Consumer Choice and Behavioral Economics: Chapter Summary and Learning Objectives
Consumer Choice and Behavioral Economics: Chapter Summary and Learning Objectives
Consumer Choice and Behavioral Economics: Chapter Summary and Learning Objectives
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also improve their decision making if they ignored sunk costs. A sunk cost is a cost that has already been
paid and cannot be recovered. Finally, people would improve their decision making if they were more
realistic about their future behavior.
Appendix: Using Indifference Curves and Budget Lines to Understand Consumer Behavior
(pages 335346)
Use indifference curves and budget lines to understand consumer behavior.
Chapter Review
Chapter Opener: J.C. Penney Learns That Simplifying Prices Isnt Simple
(page 305)
In 2010, J.C. Penney department stores had about 600 sales and sold three quarters of its products at
prices marked down at least 50 percent. This pricing strategy worked for J.C. Penneyeven though these
sales were illusions because J.C. Penney raised the prices before discounting them and required
consumers to use coupons. In 2011, the newly appointed CEO, Ron Johnson, decided to use a new and
simpler pricing strategy. He eliminated all sales and coupons and used an everyday low prices strategy.
This new strategy, although simpler, didnt work for J.C. Penney. The companys sales plunged 25
percent in 2012, and Ron Johnson was fired after only 17 months. In this chapter, you will learn about
behavioral economics and be able to use the concept to better understand the failure of Penneys pricing
strategy.
10.1
Learning Objective: Define utility and explain how consumers choose goods and services
to maximize their utility.
Utility is the enjoyment or satisfaction people receive from consuming goods and services. Economists
assume consumers spend their limited budgets on the bundle of goods and services that provides them
with the most utility, although utility cannot be measured exactly. If we assume that utility can be
measured, then a certain number of utils (units of utility or satisfaction) are associated with each unit of a
product.
Marginal utility (MU) is the change in total utility a person receives from consuming one additional unit
of a good or service. The law of diminishing marginal utility states that consumers experience less
additional satisfaction as they consume more of a good or service during a given period of time.
Study Hint
Remember that diminishing marginal utility does not imply that increasing consumption reduces utility.
Utility still rises even if marginal utility is falling.
Because consumers have limited income, they try to receive the most utility they can as they spend their
income. A budget constraint refers to the limited amount of income available to consumers to spend on
goods and services. The model of consumer behavior can be used to determine the optimal amounts of
goods a consumer will purchase given (1) knowledge of the marginal utilities (MU) of the goods, (2) the
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prices of the goods, and (3) the consumers budget constraint. This model applies a key economic
principle you learned about in Chapter 1: Optimal decisions are made at the margin.
The following information is taken from Table 10.2 on page 309 in the textbook. It is assumed that the price
of pizza is $2 per slice, the price of a cup of Coke is $1, and the consumer has $10 to spend on pizza and
Coke.
Slices of Pizza MU per Dollar (pizza) Cups of Coke MU per Dollar (Coke)
1
2
10
8
1
2
20
15
10
4
5
3
1
4
5
5
3
1.5
The consumer maximizes utility by first buying the good for which the MU per dollar is higher. Because
the first cup of Coke has a higher MU per dollar (20) than the MU per dollar from the first slice of pizza
(10), the consumer will first spend $1 on a cup of Coke. Because of the law of diminishing marginal
utility, the MU of Coke and pizza declines as more of each is consumed. The consumer will compare the
MU per dollar of the next unit of each good in deciding how to spend his income. The consumer will
maximize his utility when:
1. Marginal utility per dollar is equal for each good consumed, and
2. Total spending on all goods equals the income available.
The consumers optimal consumption is 3 slices of pizza (at $2 each, spending $6 on pizza) and 4 Cokes
(at $1 each, spending $4 on Coke). Total spending is equal to the consumers budget, $10. Marginal
utility per dollar is 5 for both pizza and Coke at this equilibrium.
The rule of equal marginal utility per dollar can be used to analyze a consumers response to a price
change. Using the previous example, if the price of pizza were to fall to $1.50, then there would be a
substitution and income effect on the quantity of pizza demanded.
Slices of Pizza MU per Dollar (pizza) Cups of Coke MU per Dollar (Coke)
1
2
13.3
10.7
1
2
20
15
6.7
10
4
5
4
1.3
4
5
5
3
The decrease in the price of pizza has raised the MU per dollar of pizza. Previously, the consumers $10
budget was used to buy 3 slices of pizza and 4 cups of Coke. At the lower price of pizza, the same
combination of goods costs only $8.50. This increase in purchasing power is the income effect of the
price change. And the consumer will now purchase 4 slices of pizza but will still buy 4 Cokes as this is
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the consumption bundle where the entire budget is spent and the marginal utility per dollar of the last unit
consumed, while not the same, is close for both goods.
The income effect is the change in the quantity demanded of a good that results from a change in price
caused by the altered consumer purchasing power, holding all other factors constant. If pizza is a normal
good, then the income effect of a decrease in price will lead to an increase in the quantity demanded of
pizza. If pizza is an inferior good, then the income effect of a decrease in price will lead to a decrease in
the quantity demanded. The substitution effect is the change in quantity demanded of a good that results
from a change in price that makes the good more or less expensive relative to other goods, holding
constant the effect of the price change on consumer purchasing power.
Study Hint
The assumption that we can measure utility exactly is unrealistic. We cant strap a consumer into a chair
and measure how many utils she receives from eating a slice of pizza. But it is realistic to assume a
consumer can determine whether he or she prefers a certain amount of one product to an amount of
another, or that he or she is indifferent between consuming two different products. Economists do not
believe in cardinal utilityutility measured in utils. However, economists do believe in ordinal
utilitythat consumers can rank products, or combinations of products, based on their preferences.
Study Hint
You can memorize the rule that utility is maximized when marginal utility per dollar is equal across all
goods, but it should make sense intuitively as well. Think about this simple example: You like both candy
bars and ice cream cones. Ice cream cones cost three times as much as candy bars, and you would like an
ice cream cone twice as much as you would like a candy bar. On one hand, you might be tempted to say
that, because the candy bar is cheaper, that you should buy a candy bar. On the other hand, you might be
tempted to say that, because you would like an ice cream cone more, that you should buy an ice cream
cone. The reality is that you need to balance your relative desire for ice cream cones and candy bars with
their relative prices. If an ice cream cone costs three times as much but you only like it twice as much as a
candy bar, then the relative cost of that ice cream cone isnt worth the benefit you would receive. Rather,
you should buy the candy bar. Mathematically, the MUice cream = 2 MUcandy bar and Pice cream = 3 Pcandy bar
so that the marginal utility per dollar spent on ice cream is only two-thirds of the marginal utility per
dollar spent on a candy bar. Spending the money on the candy bar will increase utility more than spending
the money on the ice cream cone will.
10.2
The substitution and income effects of price changes explain why demand curves for normal goods are
downward sloping. As price decreases, the good becomes attractive relative to available substitutes, so the
quantity demanded of the good will rise. This same price decrease causes an increase in the consumers
purchasing power, which causes an increase in the quantity demanded of normal goods. Although the
substitution and income effects of price changes for inferior goods have opposite effects on quantity
demanded, the income effect is typically quite small. So, as the price decreases, the quantity demanded
will increase for nearly all goods. Economists have statistically estimated millions of demand curves
using real-world data. In nearly every case, the demand curve slopes downward. The law of demand is
based on real-world evidence, not economic theory alone.
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Supports Learning Objective10.2: Use the concept of utility to explain the law of demand.
The following table represents Lees marginal utility per dollar for ice cream cones and cans of Lime Fizz
as derived in Step 4 of Solved Problem 10.1 in the textbook. The optimal level of consumption, given
Lees $7 budget constraint and the price of $2 per cone and $1 per can of Lime Fizz, is 1 ice cream cone
and 5 cans of Lime Fizz.
Ice Cream Cones $2 each
Quantity
1
2
3
4
5
6
MU
30
25
20
15
10
5
MU/P
15
12.5
10
7.5
5
2.5
MU/P
40
35
26
18
15
7
a. Assume that the price per can of Lime Fizz remains $1.00. What is the optimal level of
consumption if the price of an ice cream cone falls to $1.50? What is the optimal level of
consumption if the price per cone falls to $1.00? (Hint: Continue to purchase units with the
highest marginal utilities per dollar.)
b. Use the optimal consumption bundles for each of the three prices of ice cream cone to derive
Lees demand curve for ice cream cones.
This problem is about optimal consumption bundles and how to derive a demand curve, so
you may want to review the section Where Demand Curves Come From, which begins on
page 314 in the textbook.
Step 2:
Calculate the marginal utility per dollar of spending for each of the two prices
proposed in part (a).
Because only the price of ice cream cones is changing we can focus on the marginal utility of
ice cream cones. See the table below for the results of the calculations:
Ice Cream Cones $1.50 each
Quantity
1
2
3
4
5
6
MU
30
25
20
15
10
5
MU/P
20
17
13
10
7
3
MU/P
30
25
20
15
10
5
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Step 3:
Determine the optimal consumption bundle for Lee given his $7 budget for each of
the new possible prices of ice cream cones.
At a price of $1.50 per ice cream cone, Lee will consume 2 ice cream cones and 4 cans of
Lime Fizz as this is the point where the marginal utilities per dollar are closest and still within
the $7.00 budget. Similarly, when the price is $1.00 per cone, Lee will consume 3 ice cream
cones and 4 cans of Lime Fizz.
Step 4:
Use the optimal bundles to generate Lees demand curve for ice cream cones.
At a price of $2.00, Lee will consume 1 ice cream cone. At $1.50 per cone, Lee will consume
2 cones and at $1 per cone, he will consume 3 cones.
10.3
Learning Objective: Explain how social influences can affect consumption choices.
Consumer decisions appear to be influenced by the actions and perceptions of other consumers. Some
people obtain utility from consuming goods that others consume. Firms use celebrity endorsements to sell
products because consumers often wish to be identified with products used by celebrities. Celebrity
endorsements can be particularly effective when consumers believe celebrities are knowledgeable about
the products they endorse. For example, consumers know that Tiger Woods is knowledgeable about golf
clubs and therefore trust his endorsement.
Consumer decisions can be affected by network externalities, a situation in which the usefulness of a
product increases with the number of consumers who use it. For example, you will not find a fax machine
useful if no one else owns one. Consumers willingness to buy new technologies, such as Blu-ray DVD
players, is enhanced when they know many others have bought them because this will ensure these
technologies will be available in the future and that complementary productssuch as DVDs in the Blu-ray
formatwill be widely available.
Recent studies of consumer behavior indicate consumers think about fairness when they make decisions,
which means that consumers may decrease their well-being financially for the sake of fairness. For
example, some restaurant diners may leave a good tip even though they do not expect to visit that
restaurant again. Even economic experiments, like the Ultimatum Game, show that fairness often plays a
role in making decisions.
Firm realize that consumers value fairness. Tickets for Broadway plays, concerts, and sporting contests
are often priced below their equilibrium levels. These decisions appear to be a response to consumers
concerns that the equilibrium prices would be unfairly high.
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Study Hint
Prior to the 1970s, owners of foreign-made automobiles often had difficulty locating parts for their cars and
mechanics who could repair them. One would usually need hard-to-find metric wrenches to do even simple
repair work. The rapid increase in oil and gasoline prices beginning in 1973 caused a surge in demand for
the smaller, more fuel-efficient automobiles offered by Japanese and German automakers. By the late
twentieth century, foreign manufacturers had gained significant market share in the United States. The
availability of parts, mechanics, and tools was no longer an issue for buyers of domestic or foreign
automobiles. This is an example of the importance of network externalities.
Supports Learning Objective10.3: Explain how social influences can affect consumption choices.
In 2009, Olympic hero Michael Phelps and singer Chris Brown gave advertisers another lesson in the
risks of paying big money to celebrities to endorse their products. Soon after a photograph of Phelps
smoking marijuana was printed in a British tabloid, Kellogg cancelled its contract with the swimmer.
Brown shocked music fans after he allegedly battered singing star and girlfriend Rihanna. Brown had
earlier appeared in ads for Doublemint gum. The best celebrity endorsement deals for firms, of course,
feature those who are well-known both for their achievements in the world of sports (Peyton Manning,
Michael Jordan) and entertainment (Jerry Seinfeld, Beyonc) as well as for their ability to avoid scandal.
But another important factor is the publics belief in the credibility of the celebrity endorser. One of the
best examples of this is star pitchman and former heavyweight boxing champion George Foreman.
Foreman has appeared in ads for Meineke Mufflers and has endorsed his own line of clothing, but his
greatest success has been from sales of The George Foreman Lean Mean Grilling Machine. Salton, Inc.,
the manufacturer of the Grilling Machine, paid Foreman more than $130 million to endorse its product
over a 10-year period. An important part of Foremans success is his amiable persona, in contrast with the
sullen image he had in his early boxing years. The public also trusts Foreman, especially when it comes to
food. He has a well-chronicled history of enjoying foodlots of it, says Rich Kenah, director of
marketing for Global Athletics and Marketing firm in Boston. So he is credible on the subject.
Foreman tries all productsgathering approvals from his wife and childrenbefore agreeing to endorse
them. John Bellamy, CEO of Knockout Group, Inc., says Foreman went so far as to put an ethics clause
in Knockouts contract prohibiting it from selling the company to anyone involved in alcohol, tobacco,
pornography, or gambling. The most important thing to him is image, Bellamy says.
Sources: A.K. Cabell, Celebrity Endorsements Reach for the Stars, brandchannel.com, June 2, 2003; George Foreman:
Marketing Champ of the World, BusinessWeek Online. December 20, 2004; Charisse Jones, Ad Track: Scandals tarnish
celebrity endorsement, USA Today, February 22, 2009.
This problem is about celebrity endorsements that influence the choices consumers make, so
you may want to review the section Social Influences on Decision Making, which begins
on page 317 in the textbook.
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Step 2:
Step 3:
10.4
Some economists have questioned whether consumers make decisions rationally. Consumers sometimes
make poor choices. Behavioral economics studies situations in which people make choices that do not
appear to be economically rational. Among the most important reasons for poor choices are: failure to
account for nonmonetary opportunity costs, failure to ignore sunk costs, and being unrealistic about future
behavior.
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Appendix
Using Indifference Curves and Budget Lines to Understand
Consumer Behavior (pages 335346)
Learning Objective: Use indifferent curves and budget lines to understand consumer behavior.
Consumer Preferences
Rather than assume utility is measured in utils, it is more realistic to assume that consumers rank different
combinations of goods and services by how much utility they provide. If a consumer is presented with
two alternative consumption bundles (A and B), one can assume she will be able to decide on one of the
following:
1. the consumer prefers A to B, or
2. the consumer prefers B to A, or
3. the consumer is indifferent between A and B because she receives equal utility from A and B.
Economists assume that the consumers preferences are transitive. This means that if a consumer prefers A
to B and B to C, then she must prefer A to C. Given the assumptions made, we can draw a map of a
consumers preferences using indifference curves. An indifference curve is a curve that shows the
combinations of consumption bundles that give the consumer the same utility. Indifference curves assume
that consumption bundles consist of various amounts of only two goods. Each possible combination of two
goodsfor example, cans of Coke and slices of pizzahas an indifference curve passing through it. A
consumer is indifferent among all the consumption bundles that are on the same indifference curve.
In a graph of indifference curves, the further to the right a curve is, the greater the utility it represents.
Along an indifference curve, the slope indicates the rate at which a consumer is willing to trade off one
good for another, keeping total utility constant. This rate is called the marginal rate of substitution
(MRS). The MRS decreases as we move down the indifference curve. This decrease in the MRS means the
indifference curves are bowed in or convex.
Indifference curves do not cross. If two indifference curves (I1 and I2) crossed, they would share a
common point (point X). (See Figure 10A.2 on page 337). Assume that Y is a point on I2 so that the
consumer would be indifferent between points X and Y. Assume that point Y lies on the portion of I2 that
is above I1. Z is another point on I1 so that the consumer is indifferent between X and Z. Because of the
transitivity assumption, the consumer should be indifferent between points Z and Y, but Y represents more
of both Coke and pizza. The violation of the transitivity assumption proves that indifference curves
cannot cross.
Study Hint
Be sure you understand Figure 10A.1 on page 336 and Figure 10A.2 on page 337 and the description of
these graphs in the textbook. Notice that the indifference curves do not bend backward or become
positively sloped. This means that receiving more Coke and pizza always increases utility. If indifference
curves were positively sloped, this would mean that receiving more of one good (for example, pizza)
would lower consumer utility and require more of the other good to maintain utility at the same level.
(Positively sloped indifference curves are sometimes used to model economic bads such as pollution
and risk.)
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Study Hint
Budget lines are similar to the production possibilities frontiers introduced in Chapter 2, but they
identify possible consumption choices rather than production options. Figure 10A.3 on page 337
illustrates a budget line for Dave, a representative consumer. Points on the budget line represent
combinations of two goods that are affordable and use up all available income. Points inside the budget
line represent affordable combinations of the two goods that leave some income unspent, and points
above the budget line represent unaffordable consumption bundles.
Study Hint
It is much easier to understand how the optimal combination of goods is determined and how price
changes change the optimal combination with graphs rather than with words alone. Make sure you
understand the graphs in Figures 10A.4 through 10A.6.
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Drawing a line parallel to the new budget line (that is, with the new lines slope) tangent to the I1
illustrates the substitution effect of the price change. The change in consumption from the tangency of a
line parallel to the new budget line and I1 to the tangency of the new budget line and I2 illustrates the
income effect of the change in price. Increases in income shift the budget line outward and enable
consumers to reach higher indifference curves.
The Slope of the Indifference Curve, the Slope of the Budget Line, and the Rule
of Equal Marginal Utility per Dollar Spent
At the point of optimal consumption, the MRS is equal to the ratio of the price of the product on the
horizontal axis to the price of the product on the vertical axis. The slope of the indifference curve is the
rate at which a consumer is willing to trade off one good for the other. The slope of the budget line is the
rate at which a consumer is able to trade off one good for the other. Only at the point of optimal
consumption is the rate at which a consumer is willing to trade off one good for the other equal to the rate
which she can trade off one good for the other.
Indifference curves and budget lines can be used to explain the rule of equal marginal utility per dollar.
When a consumer moves downward along an indifference curve, more of one good (for example, pizza)
and less of another good (for example, Coke) is consumed, but utility is constant. Moving along an
indifference curve results in a loss in utility equal to the change in the quantity of Coke multiplied by the
marginal utility of Coke:
Change in the quantity of Coke MUCoke
and a gain in utility equal to the change in the quantity of pizza multiplied by the marginal utility of pizza:
Change in the quantity of pizza MUPizza..
The loss in utility from consuming less Coke equals the gain in utility from consuming more pizza
because the consumer remains on the same indifference curve. The change in utility can be written:
(Change in the quantity of Coke MUCoke) = (Change in the quantity of pizza MUPizza).
This can be rewritten:
(Change in the quantity of Coke)/(Change in the quantity of pizza) = (MUPizza/MUCoke) = MRS.
Because the slope of the indifference curve (MRS) equals the slope of the budget line at the point of
optimal consumption then:
MUPizza/MUCoke= PPizza/PCoke.
Rewriting this equation yields marginal utility per dollar:
MU pizza MU Coke
=
Ppizza
PCoke
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Key Terms
Behavioral economics The study of situations
in which people make choices that do not appear
to be economically rational.
Key TermsAppendix
Indifference curve A curve that shows the
combinations of consumption bundles that give
the consumer the same utility.
Self-Test
(Answers are provided at the end of the Self-Test.)
Multiple-Choice Questions
1. If increasing your consumption of pizza from 3 to 4 slices increases your utility, which of the
following must be true?
a. The marginal utility of the fourth slice of pizza is equal to the total utility of 4 slices of pizza.
b. The marginal utility of the fourth slice of pizza is greater than the marginal utility of the third
slice of pizza.
c. The marginal utility of the fourth slice of pizza is positive.
d. The marginal utility of the third slice of pizza is negative.
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Total Utility
10
18
?
28
?
Marginal Utility
?
?
6
?
2
34.
6.
22.
24.
6. Refer to the table below. The marginal utility from consuming the second ice cream cone equals
Ice Cream Cones
1
2
3
4
5
a.
b.
c.
d.
Total Utility
10
18
?
28
?
Marginal Utility
?
?
6
?
2
10.
9.
8.
18.
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7. Refer to the table below. The total utility from consuming 5 ice cream cones is equal to
Ice Cream Cones
1
2
3
4
5
a.
b.
c.
d.
Total Utility
10
18
?
28
?
Marginal Utility
?
?
6
?
2
28.
29.
30.
2.
a.
b.
c.
d.
257
9. Refer to the graph below. From the information in the graph, we can deduce that the marginal utility
curve would be
a.
b.
c.
d.
downward sloping.
upward sloping.
horizontal.
vertical.
258
13. Fill in the blanks. The demand curve for an inferior good is _________ sloping, while the demand
curve for a Giffen good is _______ sloping.
a. downward; downward.
b. downward; upward.
c. upward; downward.
d. upward; upward.
14. Suppose you have a fixed amount of income to spend on two goods, X and Y. The price of good X is
Px = $10, and the price of good Y is Py = $5. The marginal utility of X is MUx = 60 utils, and the
marginal utility of Y is MUy = 15 utils. How should consumption of X and Y change, if at all, to
increase utility?
a. Consumption of good X should increase, and consumption of good Y should decrease.
b. Consumption of good X should decrease, and consumption of good Y should increase.
c. The current combination of goods maximizes total utility; consumption should remain the same.
d. The consumption of goods X and Y should both increase.
15. Refer to the table below. As stated in the first row, the income of the consumer (I) equals $20. The
price of good X (Px) equals $4.00, and the price of good Y (Py) equals $2.00. Total utility derived
from consuming X and Y is listed. What is the marginal utility per dollar spent on the fifth unit of
good X?
I = $20.00
Total
X
Utility
0
0
1
40
2
65
3
85
4
100
5
108
6
114
a.
b.
c.
d.
Px = $4.00
MUx
MUx / Px
Py = $2.00
Total
Y
Utility
0
0
1
35
2
55
3
70
4
80
5
84
6
85
8
4
2
1.5
MUy
-
MUy / Py
259
16. Refer to the table below. As stated in the first row, the income of the consumer (I) equals $20. The
price of good X (Px) equals $4.00, and the price of good Y (Py) equals $2.00. Total utility derived
from consuming X and Y is listed. What combination of goods X and Y will maximize utility subject
to the consumers budget constraint?
I = $20.00
Total
X
Utility
0
0
1
40
2
65
3
85
4
100
5
108
6
114
a.
b.
c.
d.
Px = $4.00
MUx
MUx / Px
Py = $2.00
Total
Y
Utility
0
0
1
35
2
55
3
70
4
80
5
84
6
85
MUy
MUy / Py
17. Refer to the table below. As stated in the first row, the income of the consumer (I) equals $20. The
price of good X (Px) equals $3.00, and the price of good Y (Py) equals $2.00. Total utility derived
from consuming X and Y is listed. What combination of goods X and Y will maximize utility subject
to the consumers budget constraint?
I = $20.00
Total
X
Utility
0
0
1
40
2
65
3
85
4
100
5
108
6
114
a.
b.
c.
d.
Px = $3.00
MUx
MUx / Px
Py = $2.00
Total
Y
Utility
0
0
1
35
2
55
3
70
4
80
5
84
6
85
MUy
MUy / Py
18. The income effect is the change in the quantity demanded of a good that results from
a. the effect of a change in the price on consumer purchasing power.
b. the effect of a change in the price making the good more or less expensive relative to other goods,
holding constant the effect of the price change on consumer purchasing power.
c. either (a) or (b).
d. none of the above.
260
19. The substitution effect is the change in the quantity demanded of a good that results from
a. the effect of a change in the price on consumer purchasing power.
b. the effect of a change in the price making the good more or less expensive relative to other goods,
holding constant the effect of the price change on consumer purchasing power.
c. either a or b
d. none of the above.
20. Fill in the blanks. For a normal good, the income effect is _________, and the substitution effect is
_______.
a. positive; positive
b. positive; negative
c. negative; positive
d. negative; negative
21. Fill in the blanks. For an inferior good, the income effect is _________, and the substitution effect is
_______.
a. positive; positive
b. positive; negative
c. negative; positive
d. negative; negative.
22. For an inferior good,
a. the income effect is greater than the substitution effect.
b. the income effect is smaller than the substitution effect.
c. the income effect equals to the substitution effect.
d. none of the above occurs.
23. Refer to the graph below. The graph shows your weekly demand for pizza. How was this demand
curve constructed?
a. by computing your optimal consumption of pizza at the various prices shown, all else the same
b. by computing your consumption of pizza when the price of pizza remains constant
c. by computing your consumption of pizza when both the price of pizza and the number of slices
you consume per week remain constant
d. by computing your consumption of pizza at various prices, regardless of utility gained
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24. Because of the law of diminishing marginal utility, total utility of consuming any good or service
a. increases at a decreasing rate as we consume more of any good or service.
b. decreases as we consume more of any good or service.
c. stays the same.
d. none of the above.
25. Which of the following factors best explains why consumers might prefer to go to a restaurant that
was similar to another restaurant in terms of dcor and food choices but had fewer customers?
a. the presence of network externalities
b. the idea that some people receive utility from goods they believe are popular
c. income and substitution effects
d. switching costs
26. For a Giffen good,
a. the income effect is greater than the substitution effect.
b. the income effect is smaller than the substitution effect.
c. the income effect equals to the substitution effect.
d. none of the above is true.
27. What happens when network externalities are present?
a. The usefulness of telecommunications equipment rises.
b. The usefulness of networks diminishes with the number of consumers who enter them.
c. The usefulness of a product increases with the number of consumers who use it.
d. The usefulness of a product decreases as the number of products rises.
28. What happens when a product is path dependent?
a. The technology used to produce the product has a specific growth path.
b. The product can sell for a higher price when it is new and there are no similar products consumers
can buy than when it is older and consumers can choose to buy substitutes for the product.
c. The cost of switching to a product with a better technology gives the product with the initial
technology an advantage.
d. The path that a product follows depends on the firm that uses the best technology to produce it.
29. The budget line shows
a. different levels of consumption associated with different levels of incomes.
b. the affordable combinations of goods and services you can buy with your income.
c. different levels of inputs needed to produce specific level of output.
d. none of the above.
30. In considering consumers attitudes toward fairness, which of the following have economists found to
be true?
a. People are interested mainly in making themselves as well off as possible.
b. People attempt to treat others fairly, even if doing so makes them worse off financially.
c. People attempt to treat others fairly, but only if doing so makes them better off financially.
d. People usually ignore fairness when making spending decisions.
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31. Many people donate to charity and leave tips to servers in restaurants even when they will never visit
the restaurant again. Economists consider this type of behavior to be
a. irrational because these actions make people worse off financially.
b. rational because it shows that people value fairness even when this behavior makes people worse
off financially.
c. rational only if other people observe this behavior.
d. All of the above are consistent with the general view of fairness.
32. In the ultimatum game, if neither the allocator nor the recipient cared about fairness, what would be
the optimal distribution of $20.00?
a. $19.99 for the allocator and $0.01 for the recipient
b. $10.00 for the allocator and $10.00 for the recipient
c. $19.99 for the recipient and $0.01 for the allocator
d. $20.00 for the allocator and nothing for the recipient
33. In the ultimatum game, when the allocator and the recipient care about fairness, how is the
distribution of $20.00 affected?
a. Allocators receive everything, and recipients receive nothing.
b. Recipients usually reject offers of less than a 10 percent share.
c. Allocators usually offer recipients a very small share.
d. Allocators and recipients always end up sharing the $20.00 equally.
34. Refer to the graph below, which shows the demand and supply of tickets for a Broadway play. At
what price is there a shortage of tickets?
a.
b.
c.
d.
at $75
at $125
at $145
at all three prices
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35. Refer to the graph below, which shows the demand and supply of tickets for a Broadway play. When
the plays producers take fairness into account, which of the following would most likely occur?
a.
b.
c.
d.
36. Fill in the blanks. Which of the following has been found by researchers in surveys of consumers?
Most people consider it _________ for firms to raise their prices following an increase in costs
____________ to raise prices following an increase in demand.
a. fair; and fair
b. fair; but unfair
c. unfair; but fair
d. unfair; and unfair
37. Marginal utility per dollar spent on good X is
a. total utility of X divided by its price.
b. marginal utility of X divided by its price.
c. the change in marginal utility of good X.
d. none of the above.
38. Marginal rate of substitution between X and Y is
a. total utility of X divided by total utility of Y.
b. marginal utility of X divided by marginal utility of Y.
c. total utility of X divided by marginal utility of Y.
d. none of the above.
39. What do economists call the study of situations in which people act in ways that do not appear to be
economically rational?
a. normative economics
b. rational economics
c. behavioral economics
d. the economics of fairness
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40. Which of the following mistakes do consumers commonly commit when making decisions?
a. They take into account monetary costs but ignore nonmonetary opportunity costs.
b. They fail to ignore sunk costs.
c. They are unrealistic about their future behavior.
d. All of the above are mistakes consumers commonly commit when making decisions.
41. According to the endowment effect, people are unwilling to sell a good they already own in which of
the following situations?
a. if they are offered a price greater than the price they would pay if they did not already own the
good
b. if they are offered a price lower than the price they would have to pay to replace the good
c. if they cant replace the good
d. if the good was a gift that had great sentimental value
42. Which of the following reasons do economists use to explain why people are overweight?
a. People undervalue the utility to be received in the future.
b. People overvalue the utility from current choices.
c. Peoples preferences are not consistent over time.
d. All of the above explain why people are overweight.
2. Both an inferior good and a Giffen good have a negative substitution effect and a positive income
effect, yet the demand curve for an inferior good is downward sloping whereas for a Giffen good
it is upward sloping. How can you explain that?
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
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3. In Table 10.2 (page 309) in the textbook, you have a budget of $10 to spend on pizza and Coke,
and the price of pizza is $2 per slice, while the price of Coke is $1.00 per cup. You would
maximize your utility by consuming 3 slices of pizza and 4 cups of Coke. What quantities of
Coke and pizza would you consume if your budget increased to $13? What does your answer tell
you about whether Coke and pizza are normal or inferior goods?
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
4. Your friend argues that The optimal bundle of pizza and coke is where the marginal utility of
pizza is the same as the marginal utility of coke. Comment on his argument.
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
5. Approximately 20 percent of U.S. adults smoke cigarettes despite the documented health risks
associated with smoking. Explain how the prevalence of smoking can be an example of irrational
decision making.
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
True/False Questions
T F
T F
T F
T F
1. If total utility increases when you consume more of a good, then marginal utility must also
be increasing as consumption rises.
2. Marginal utility of the second slice of pizza you eat is larger than the marginal utility of the
first slice of pizza you eat.
3. The income effect of a normal good is negative.
4. The income effect of an inferior good is negative.
2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
266
T F
T F
T F
T F
T F
T F
T F
T F
T F
T F
T F
5. Gary Becker and Kevin Murphy are among the economists who believe that social factors
such as culture, customs, and religion do not explain the choices consumers make.
6. Economists use the phrase network externalities to describe the role technology plays in
explaining why consumers buy products that other consumers are already buying.
7. Marginal utility is the change in the total utility that a person receives from consuming one
more unit of a good or service.
8. The substitution effect of an inferior good is positive.
9. When the price of a normal good decreases, the substitution effect causes the quantity
demanded to increase. When the price of an inferior good decreases, the substitution effect
causes the quantity demanded to decrease.
10. A point on the budget line is affordable to the consumer.
11. Marginal rate of substitution of good X for good Y equals the ratio of marginal utility of X
divided by marginal utility of Y.
12. Firms pay celebrities to endorse their products because they believe this will increase the
demand for these products.
13. Firms will sometimes not raise their prices, even when there is a large increase in demand
for their products because they fear consumers will consider the price increases unfair.
14. A point outside the budget line is unaffordable to the consumer.
15. The endowment effect is used to describe the mistake a consumer makes when he accounts
for the monetary costs of his decisions but ignores the nonmonetary opportunity costs.
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268
269
True/False Answers
Question
1.
Answer
F
2.
3.
4.
5.
T
F
F
6.
7.
8.
Comment
Total utility increases, even if marginal utility (the change in total utility from
consuming one more unit) decreases.
Because of the law of diminishing marginal utility, the marginal utility of the
second slice of pizza you eat is smaller, not larger, than the marginal utility of the
first slice of pizza you eat.
For a normal good, both the income and substitution effects are negative.
For an inferior good, the income effect is positive.
These economists believe that the mentioned factors do influence decision
making.
The product becomes more useful as more consumers purchase and use the
product.
Marginal utility is the extra satisfaction (utility) that a person receives from
consuming one more unit of a good or service.
The substitution effect of an inferior good is negative, not positive.
270
Question
9.
Answer
F
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
T
T
15.
Comment
If the price either of a normal good or an inferior good decreases, the substitution
effect will cause quantity demanded to increase. It is the direction of the income
effect that is different across normal and inferior goods.
A point on the budget line means that the consumer spends all his or her income
and is therefore affordable to the consumer.
Marginal rate of substitution of good X for good Y equals the ratio of the marginal
utility of X to the marginal utility of Y.
Consumers may buy products endorsed by celebrities to be fashionable or to feel
closer to the celebrities.
See the section entitled Does Fairness Matter? that begins on page 319.
A point outside the budget line needs more of the consumers income than he or
she has and is therefore unaffordable to the consumer.
The endowment effect is the tendency of people to be unwilling to sell a good they
already own even if they are offered a price that is greater than the price they
would be willing to pay to buy the good if they didnt already own it.