Utility

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We have already seen that the focus of economics is to understand the problem
of scarcity: the problem of fulfilling the unlimited wants of humankind with limited
and/or scarce resources.

Because of scarcity, economies need to allocate their resources efficiently. Underlying the laws of demand and supply is the concept of
utility, which represents the advantage or fulfillment a person receives from
consuming a good or service. Utility, then, explains how individuals and
economies aim to gain optimal satisfaction in dealing with scarcity.

Utility is an abstract concept rather than a concrete, observable quantity. The
units to which we assign an “amount” of utility, therefore, are arbitrary,
representing a relative value. Total utility is the aggregate sum of satisfaction or
benefit that an individual gains from consuming a given amount of goods or
services in an economy. The amount of a person's total utility corresponds to the
person's level of consumption.

Usually, the more the person consumes, the larger his or her total utility will be. Marginal utility is the additional satisfaction, or
amount of utility, gained from each extra unit of consumption.

Although total utility usually increases as more of a good is consumed, marginal
utility usually decreases with each additional increase in the consumption of a
good. This decrease demonstrates the law of diminishing marginal utility.

Because there is a certain threshold of satisfaction, the consumer will no longer
receive the same pleasure from consumption once that threshold is crossed. In
other words, total utility will increase at a slower pace as an individual increases
the quantity consumed.

Take, for example, a chocolate bar. Let's say that after eating one chocolate bar
your sweet tooth has been satisfied. Your marginal utility (and total utility) after
eating one chocolate bar will be quite high. But if you eat more chocolate bars,
the pleasure of each additional chocolate bar will be less than the pleasure you
received from eating the one before - probably because you are starting to feel
full or you have had too many sweets for one day.

 But if you eat more chocolate bars,the pleasure of each additional chocolate bar will be less than the pleasure youreceived from eating the one before - probably because you are starting to feelfull or you have had too many sweets for one day

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This table shows that total utility will increase at a much slower rate as marginal
utility diminishes with each additional bar. Notice how the first chocolate bar
gives a total utility of 70 but the next three chocolate bars together increase total
utility by only 18 additional units.

The law of diminishing marginal utility helps economists understand the law of
demand and the negative sloping demand curve. The less of something you
have, the more satisfaction you gain from each additional unit you consume; the
marginal utility you gain from that product is therefore higher, giving you a higher
willingness to pay more for it.

Prices are lower at a higher quantity demanded because your additional satisfaction diminishes as you demand more.

In order to determine what a consumer's utility and total utility are, economists turn to consumer demand theory, which studies consumer behavior and
satisfaction. Economists assume the consumer is rational and will thus maximize
his or her total utility by purchasing a combination of different products rather
than more of one particular product.

Thus, instead of spending all of your money on three chocolate bars, which has a total utility of 85, you should instead
purchase the one chocolate bar, which has a utility of 70, and perhaps a glass of
milk, which has a utility of 50. This combination will give you a maximized total
utility of 120 but at the same cost as the three chocolate bars.

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