 = pizza and q2 = burritos
Bundle x contains 16 pizzas and 9 burritos: U(x) = 12
Bundle y contains 13 pizzas and 13 burritos: U(y) = 13
Thus, y x
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3.2 Utility
Utility is an ordinal measure rather than a cardinal one.
Utility tells us the relative ranking of two things but not
how much more one rank is valued than another.
We dont really care that U(x) = 12 and U(y) = 13 in the
previous example; we care that y x.
Any utility function that generated y x would be
consistent with these preferences.
A utility function can be transformed into another utility
function in such a way that preferences are maintained.
Positive monotonic transformation
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3.2 Utility and Indifference Curves
The general utility function (for q1 = pizza and
q2 = burritos) is
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3.2 Willingness to Substitute
Between Goods
Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS) is the maximum
amount of one good that a consumer will sacrifice (trade) to
obtain one more unit of another good.
It is the slope at a particular point on the indifference curve
MRS = dq2 / dq1
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3.2 Marginal Utility and MRS
The MRS depends on how much extra utility a
consumer gets from a little more of each good.
Marginal utility is the extra utility that a consumer
gets from consuming the last unit of a good, holding
the consumption of other goods constant.
Using calculus to calculate the MRS:
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3.2 Curvature of Indifference
Curves
MRS (willingness to trade) diminishes along many typical
indifference curves that are concave to the origin.
Different utility functions generate different indifference
curves:
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3.2 Curvature of Indifference
Curves
Perfect Substitutes
Goods that a consumer is completely indifferent
between
Example: Clorox (C) and Generic Bleach (G)
MRS = -2 (constant)
Perfect Complements
Goods that are consumed in fixed proportions
Example: Apple pie (A) and Ice cream (I)
MRS is undefined
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3.2 Curvature of Indifference
Curves
Imperfect Substitutes
Between extreme examples of perfect substitutes and
perfect complements are standard-shaped, convex
indifference curves.
Cobb-Douglas utility
function
(e.g.
)
indifference curves
never hit the axes.
Quasilinear utility
function
(e.g.
)
indifference curves
hit one of the axes.
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3.3 Budget Constraint
Consumers maximize utility subject to constraints.
If we assume consumers cant save and borrow, current
period income determines a consumers budget.
Given prices of pizza (p1) and burritos (p2), and income Y,
the budget line is
Example:
Assume p1 = $1, p2 = $2 and Y = $50
Rewrite the budget line equation for easier graphing
(y=mx+b form):
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3.3 Budget Constraint
Marginal Rate of Transformation (MRT) is how the
market allows consumers to trade one good for
another.
It is the slope of the budget line:
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3.4 Constrained Consumer Choice
Consumers maximize their well-being (utility) subject
to their budget constraint.
The highest indifference curve attainable given the
budget is the consumers optimal bundle.
When the optimal bundle occurs at a point of tangency
between indifference curve and budget line, this is
called an interior solution.
Mathematically,
Rearranging, we can see that the marginal utility per
dollar is equated across goods at the optimum:
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3.4 Constrained Consumer Choice
The interior solution that maximizes utility without
going beyond the budget constraint is Bundle e.
The interior optimum is where
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3.4 Constrained Consumer Choice
If the relative price of one good is too high and
preferences are quasilinear, the indifference curve will
not be tangent to the budget line and the consumers
optimal bundle occurs at a corner solution.
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3.4 Consumer Choice with Calculus
Our graphical analysis of consumers constrained choices
can be stated mathematically:
The optimum is still expressed as in the graphical analysis:
These conditions hold if the utility function is quasi-concave,
which implies indifference curves are convex to the origin.
Solution reveals utility-maximizing values of q1 and q2 as
functions of prices, p1 and p2, and income, Y.
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3.4 Consumer Choice with Calculus
Example
(Solved
Problem 3.5):
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3.4 Consumer Choice with Calculus
A second approach to solving constrained utility
maximization problems is the Lagrangian method:
The critical value of
conditions:
is found through first-order
Equating the first two of these equations yields:
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3.4 Minimizing Expenditure
Utility maximization has a dual problem in which the
consumer seeks the combination of goods that
achieves a particular level of utility for the least
expenditure.
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3.4 Expenditure Minimization with
Calculus
Minimize expenditure, E, subject to the
constraint of holding utility constant:
The solution of this problem, the
expenditure function, shows the minimum
expenditure necessary to achieve a specified
utility level for a given set of prices:
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3.5 Behavioral Economics
What if consumers are not rational, maximizing
individuals?
Behavioral economics adds insights from psychology
and empirical research on cognition and emotional
biases to the rational economic model.
Tests of transitivity: evidence supports transitivity
assumption for adults, but not necessarily for children.
Endowment effect: some evidence that endowments of
goods influence indifference maps, which is not the
assumption of economic models.
Salience: evidence that consumers are more sensitive to
increases in pre-tax prices than post-tax price increases
from higher ad valorem taxes.
Bounded rationality suggests that calculating post-tax prices
is costly so some people dont bother to do it, but they would
use the information if it were provided.
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Figure 3.10 Optimal Bundles on Convex
Sections of Indifference Curves
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