CIE AS/A Economics Chapter 30≡ Contents

Chapter 30 — Utility

Cambridge International AS & A Level Economics (9708) · Unit 7.1 · 4th edition coursebook

Learning objectives

  • Define the meaning of total utility and marginal utility.
  • Calculate total utility and marginal utility.
  • Explain diminishing marginal utility.
  • Explain the equi-marginal principle.
  • Derive an individual demand curve.
  • Evaluate the limitations of marginal utility and its assumptions of rational behaviour.

Key terms

law of diminishing marginal utility
As consumption increases, the satisfaction from consumption decreases.
total utility
The total satisfaction received from consumption.
marginal utility
The utility derived from the consumption of one more unit of the good or service.
equi-marginal principle
Consumers maximise their utility where their marginal valuation for each product consumed is the same.

30.1Utility and diminishing marginal utility

Earlier chapters derived a demand curve from a demand schedule but did not explain why a consumer is willing to buy more of a good as its price falls. The answer lies in the idea of utility — a measure of the satisfaction or happiness a person obtains from consuming a good or service. Utility theory assumes that this satisfaction can, in principle, be counted in units in the same way that the goods themselves can be counted.

Consider a hungry consumer buying slices of pizza. The first slice yields a large amount of satisfaction, and the consumer may be willing to pay a relatively high price for it. A second slice still adds satisfaction, but less than the first, so the consumer is willing to pay only a slightly lower price. A third slice adds less still. The reducing amount the consumer is willing to pay reflects the falling extra satisfaction received from each additional slice. The same logic explains why a shopper will quickly buy an item priced below what they expected (its utility exceeds the price asked) but walk away from an item priced above the expected price.

Total and marginal utility

Two measures of satisfaction are central to the analysis. Total utility is the overall satisfaction derived from consuming all units of a good over a given time period. Marginal utility is the additional utility derived from consuming one more unit. If a consumer gains ten units of satisfaction from one slice of pizza and fifteen units from two slices, then the marginal utility of the second slice is five units. Marginal utility is therefore the change in total utility caused by consuming one extra unit.

The law of diminishing marginal utility

The law of diminishing marginal utility states that, as consumption of a good increases, the marginal utility derived from each additional unit gets smaller. Total utility may still be rising — the consumer is still gaining satisfaction from the next unit — but it is rising at a slower and slower rate. This pattern is the reason a consumer is only willing to buy more of a good when its price falls: each successive unit is worth less to them than the one before, so price must fall to make further purchases worthwhile. Diminishing marginal utility therefore provides the underlying explanation for the downward-sloping individual demand curve.

Practice — after §30.1LO 7.1.1 · P3 2023 w Oct/Nov
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 1)
Practice — after §30.1LO 7.1.2 · P3 2023 s May/Jun
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 2)

30.2The equi-marginal principle

A consumer rarely buys just one good. When income is divided between several products, the question becomes: how should a consumer allocate a limited budget so that total satisfaction is as large as possible? The answer is given by the equi-marginal principle.

A consumer is in equilibrium when it is no longer possible to switch spending from one good to another and raise total utility. Suppose product A yields marginal utility of ten units and costs $5, while product B yields marginal utility of twenty units and costs $10. The marginal utility per dollar (MU/P) is two for A and two for B; the consumer has nothing to gain by moving a dollar between them. More generally, consumer equilibrium occurs where:

MUA / PA = MUB / PB = MUC / PC = … = MUN / PN

where MU is marginal utility, P is price, and A, B, C, …, N are the different products. When this condition holds it is impossible to reallocate spending between any of the products and obtain more satisfaction. Income has been allocated in the way that maximises total utility.

Assumptions of the equi-marginal principle

The principle rests on three assumptions:

A simple numerical example illustrates the idea. Suppose products x and y cost $1 and $2 respectively and a consumer has $10 to spend. By calculating MU/P for each unit of x and each unit of y, the equilibrium combination can be found at the point where MU/P is the same for both goods and where total spending equals the budget. At that combination, total utility is as high as the budget allows; any other affordable combination would deliver less satisfaction.

Practice — after §30.2LO 7.1.3 · P3 2022 w Oct/Nov
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 4)

30.3Derivation of an individual demand curve

Marginal utility analysis can be used to derive an individual's demand curve for a good. Begin at a position of consumer equilibrium, where MU/P is equal across all products being consumed. Now suppose the price of one good — call it y — falls, while the price of every other good and the consumer's income remain unchanged (see Figure 30.3).

Quantity Price ($)1234567012D
Figure 30.3: Derived individual demand curve for product y

Because the price of y has fallen, MUy/Py is now larger than the MU/P of every other good. The consumer can raise total utility by buying more y. As consumption of y rises, the law of diminishing marginal utility causes MUy to fall, which reduces MUy/Py back towards the common ratio. A new equilibrium is reached at a larger quantity of y. Total utility has increased.

Plotting the price of y against the quantity demanded gives two points on the individual's demand curve: the original price-quantity combination and the new lower-price, higher-quantity combination. Repeating the exercise for many price changes traces out a full downward-sloping individual demand curve. Because the underlying mechanism is the law of diminishing marginal utility, the analysis explains rather than merely asserts the negative relationship between price and quantity demanded.

Practice — after §30.3LO 7.1.4 · P3 2022 m Feb/Mar
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 5)

30.4Limitations of marginal utility theory and assumptions of rational behaviour

Marginal utility theory rests on assumptions that may not hold in practice. Two are especially demanding.

First, the theory assumes that consumers can rank their wants in order and assign a numerical value to the satisfaction obtained from each unit of consumption. This is a strong assumption. Most people do not consciously attach numbers to their satisfaction and may find it difficult to compare the utility derived from very different goods.

Second, the law of diminishing marginal utility — and the equi-marginal principle that follows from it — assumes that consumers behave rationally. Empirical evidence from real markets consistently shows that there are factors other than utility that influence what people buy. Habit, advertising, peer pressure, emotional state, brand loyalty and incomplete information all shape purchases. To explain real consumer behaviour, economists must look beyond utility maximisation and consider the psychological influences that affect decision-making. Students should therefore not assume that consumers always act in the way that marginal utility theory predicts.

Practice — after §30.4LO 7.1.5 · P3 2023 m Feb/Mar
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 3)

End-of-chapter practice

Past-paper questions from CIE 9708. Pick A, B, C or D. Answers are saved on this device — press Download report (PDF) at the top to save them.

End-of-chapter Q1LO 7.1.3 · P3 2021 w Oct/Nov
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 6)
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CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 7)
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CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 8)
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CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 9)
End-of-chapter Q5LO 7.1.2 · P3 2016 w Oct/Nov
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Utility (image 10)
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Self-evaluation checklist

After studying this chapter, you should be able to:

  • Understand that total utility is the overall satisfaction that is derived from the consumption of all units of a good over a given time period and that marginal utility is the additional utility derived from the consumption of one more unit of a particular good.
  • Calculate total utility and marginal utility.
  • Explain the equi-marginal principle whereby consumers maximise their utility where their marginal valuation for each product consumed is the same.
  • Use the equi-marginal principle to derive an individual demand curve.
  • Evaluate the limitations of marginal utility theory and understand that consumers do not always behave as prescribed by utility theory.