Advanced Micro Economics
Advanced Micro Economics
Definition: Utility may be defined as the creation of satisfaction. Put different, utility is seen as the want-
satisfying power of a commodity i.e. it’s the quality possessed by a commodity or service to satisfy human
want. It may also be defined as value- in-use of a commodity.
Types of Utility
1. Form utility: This type of utility is created or added by changing the shape or form of a particular good. For
example, a form utility is created when a carpenter makes a chair out of wood.
2. Place utility: This is utility created or added based on geographical location. If the commodity is not at a
particular place, its utility may diminish or totality absent. For example, watching a live football match at
the stadium.
3. Time utility: These are time bound utilities. They are present at a particular time and less or none at any
other time. For examples, selling a highly perishable good few days after harvest or production. Another
good example is watching a live programme or match.
4. Service utility: This type of utility is created or added when professionals like teachers, doctors, lawyer etc
satisfy human wants through their services.
5. Possession utility: This type of utility is created or derived when there is right ownership or possession of
a commodity. For example a hammer has a greater utility in the hand of a carpenter than in the hand of a
tailor.
6. Knowledge utility: This occurs when the utility of a commodity increases as a result of the increase in the
knowledge of its use. For example, knowing that your mobile phone can perform banking services. This
type of utility is usually created through advertisement.
7. Natural utility: It’s created or added by the free gift of nature. For example, water, air, sunshine, beach etc
There are two basic approaches to the problem of utilities, the cardinal approach and the ordinal approach.
Cardinalists’ Assumptions
1. Rationality: The consumer is assumed to be sensible and he aims at maximizing his utility subject to the
constraint imposed by his given income.
2. Cardinal utility: The utility of each commodity is measureable. Utility is measured by the monetary unit
that the consumer is prepared to sacrifice for the unit of the commodity.
3. Constant marginal utility of money: The essential feature of a standard unit of measurement is that it is
constant. Since money is used as the standard unit of measurement, it must therefore be assumed to be
constant irrespective of the level of income of the consumer.
4. Diminishing marginal utility: The marginal utility of a good diminishes as the consumer acquires larger
quantity of it.
MU = =
Equilibrium of a consumer
A consumer is said to be at equilibrium when the utility he derives from the consumption of an item
justifies the price paid for such an item. He is said to maximize his welfare at this point, subject to his
income.
1. A single commodity case: Here, the consumer buys only one commodity. He is at equilibrium at the point
where the marginal utility derived from the consumption of a commodity is equal to the price paid i.e.
= Price of commodity x
See class notes for mathematical derivation of this point.
2 Two – or –More Commodities Case: If there are two or more commodities involved, the condition for the
equilibrium of the consumer is the equality of the ratios of the marginal utilities of the individual
commodities to their respective prices. That is;
= =-------- =
Note, the equilibrium condition stated above is called the equimarginal principle. Other names for this principle
may include the following:
Marshal (1890) defined it thus; ‘’if a person has a thing which he can put to several uses, he will distribute it
among these uses in such a way that it has the same marginal utility in all’’
1. Utility is not measurable: the assumption of cardinal utility is extremely doubtful. the satisfaction from
various commodities cannot be measured objectively ,say in utils.
2. Unrealistic constant marginal utility of money: as income increases, the marginal utility of money changes
(decreases).A ₦500 note is worth more to a consumer when his income is low,say₦10,000 than when his income
is high, say ₦1,000,000.thus,money cannot be used as a measuring –rod.
3. Consumer irrationality: Most of our human purchases are casual, prompted by habit or taste and it cannot
be expected of the consumer to act rationally under these circumstances. Bandwagon effect, snob effect etc can
also make a consumer to be irrational.
4. Imperfect knowledge: in reality, most of the consumers are ignorant about other useful alternative of
spending their incomes.
5. The law of diminishing marginal utility has been established from introspection. It’s thus, a psychological law
which must be taken for granted.
B. ORDINAL APPROACH:
This school of thought postulated that utility is not measurable but it is an ordinal magnitude.
Consumer’s behaviour is explained in terms of his preferences or rankings for different combinations of two
goods, say x and y. The theory was developed by 20 th century economists such as: Slutsky (1915), Allen (1934),
Hicks (1939) and Watsan (1951).
Ordinalists’ Assumptions
In order to make their theory stand, the following axioms were made:
1. Rationality: The consumer aims at the maximization of his utility, given his income and market prices.
1. The Budget Line: it’s a line showing various combinations of two commodities the consumer can buy given
his money income and market prices of the two commodities.
The budget line is also called the budget constraint of the consumer and it sets limits to the maximization
behaviour of the consumer.
The income constraint, in the case of two commodities, say x and y, may be written thus:
M = P x Qx + P y Qy
Qy = M - P y Qy
Py P y
Note, the slope of the BL is the ration of the prices of the two commodities.
2. Indifference Curve: An IC is the locus of points (particular combinations of goods) which yield the same
level of satisfaction to the consumer, so that he is indifferent as to the particular combination he
consumes.
Simply put, an IC joins together all points representing different combinations of two goods which yield the same
utility to the consumer.
a. An IC has a negative slope: This means that if the quantity of one commodity, say x, decreases, the
quantity of the other commodity, say y, must increase so that the consumer can stay on the same level of
satisfaction.
b. The further away from the origin an IC lies, the higher the level of satisfaction.
c. Two Indifference curves do not intersect. If two ICs intersect, it represents two different levels of
satisfaction and this is impossible.
d. ICs are convex to the origin: This explains the law of diminishing Marginal Rate of Commodity Substitution.
3. Marginal Rate of Substitution: It means the amount of one commodity that is required to compensate the
consumer for giving up an amount of another commodity such that he maintains the same level of utility.
MRS is the negative slope of IC. That is:
Slope of IC =
And; =
Equilibrium of a Consumer
A consumer is at equilibrium (maximizing his utility) at the point where the budget line is tangential to
an IC.
At this point, the slopes of the BL ( ) and of the IC (MRSx,y = MUx ÷ MUy) are equal. That is, at
equilibrium:
PRACTICE QUESTIONS
1. Given the utility function U =10Q1Q2 and relative prices of P1 = ₦20, P2 = ₦10 and consumer
money income of ₦400. You are required to determine the units of each commodity to consume
at the equilibrium point.
2. Given the utility function, φ = Ax ayb subject to a budget constrained of PxX +PyY= B, prove that at
the point of constrained utility maximization the ratio of price Px÷P y must equal the ratio of
marginal utilities MUX ÷ MUY.
3. Prove the Marshalian demand function, stating its properties.