Chap 05
Chap 05
Chap 05
I. CHAPTER OVERVIEW
Now that you know the basics of market behavior, you are ready to do more in-depth analysis of the demand
curve. This chapter asks, “What makes consumers tick?” and provides you with an opportunity to apply
consumer theory to different situations. In a market economy, consumer theory is very important; just think
about the number of firms and agencies that exist to sell a whole host of products to consumers! Firms compete
fiercely for the dollars that consumers bring to the marketplace. The theory that this chapter develops will give
you some clues as to the nature of this competition.
Consumer theory formalizes behavior that should be very familiar to you. You, your classmates, your
friends, and their families are all consumers who ordinarily have only a limited amount of money to spend in
any given period of time on the goods and services that they need or want. Each good has a market price that
usually cannot be altered by bargaining or haggling. You must decide which goods to buy and how much of
each good to buy knowing from the quoted prices that each purchase will exhaust part of your limited income
or budget, but also knowing what you like and what you do not like. Chapter 5 involves careful analysis of
this decision-making process.
After you have read Chapter 5 in your text and completed the exercises in this Study Guide chapter, you should
be able to:
1. Define total utility and marginal utility and explain the difference between these two measures of
consumer satisfaction.
2. Explain the law of diminishing marginal utility and its importance in economic analysis.
3. Show that an individual’s utility is maximized for a given income when the marginal utility derived
from the last dollar spent on each good is the same for all goods purchased.
4. Express the utility-maximizing rule mathematically, and show how it combines with the law of
diminishing marginal utility to produce downward-sloping demand curves.
5. Define substitution and income effects and explain how they work to produce downward-sloping
demand curves.
6. Explain how market demand curves are derived from the horizontal summation of individual demand
curves.
7. Describe the paradox of value and resolve it through application of the utility-maximizing rule.
8. Discuss what is meant by the term consumer surplus, and illustrate the concept using examples and a
demand curve.
Match the following terms from column A with their definitions in column B.
A B
__ Utility 1. Denotes the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage
change in income, all else held fixed.
__ Marginal utility 2. Represents the sum of the individual demands at each price.
__ Utilitarianism 3. Given two goods, an increase in the price of one causes a decrease in the demand
for the other.
__ Law of 4. Explains why the price of a diamond is greater than the price of a gallon of
diminishing water.
marginal utility
__ MU1/P1 = 5. States that when the price of a good rises, consumers will tend to substitute
MU2/P2 = ... = other goods for the one whose price is rising in order to satisfy their needs less
MU per $ spent expensively.
__ Market demand 6. Measures the want-satisfying power of a good or service.
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__ Income elasticity 7. Given two goods, an increase in the price of one causes an increase in the
demand for the other.
__ Substitutes 8. States that as the amount of a good consumed increases, the marginal utility of
that good tends to diminish.
__ Complements 9. Measures the increase in total utility when an additional unit of a good is
consumed.
__ Ordinal Utility 10. The gap between the total utility of a good and its total market value.
__ Substitution effect 11. “The greatest happiness of the greatest number.”
__ Income effect 12. Denotes the impact of a price change on a good's quantity demanded that results
from the effect of the price change on consumers' real income.
__ Demerit goods 13. Describes the market basket of goods that will bring the consumer maximum
satisfaction.
__ Paradox of value 14. Goods whose consumption is deemed harmful.
__ Consumer 15. Consumers only need to determine their preference ranking of bundles of
surplus commodities.
2. Utility theory helps to explain why demand curves are generally downward-sloping, as was argued in
Chapters 3 and 4. As the price of good X falls, the quantity of X consumed rises, and so MUX falls with
price.
3. Substitution and income effects also help to explain the negative correlation between price and quantity
demanded. Substitution effects describe the fact that as prices change along a demand curve, consumers
substitute relatively cheaper goods into their market baskets. Income effects describe the fact that as prices
change along a demand curve, money income is held fixed, but real income or purchasing power changes. This
means that consumers are not able to buy as much at higher prices.
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For example, suppose a consumer increases her purchases of apples from 4 to 6 when the price of apples
falls from 50 cents to 25 cents per apple. She purchases more apples and substitutes them into her market
basket in place of oranges, bananas, and other fruit that is now relatively more expensive. (Substitution effect.)
She is able to buy more apples because she has more purchasing power. When the price was 50 cents, she
spent a total of $2.00 on 4 apples. The same 4 apples now cost only $1.00! She has an additional $1.00 of
purchasing power to spend on apples, or any other good in her market basket, even with no increase in her
budget. (Income effect.)
D. Paradox of Value
l. The paradox of value addresses the somewhat counterintuitive observation that water costs less than
diamonds in spite of the fact that water sustains life and diamonds are often simply decorative. This can be
explained by the fact that water is relatively abundant, and hence in great supply, but diamonds are relatively
scarce. Note that the total utility from water is greater than the total utility from diamonds.
E. Consumer Surplus
l. Consumer surplus represents the difference between what people would have been willing to pay for a given
quantity of some good, one unit at a time, and how much they actually had to pay in a market quoting one
price for all units. Remember that a demand curve represents the maximum amount that consumers would be
willing and able to pay for each unit of a good. Also remember that from our model, there is a single market
price paid for all units of a good exchanged. (Price dispersion will be discussed in a later chapter.) This means
that consumers typically receive a “surplus;” that is, some consumers receive value from a good or service in
excess of the amount that they paid for it.
V. HELPFUL HINTS
l. Utility theory would be much more concrete if we could somehow measure utility, or consumer
satisfaction. Just think, we could then ask consumers to strap their “utilmeters” onto their wrists before they
walk into the grocery store or mall, and they could simply purchase those goods that bring the highest
utilmeter reading per dollar spent. For example, a consumer in the cookie aisle of the grocery store could
choose between the Oreos and the Chips Ahoy by holding each one in turn and checking to see which product
got the highest number of utils.
This might be nice, but this sort of cardinal representation of utility is not possible. Utility is a subjective
notion. It changes over time; some things that you like now you may not have liked or needed as a child.
(Coffee or beer, for example?) If I say, “I got a marginal utility of 200 from the last cookie I ate,” it would be
impossible for you to place this on a meaningful scale. Thus, we have to be happy with ordinal measures of
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utility, that is, with our ability to say “I like A better than B” or “I like B better than A” or “I like A and B
exactly the same amount.” This sort of measurement is fine for our purposes as economists.
2. Grab a box of cookies, or a bag of potato chips, or something else that you like to eat and think carefully
about the concepts of total utility, marginal utility, and the law of diminishing marginal utility. The marginal
utility of, say, cookies is the additional satisfaction that you get from consuming each additional cookie. The
total utility you get is the total of the marginal utilities from each cookie; that is, when you have finished your
snack, total utility is the total amount of satisfaction that you got from eating those cookies. The law of
diminishing marginal utility should hold; as you eat more and more cookies, eventually your marginal utility
will fall. Does this principle hold for you?
3. Income elasticities and cross price elasticities are very similar to price elasticities of supply and demand
that you learned about in Chapter 4. However, there are some important differences. Price elasticities of
demand and supply measure moves along a demand or a supply curve, because price is measured on the Y axis.
Income elasticity and cross price elasticities measure shifts in the demand curve as factors other than the price of
the product are changing. This is an important distinction to make.
4. Notice that the sign of an income elasticity or of a cross price elasticity gives you important information.
A positive income elasticity means that a good is normal, but a negative income elasticity means that a good is
inferior. A positive cross price elasticity means that the two goods are substitutes, but a negative cross price
elasticity means that the two goods are complements.
These questions are organized by topic from the chapter outline. Choose the best answer from the options
available.
c. third cookie.
d. fourth cookie.
e. fifth cookie.
6. If total utility reaches its maximum, then:
a. marginal utility is at its maximum.
b. marginal utility is zero.
c. marginal utility is negative.
d. this is always the amount the consumer should buy.
TABLE 5-1
Total Marginal
Price Bought Utility Utility
A $.70 20 500 30
B $.50 12 l000 20
c. 30 utils.
d. 45 utils.
e. not enough information to tell.
12. Homer does not have to work on Saturday, and he is trying to decide how to spend his afternoon. He
decides that he can either watch TV or play baseball with Bart. The total utility that he would derive from each
pursuit is independent of the other and is given in Table 5-2.
TABLE 5-2
Total Utility
Hours Spent TV Baseball
1 16 10
2 24 18
3 31 24
4 37 30
If Homer has 4 hours to allocate between TV and baseball, what combination would he choose to maximize his
utility?
a. 4 hours of baseball.
b. 3 hours of TV and 1 hour of baseball.
c. 2 hours of TV and 2 hours of baseball.
d. 3 hours of TV and l hour of baseball.
e. 4 hours of TV.
13. In question 11, at this utility-maximizing combination of TV and baseball, the marginal utility of:
a. TV is 8 and of baseball is 8.
b. TV is 24 and of baseball is 18.
c. TV is 40 and of baseball is 28.
d. TV is 31 and of baseball is 24.
e. both goods are indeterminate.
14. The income effect captures which of the following economic phenomena?
a. If money incomes fall, people will purchase less of any given commodity.
b. A decrease in the price of a major purchase has an effect similar to an increase in income, and this may
prompt people to buy more of that good.
c. The quantity of a good purchased may actually decrease as people’s incomes rise.
d. As people’s incomes rise, they save proportionately more out of income, so they actually spend a
smaller fraction of their incomes.
e. If the price of a good drops, it is as though the prices of all other goods have risen, in relative terms,
so smaller quantities of those other goods will tend to be bought.
15. You regard goods X and Y as substitutes. If the price of X rises and neither good is inferior, the income
effect should induce you to purchase:
a. more Y only if the price of X is less than the price of Y.
b. less of good Y.
c. the same amount of Y.
d. more Y only if the price of X is greater than the price of Y.
e. none of the above.
16. Which alternative in question 14 would have been correct if it had referred to the substitution effect rather
than the income effect?
a. If money incomes fall, people will purchase less of any given commodity.
b. A decrease in the price of a major purchase has an effect similar to an increase in income, and this may
prompt people to buy more of that good.
c. The quantity of a good purchased may actually decrease as people’s incomes rise.
d. As people’s incomes rise, they save proportionately more out of income, so they actually spend a
smaller fraction of their incomes.
e. If the price of a good drops, it is as though the prices of all other goods have risen, in relative terms,
so smaller quantities of those other goods will tend to be bought.
17. A consumer moves to a new equilibrium position as a result of some change either in market price or in
income. In this new equilibrium situation, marginal utilities are all lower than they were in the old
equilibrium situation. Tastes or preferences are unchanged. This consumer is:
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Figure 5-1
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Figure 5-2
21. A consumer’s demand curve for any given commodity is most likely to shift to the right with:
a. an increase in the price of substitutes or a decrease in the price of complements.
b. an increase in the price of either substitutes or complements.
c. a decrease in the price of substitutes or an increase in the price of complements.
d. a decrease in the price of either substitutes or complements.
e. none of these cases.
22. Suppose that the income elasticity of demand for new houses is 2.3. If consumer incomes increase by 2
percent, you could expect the quantity of new houses to:
a. increase by 2.3 percent.
b. increase by 2 percent.
c. increase by 4.6 percent.
d. decrease by 1 percent.
e. decrease by 4.6 percent.
23. Suppose that when the price of Coke increases by 2 percent, the quantity of Bacardi Rum purchased
increases by 4 percent. (Assume everything else is held fixed.) This means that the:
a. income elasticity of demand is 2 and the goods are complements.
b. cross price elasticity is 2 and the goods are substitutes.
c. cross price elasticity is -.5 and the goods are complements.
d. price elasticity of demand for Coke is -2 and the goods are complements.
e. price elasticity of demand for Bacardi is .5 and the goods are substitutes.
D. Paradox of Value
24. The paradox of value occurs because:
a. prices of commodities are not always proportional to the total satisfaction that they give us.
b. it is impossible to explain the price of a commodity in terms of either demand factors alone or supply
factors alone.
c. it is impossible to explain why people’s tastes are what they are or why they vary from one person to
the next.
d. prices of commodities always perfectly reflect the amount of value that they bring to the consumer.
e. none of the above.
25. The paradox of value is best illustrated by which of the following?
a. The quantity of diamonds demanded increases as price decreases.
b. Suppliers are willing and able to supply more water when the price increases, everything else held
fixed.
c. Consumers must pay more for diamonds than they pay for water, even though water is a necessity and
diamonds are a luxury for most people.
d. Consumers will substitute diamonds into their market basket when the price of diamonds falls.
e. Diamonds and water do not mix.
26. The demand for addictive substances is highly dependent on past consumption. For heavy users of
cocaine, demand is:
a. highly inelastic so that government prohibition has little impact on price.
b. highly elastic so that government prohibition has a great impact on price.
c. highly inelastic so that government prohibition has a great impact on price.
d. highly elastic so that government prohibition has little impact on price.
e. perfectly elastic since users can get all they want to consume at the market price.
E. Consumer Surplus
27. Consumer surplus is defined as the:
a. difference between the total utility of a good and the maximum amount that consumers are willing to
pay for it.
b. difference between the total utility of a good and the market price.
c. sum of the total utility of a good and its market price.
d. total revenue that producers receive from selling a particular good.
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Figure 5-3
Figure 5-4
29. If this good is provided for free, consumer surplus will be:
a. $5.
b. 10 units.
c. $16.
d. $25.
e. $50.
30. If the price of this good is $2, consumer surplus will be:
a. $2.
b. $9.
c. $12.
d. $25.
e. $50.
The following problems are designed to help you apply the concepts that you learned in this chapter.
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TABLE 5-3
Total Apples Apples Bananas Bananas Cherries Cherries
Units (Total Utility) (Marginal Utility) (Total Utility) (Marginal Utility) (Total Utility) (Marginal Utility)
1 10 _____ 100 _____ 6 _____
2 19 _____ 150 _____ 12 _____
3 27 _____ 175 _____ 18 _____
4 34 _____ 187 _____ 24 _____
5 40 _____ 193 _____ 30 _____
6 45 _____ 196 _____ 36 _____
7 49 _____ 197 _____ 42 _____
8 52 _____ 197 _____ 48 _____
3. Two “effects” explain why more of a commodity is bought if its price falls and why less is bought if its
price rises. In this question and the one following, we use the idea of marginal utility to examine in detail the
nature of these two effects.
a. Specifically, these effects are (1) the (substitution / institutional) effect and (2) the (envy / income)
effect.
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Table 5-4 shows the levels of total utility (TU) associated with different quantities of commodities X
and Y, measured in satisfaction units. (Commodities X and Y are the only ones you can buy, or the only
ones in which you are interested.) Calculate the MU of X and Y.
TABLE 5-4
No. of Units
Consumed MU of X TU of X MU of Y TU of Y
3 32 348 20 130
4 ___ 376 ___ 148
5 ___ 400 ___ 164
6 ___ 420 ___ 178
7 ___ 436 ___ 190
8 ___ 448 ___ 200
9 ___ 456 ___ 208
10 ___ 461 ___ 213
11 ___ 464 ___ 216
b. Suppose that the prices of X and of Y are $2.40 and $1.00, respectively, and that you have just $20
per period to spend. Given the data in Table 5-4, what will your equilibrium or maximum-satisfaction X-
Y combination be? In this situation, you will buy ___ units of X and ___ units of Y. The total utility
you obtain, from X and Y combined, will be ___.
c. Now let the price of X drop from $2.40 to $1.00. The price of Y is still $1.00, and you still have $20
to spend. What will your new equilibrium position be; you will now buy ___ units of X and ___ units of
Y.
In the new situation, the quantity of X has (increased / decreased). This is not surprising, since X’s
price has fallen. The quantity of Y has (increased / decreased). Why this should happen is not
immediately obvious. Y’s price has not fallen; indeed, the price of Y has risen relative to the price of X.
d. What has happened is this: In part b you were spending considerably more than half your income on
X. The reduction in X’s price considered in part c had an effect similar to a substantial rise in your
income. In fact, your total satisfaction level has climbed from the original total of 600 utils to (620 / 664 /
670 / 674) utils. How so? You have used the practical equivalent of a larger income to buy more X and
more Y.
When X’s price falls, there are two effects that operate on your desire to purchase X and Y. Insofar as
X and Y are substitutes, you will be disposed to buy (more / less) Y and more X. But countering this is
the income effect just discussed, which makes you inclined to buy (more / less) X and (more / less) Y. In
this case, the income effect won out over the substitution effect. Had X and Y been “better” substitutes for
one another, then the quantity of Y chosen might have fallen instead of rising.
TABLE 5-5
Individual Individual Individual Market
Price A B C Demand
$8 2 0 0 _____
7 3 0 1 _____
6 4 0 3 _____
5 5 0 5 _____
4 6 1 7 _____
3 7 3 10 _____
2 8 5 14 _____
b. On the diagrams in Figure 5-5, plot the demand curves for each of the consumers, and plot the market
demand curve.
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Figure 5-5
E. Consumer Surplus
c. From your diagrams in Figure 5-5, you can see that if the market price is $4, consumer surplus is
$___ for individual A, $___ for individual B, and $___ for individual C.
d. If the market price increases to $5, total consumer surplus in this market changes from $___ to $___.
Answer the following questions, making sure that you can explain the work you did to arrive at the answers.
1. A consumer has $50 per week to spend on either commodity X, whose price is $5, or commodity Y,
whose price is $4. For each of the four cases below, indicate whether or not this consumer is “at equilibrium,”
i.e., deriving the maximum-attainable satisfaction. If you lack sufficient information to answer, explain why.
If you know the consumer is not at equilibrium, indicate the required direction of movement (e.g., “buy more
of X and less of Y,” “buy less of X and more of Y,” “buy more of both,” etc.).
a. Purchases are now 2 of X and 10 of Y. Total utility of X at this level is 500 utils; total utility of Y is
400 utils
b. Purchases are now 6 of X and 5 of Y. Total utility of X at this level is 400 utils, and the marginal
utility of X is 60 utils. Total utility of Y is 800 utils, and the MU of Y is 30 utils.
c. Purchases are now 6 of X and 5 of Y. The MU of X at this level is 25 utils; the MU of Y is 20 utils
d. Purchases are now 6 of X and 4 of Y. The MU of X at this level is 25 utils; the MU of Y is 20 utils.
2. What does it mean when we refer to utility as an “ordinal” measure, rather than a “cardinal” measure? What
contribution did Jeremy Bentham make to utilitarianism? Explain.
3. Mr. Economist says, “Consumers always find their optimal bundle of consumer goods when the marginal
utility of the last unit of each good is equal.” Do you agree?
4. Tables 5-2 and 5-3 in your textbook list estimates of price elasticities of demand and income elasticities for
various goods.
a. Income elasticity for automobiles is listed as 2.5. If incomes rise by 5 percent, what will happen to
the quantity of automobiles demanded? Are automobiles an inferior good?
b. The income elasticity for margarine is -.2. If income falls by 2 percent, what will happen to the
quantity of margarine demanded? What type of good is margarine?
c. The price elasticity of demand for medical insurance is .31. If the quantity demanded has fallen by 10
percent, what must have happened to the price? What type of good is medical insurance?
5. As the environment becomes increasingly polluted, communities have to pay increasingly more money for
clean air and clean water. Does this mean that the paradox of value is no longer valid?
6. In recent years, California has toyed with the idea of legalizing the purchase and sale of marijuana. Given
what you know about consumer demand and addictive substances, would you recommend this policy change?
Why or why not?
7. Consumer surplus is defined as the difference between what consumers are willing to pay and what they
actually pay for a good or service. Why do firms not capture this surplus? That is, why do firms not charge
people the maximum amount they are willing to pay, rather than a market-determined price?
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Figure 5-4
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TABLE 5-3
Total Apples Apples Bananas Bananas Cherries Cherries
Units (Total Utility) (Marginal Utility) (Total Utility)(Marginal Utility)(Total Utility)(Marginal Utility)
1 10 10 100 100 6 6
2 19 9 150 50 12 6
3 27 8 175 25 18 6
4 34 7 187 12 24 6
5 40 6 193 6 30 6
6 45 5 196 3 36 6
7 49 4 197 1 42 6
8 52 3 197 0 48 6
3. a. substitution, income
b. 5, 8, 600 units
c. 10, 10, increased, increased
d. 674, less, more, more
4. a. See Table 5-5.
TABLE 5-5
Individual Individual Individual Market
Price A B C Demand
$8 2 0 0 2
7 3 0 1 4
6 4 0 3 7
5 5 0 5 10
4 6 1 7 14
3 7 3 10 20
2 8 5 14 27
Figure 5-5
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c. 14, 0, 9
d. 23, 13