Consumer Always Like To Get More Than Less-Discuss

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"Consumer always like to get more than less"discuss.

Explain the different properties of


consumer preference?

A rational consumer always prefers a more of a commodity. Because he


thinks that the consumption bundle having more quantity will give him more
utility. This is called the monotonic preference.
For example a consumer has two combinations of two goods namely
mango and apple. The first combination offers him 4 units of mango and
units of apple and second combination offers 4 units of mango and 8 units
of apple. So acccording to monotonic preferences he will choose the
second combination because it will give him more satisfaction. This
monotonic preference is the basic assumption for styuding the concept of
IC ( indifference curve
Explain the Different properties of consumer preference start by making five assumptions
about the properties of consumers’ preferences.
For brevity, these properties are referred to as completeness, transitivity, more is better,
continuity, and strict convexity.
Completeness. The completeness property holds that, when facing a choice
between any two bundles of goods, a consumer can rank them so that one and only
one of the following relationships is true: The consumer prefers the first bundle to
the second, prefers the second to the first, or is indifferent between them. This prop-
erty rules out the possibility that the consumer cannot decide which bundle is
preferable.
It would be very difficult to predict behavior if consumers’ rankings of bundles were
not logically consistent. The next property eliminates the possibility of certain types of
illogical behavior.
Transitivity. The transitivity (or what some people refer to as rationality) property is
that a consumer’s preferences over bundles is consistent in the sense that, if the con-
sumer weakly prefers Bundle z to Bundle y—that is, likes z at least as much as y—and
weakly prefers Bundle y to Bundle x, the consumer also weakly prefers Bundle z to
Bundle x.4
If your sister told you that she preferred a scoop of ice cream to a piece of cake, a
piece of cake to a candy bar, and a candy bar to a scoop of ice cream, you’d probably
think she’d lost her mind. At the very least, you wouldn’t know which of these desserts
to serve her.
3
L. M. Boyd, “The Grab Bag,” San Francisco Examiner, September 11, 1994, p. 5.
4
The assumption of transitivity of weak preferences is sufficient for the following analysis.
However, it is easier (and plausible) to assume that other preference relations—strict preference
and indifference between bundles—are also transitive.
Preferences 63
More Is Better. The more-is-better property (the economics jargon is nonsatiation)
holds that, all else the same, more of a commodity is better than less of it.5 Indeed,
economists define a good as a commodity for which more is preferred to less, at least
at some levels of consumption. In contrast, a bad is something for which less is pre-
ferred to more, such as pollution. We now concentrate on goods.
Although the completeness and transitivity properties are crucial to the analysis
that follows, the more-is-better property is included to simplify the analysis—our most
important results would follow even without this property.
So why do economists assume that the more-is-better property holds? The most
compelling reason is that it appears to be true for most people.6 A second reason is that
if consumers can freely dispose of excess goods, consumers can be no worse off with
extra goods. (We examine a third reason later in the chapter: We observe consumers
buying goods only where this condition is met.)
Continuity. Loosely, the continuity property holds that if a consumer prefers Bundle
a to Bundle b, then the consumer prefers Bundle c to b if c is very close to a. The pur-
pose of this assumption is to rule out sudden preference reversals in response to small
changes in the characteristics of a bundle. This assumption is technical and allows us
later in this chapter to develop the mathematical theory concerning utility functions.
Strict Convexity. Strict convexity of preferences means that consumers prefer aver-
ages to extremes. For example, if Bundle a and Bundle b are distinct bundles and the
consumer prefers both of these bundles to Bundle c, then the consumer prefers a
weighted average of a and b, ba (1 – b)b (where 0 < b < 1), to Bundle c. This con-
dition is a technical one, which we will usually assume holds.7

So we can say "consumer always like to get more than less" analysis the different
properties of consumers preference

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