Chapter 2: Theory of Consumer Behaviour (Utility Approach)
1. Consumer
Consumer is an economic agent who buys goods and services to satisfy wants.
2. Utility
Meaning: The satisfaction a consumer gets from consuming a good/service.
Types of Utility:
Total Utility (TU): Total satisfaction from consuming given units.
Marginal Utility (MU): Extra satisfaction from consuming one more unit.
MU=TUn−TUn−1MU = TU_n – TU_{n-1}MU=TUn−TUn−1
3. Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility (DMU)
As more units of a commodity are consumed, marginal utility decreases.
Example: Eating slices of pizza – satisfaction reduces with each extra slice.
4. Consumer’s Equilibrium (Utility Approach)
A consumer is in equilibrium when:
One Commodity Case
MUx = Px (in terms of money)
or MUxPx=MUofmoney\frac{MUx}{Px} = MU of moneyPxMUx=MUofmoney
Two Commodity Case
MUxPx=MUyPy=MUm\frac{MUx}{Px} = \frac{MUy}{Py} = MU_mPxMUx=PyMUy=MUm
Meaning: utility per rupee spent on all goods is equal.
5. Indifference Curve Approach (Alternative Theory)
(Though detailed in later chapters, it’s introduced here)
Indifference Curve (IC): Shows different combinations of two goods giving same satisfaction.
Budget Line: Represents all possible combinations a consumer can afford.
Equilibrium Condition: Consumer is in equilibrium when:
MRSxy=PxPyMRS_{xy} = \frac{Px}{Py}MRSxy=PyPx(Marginal Rate of Substitution = Price ratio).
6. Key Definitions
Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS): Units of Y a consumer is willing to sacrifice for 1 unit of X while keeping satisfaction same.
Indifference Map: A set of indifference curves.
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