Summary

This document presents an overview of consumer behavior, including factors influencing consumer choices, theories of consumer behavior, and concepts like utility, marginal rate of substitution, and indifference curves.

Full Transcript

CONSUMER BEHAVIOR - Study of how individual customers, group or organizations select, buy, use and dispose ideas and services to satisfy their needs and wants According to ENGEL, BLACKWELL AND MANSARD: - Consumer behavior is the actions and decisions processes of people who purcha...

CONSUMER BEHAVIOR - Study of how individual customers, group or organizations select, buy, use and dispose ideas and services to satisfy their needs and wants According to ENGEL, BLACKWELL AND MANSARD: - Consumer behavior is the actions and decisions processes of people who purchase goods and services for personal consumption Importance of consumer behavior - Better marketing and communications - Improve customer retention - Increase consumer loyalty - Better plan inventory - Increase sales - Research competition Factors influencing Consumer behavior - Situational -- external, temporary influences that affect behavior and decision making such as environment, time or context - Personal -- involve characteristics such as age, gender, lifestyle and economic status that influence decision behavior - Social -- influences from family, friends, social groups, and social norms that shape behavior and decisions - Psychological -- intrinsic, motivation, such as perception, beliefs attitudes and learning that influence behavior Theory of Consumer behavior -- description of the consumers allocate incomes among different goods and services to maximize their well being Consumer behavior is best understood in three distinct step: 1. Consumer preferences 2. Budget constraints 3. Consumer choices Market basket - List of specific quantities of one or more goods Individual preferences - Completeness -- preferences are assumed to be completed consumers can compare and rank all possible basket - Transitivity -- regarded as consumer consistency (a&b, b&c, c&b, a&c) - More is better than less - consumer prefer more of any goods than less Indifference curve - Curve representing all combinations of market baskets that provide a consumer with the same level of satisfaction Indifference map -- graph containing a set of indifference curve showing the market baskets among which consumer is indifferent Marginal rate of substitution - Maximum amount of good that a consumer is willing to give up in order to have additional unit of another goods in the same satisfaction level Convexity -- when the MRS diminishes along indifference curve Perfect substitute -- two goods are identical in purpose can be replaced Perfect complements -- goods that cannot buy without the one another BADS -- goods that is preferred for which less is rather than more Cardinal utility - It explains that the satisfaction level after consuming a good or service can be scaled in terms of COUNTABLE NUMBERS - UTILITY is measured on the basis of utils - Theory was applied by PROF. MARSHALL - OTHER NAME: UTILITY ANALYIS Ordinal Utility - Explains the satisfaction after consuming a good or service cannot be scaled in numbers - Can be arrange in order of PREFERENCE - UTILITY is ranked based on SATISFACTION - Theory was applied by J.R HICKS AND R.G D. ALLEN - OTHER NAME: INDDIFFERENCE CURVE ANALYSIS Effect of CHANGE IN INCOME on the BUDGET LINE Budget constraints - Consumer face as a result of limited incomes Budget line - All combinations of goods for which the total amount of money spent is equal income Effects of CHANGE IN PRICE on the budget Price changes - (With income unchanged) causes the budget line to rotate about one intercept Marginal benefit - Benefit from the consumption of one additional unit of good Marginal cost - Cost of one additional unit of a good Marginal utility -- additional satisfaction obtained from consuming one additional unit of good Diminishing marginal utility -- as more of a good is consumed, the consumption of additional amounts will yield smaller additions to utility Equal marginal principle - principle that utility is maximized when the consumer has equalized the marginal utility per dollar of expenditure across all goods Consumer equilibrium -- entails decisions about how much the consumer will consume several goods and services Maximization total utility -- when consumer make choices about the number of goods and services to consume Marginal utility -- change in total utility as an individual consumes each additional unit of commodity Utility -- total satisfaction received from consuming goods and services SATURATION POINT -- the product has reached all the potential consumer and the demand of the product is now less than the supply Total utility - sum of the total utility derived from each unit of commodity - aggregate amount of satisfaction or fulfillment that a consumer receives through the consumption of a specific good or services MRS Utility in other words: happiness -- measures how happy the consumers are an increase utility means consumers are better off and decrease are worse. No. of bread Marginal utility Total utility -------------- ------------------ --------------- 1 20 20 2 16 36 = (20+16) 3 12 48 = (36+12) 4 8 56 = (48+8) 6 4 60 = (56+4) TOTAL: 60 PROFIT MAXIMIZATION RULE (if a firm chooses to maximize its profits) - Marginal cost is equal to Marginal revenue (MC=MR) MAXIMIZE TOTAL UTILITY (consumer) - Should spend it on the items which yields the greatest marginal utility per dollar of expenditure

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