Overheads Chpt.5

The Nature of Demand

To better understand markets and equilibrium, we need to learn more about the nature of demand -- what is it that makes people willing buy, at a price? This is sometimes called "the theory of demand."

In a way, the surprise is that anything at all can be said about this, in general. The obvious guess is that people have a wide variety of motives, and that different things motivate different people to buy different things, so that nothing can be said in general. All that these motivations have in common is that the item bought gives satisfaction -- or, as we will say, "utility" -- of some sort. This may seem pretty vague, but, surprisingly, we can do a good deal with it.

Adam Smith on the Nature of Demand

Adam Smith considered, and rejected, the idea that demand must be related to "utility." This may seem self-evident: the more useful a thing is, the more satisfaction it gives, the more people would be willing to pay for it.

However, Smith saw a difficulty with this argument. The problem Smith posed has come down to us as the "Paradox of Diamonds and Water."

Diamonds and Water 2

The Paradox

As Smith observed, water is very useful -- indeed it is necessary for life. But water is very cheap. By contrast, diamonds have little utility. They are only useful for adornment. It is possible to do without diamonds entirely, and most people do. Yet diamonds are very costly. This is Smith's "paradox:" if demand depends on the usefulness of the product, then we would expect the more useful product, water, to command the higher price -- yet diamonds are more costly. Not only do we know that water is cheaper as a matter of fact, but most people would agree that they would not pay as much for water as for diamonds.

Smith Got This One Wrong

Because of this "paradox," Smith came to the conclusion that "natural price" is not related to utility. "Natural price," he said, is unrelated to usefulness and must be based on other principles. What other principles? It was here that Smith relied on the labor theory of value. For a century, most economists felt that Smith had settled all this -- that "natural" market prices depend on labor value.

The Labor Theory of Value came to play a key role in Marxism, and has a history of its own. We will have to leave this history for the study of Marxist economics, and for now go on to show how the New Economists of 1880 answered Smith's paradox.

Utility of Diamonds and Water

The explanation of the Paradox of Diamonds and Water will need a little special terminology.

It is best to begin with an example. In the example, we will assume that a person can buy water or diamonds or both. We assume that the satisfactions she gets from diamonds and from water can be measured in numerical terms. Following a long tradition in economics we will speak of the amount of satisfaction as the "utility" of diamonds and water. We assume:

  1. that her total satisfaction is the sum of the utility of water and the utility of diamonds,
  2. that the total utility of diamonds increases as she consumes more diamonds,
  3. that the total utility of water increases as she consumes more water, and
  4. that she tries to spend her income in such a way as to get the most satisfaction that she can -- that is, that she "maximizes" utility.

Quantity and Utility

Now suppose that the utility of diamonds and water increase as shown in Table 1

Table 1

Water Diamonds
Gallons Utility Carats Utility
1 1,000,000 1 15
2 1,000,100 2 29
3 1,000,110 3 42
4 1,000,111 4 54
5 1,000,111 5 64

Now suppose consumer already has

3 gallons of water but no diamonds. The fourth gallon of water would give her only one additional unit of utility. However, the first diamond would give her 15 units of utility. Thus, she would be willing to spend 15 times as much for a one-carat diamond as for a gallon of water.

.

Marginal Utility

Marginal Utility

This example makes two points.

First, the consumer's decision is not an all-or-nothing one. Instead, it is a decision to buy or not to buy just one more unit.

For that reason, we should not look at the total utility but at the "marginal" utility of the good or service. Marginal utility is defined as

MU = U/Q ‰ U/Q

where U is utility and Q is the quantity of the good. In the numerical example, the MU of water is 1 and the MU of diamonds is 15, so the consumer is willing to pay 15 times as much for a diamond as for a gallon of water. (This example is, of course, not "realistic.") Despite that, the person gets about 67000 times as much total utility from water as from a diamond.

Second, it follows that when one commodity is very common, and the other is very scarce, it is not so surprising that a person would pay more for the scarce good.

Marginal Utility Tables

Table 2 shows how marginal utility changes with changing consumption of the two goods.

Table 2


Water Diamonds

Total
Utility
Marginal
Utility
Total
Utility
Marginal
Utility
0 0 0
1,000,000 15
1 1,000,000 15
100 14
2 1,000,100 29
10 13
3 1,000,110 42
1 12
4 1,000,111 54
0 10
5 1,000,111 64

Exercise: Assuming unrealistically that diamonds cost $10 and water costs $1 and the consumer has $12 to spend in order to maximize total utility, how much of each good would she buy?

Diminishing Marginal Utility

This example illustrates some principles that have much wider application in economics. One is the principle of diminishing marginal utility.

We observe that for each good, the marginal utility decreases as the quantity of the good increases. In other words, total utility increases more and more slowly as the quantity consumed increases.

This is "diminishing returns" from the viewpoint of the consumer, and is a general principle of economics. There might be a threshold before the principle applies. For example, the marginal utility of golf clubs might increase until you have a fairly full set. But beyond some threshold, marginal utility will diminish with increasing consumption of any good.

Problems with Utility


The utility theory works OK as an example, to show how the "paradox of diamonds and water" can be resolved. But some economists -- and many other people -- are pretty doubtful that consumer satisfaction can really be measured in a number.

In more advanced economics, we have an alternative: "preference theory." It turns out that all we really need is consistent preferences. That is, suppose the consumer prefers five gallons of water and one diamond to fifty gallons of water and two diamonds. As long as those preferences are consistent, we can just use the preferences -- no utility numbers -- to get a theory of demand.

Benefits and Costs


Whether we think in terms of the utility approach or the preference approach, a consumer buys one more unit of a good or service only if she or he gets a benefit from it. The benefit is subjective -- getting something she prefers, or increasing her utility -- but that subjective benefit is the motivation for buying. How can we measure a subjective benefit?.

We can measure the subjective benefit by using the idea of opportunity cost.

Let's measure the benefit a person gets from buying (for example) four hamburgers a week. Here is the way we do it. The benefit from four hamburgers is the market value of the most valuable goods the person would give up to get the four hamburgers. Suppose, for example, that I would give up three movie tickets to get the four hamburgers, and the movie tickets would cost me $6 each. And suppose there are no other goods I would give up to get my four hamburgers that would cost more than $18. Then we can say that the four burgers bring me a total benefit of $18. The market value of the goods I would give up is the measure of the benefit I get from the burgers.

Economists call this the "doctrine of revealed preference."

Total Benefits of Burgers


For the example, we'll assume that a consumer's benefit from burgers increases with the number of burgers consumed as we see in Table 3.

Table 3 -- Total Benefit of Burgers in Money Terms

Burgers Total
Benefit
in $
1 10
2 15
3 17
4 18

Marginal Benefit

As usual, we will be interested in the marginal benefit. We can define the marginal benefit in parallel as we did the marginal utility:

That is, as near as we can approximate, the marginal benefit is the additional benefit from increasing consumption by one unit. For example, using the table in the previous overhead, when consumption of burgers is incresed from 2 burgers to 4, we have total benefit = 18-15 = 3 and  burgers = 4-2 = 2, so the marginal benefit for the range of 2 to 4 burgers is 3/2=1.5.

Marginal Benefit of Burgers

Let's see how the marginal benefit of burgers varies as the consumer eats more burgers in our example:

Table 6: Marginal Benefit of Burgers

Burgers Total
Benefit
Marginal
Benefit
0 0
10
1 10
5
2 15
2
3 17
1
4 18

Maximum Net Benefit 2


We assume that a rational consumer will keep increasing the consumption of burgers until she has maximized net benefits

The rule for this objective is

MB=p

That is, according to basic economic theory, consumers adjust their consumption of all goods and services so that MP=p for each good and service.

Demand for Burgers

Using this information we can draw a picture of the individual's demand curve for burgers, (as long as his opportunity cost is given at 10 units of utility per dollar):

Demand in General


This illustrates a general principle that applies to all consumer demand. In fact, it is so important and general that we might call it the fundamental principle of consumers' demand. Here it is:

Fundamental Principle of Consumers' Demand:
The demand curve for any product or service is identical with the marginal benefit curve for that good or service.
We remember the Law of Demand: a higher price means a lower quantity demanded, ceteris paribus. We also remember the Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility: each additional unit of consumption adds less to utility than the previous one. Since benefits are approximately utility in money terms, that also applies to benefits -- each additional unit of consumption adds less to total benefits than the previous one. So we have diminishing, marginal benefits, and we can now see that the Laws of Demand, Diminishing Marginal Utility, and Diminishing Marginal Benefits all really are the same law, looked at from different points of view.

Individual to Market Demand

We now have a theory of the individual's demand curve. But we need the market demand curve.

That's actually pretty easy. At any price, the market demand is the sum of the amounts demanded by each of the individuals at that price. That is, the market demand is the horizontal sum of the individual demands.

The diagram shows individual demand curves for Tom,

Dick and Harry. The thick gray line is the demand curve for a market consisting of Tom, Dick and Harry.

Marginal Benefit and Consumer's Surplus

Now we can use that information to restate the relationship between the demand and the consumers' utility. The consumer will buy just enough of any good so that the marginal benefit of the good is equal to its price. Conversely, the individual's demand curve is also her marginal benefit curve for the good.

The burgers example illustrates this. Our consumer, in the example, buys three burgers. The marginal benefit of the third burger is $2, equal to the price.

But notice that the total benefit from three burgers is $17, while the consumer has paid only $6 for the three burgers. He has gotten a net benefit of $17-$6=$11 from the three burgers. This net benefit of $11 is called the "consumer's surplus."

How has this happened? The customer got a marginal benefit of $10 for the first burger, but paid only $2, for a net of $8. For the second burger, he got a marginal benefit of $5, but paid only $2, for a net of $3. The consumer's surplus is the sum of the net benefits on the successive units bought: $8+$3=$11.

Consumer's Surplus Diagram

Consumer's surplus can be easily shown in a demand diagram.

In the figure, the demand for burgers is the stairstep, and the $2 price is the gray line. The lightly shaded area between the demand curve and the price line is the consumer's surplus.

Consumer's Surplus and Demand in General

In general, we identify the consumer's surplus in any demand diagram as the area between the demand curve and the price line, as the shaded area in the diagram below.

The area under the demand curve is the consumer's total benefit, and the area between the demand curve and price line is her net benefit, that is, consumer's surplus.

An Application of Consumers' Surplus

Here is an example of an application of consumers' surplus. Suppose a new consumers' good is introduced -- as VCR's were a few years ago. How much do consumers benefit?

Suppose D is the demand for VCR's and p is the price for which they sell. Before VCR's were introduced, consumers of course got no benefit from them at all. After they are introduced, consumers get a surplus indicated by the area of the shaded triangle. That is their net benefit from buying VCR's and is the consumers' benefit from the introduction of the new good.

Another Reasonable Dialog

Now let's put this into context -- the context of the 200 year reasonable dialog that is economics. We can express it as a dialog between a skeptic (perhaps a student) and a committed neoclassical economist:

Skeptic: I don't see how a "theory of demand" is possible. People demand different goods and services for all sorts of different reasons.

NE: The economist's strategy is to abstract from all that. What all goods and services have in common is that they give the consumer satisfaction -- "utility" -- and our theory of demand is built on just that.

Skeptic: That doesn't sound very promising! Can you say anything worthwhile at that level of abstraction?

NE: That's just what the utility approach does, and it shows that we can say important things without worrying about all the reasons why people buy things. Look what the utility theory tells us:

More Dialog

NE: The utility theory makes these specific points (and this is the chapter summary, by the way):

  1. It focuses our attention on marginal rather than total utility, solving the "paradox of diamonds and water" that had set economists off on a 100 year wrong track.

  2. It gives a reason why the demand curve is downward sloping, namely, the law of diminishing marginal utility. It turns out that that's not quite the whole story -- but we will have to save that complication for intermediate microeconomics.
  3. It gives us an approach to the whole problem of "efficient resource allocation," and a key principle of "efficient resource allocation," the equimarginal principle.
  4. It gets us started on practical cost-benefit analysis, with the fundamental concept of "consumers' surplus."

More Dialog

Skeptic: OK, I guess that proves the trick can be done -- but at what price, if you will excuse the expression! I have some problems with this whole utility approach.

NE: Tell me what they are.

Skeptic: Well -- the first one is small, but it bothers me. In your examples, the utility of cokes depends only on the consumption of cokes. What if the burgers make the consumer thirsty? Wouldn't that shift his marginal utility of cokes?

NE: Probably. That's just a simplifying assumption. We can get rid of it -- with a little math or geometry -- but we'll save that complication for intermediate microeconomics.

Skeptic: I'm supposed to trust you, huh?

NE: You could sign up for Econ 320.

Skeptic: I'll trust you.

Dialog: Conclusion, for Now

Skeptic: OK -- I guess I can buy this as a first approximation with a lot of simplifying assumptions for us first-term students. But one other thing puzzles me. Is this positive or normative economics?

NE: A bit of both, all mixed up in complicated ways. For example: we can compute the consumers' surplus from an estimate of the demand curve. That's positive economics. We can use that to estimate the costs and benefits of some government policy. That's positive economics (although the use of terms like "benefit" has some normative connotations). But as soon as we say that the government policy ought to be this, or that, because of the costs and benefits -- that's normative economics.

Skeptic: OK! I've got a few ideas about demand. How about supply?