1.3. You learned in the chapter that the process of utility maximization involves a comparison of marginal...
Question:
1.3. You learned in the chapter that the process of utility maximization involves a comparison of marginal utilities per dollar, which are calculated as marginal utility divided by price.
Consider two goods that most people consume at least some of during their lives: apples and cars.
a. If utility maximization was only about marginal utility (not marginal utility per dollar), which good (apples or cars) would consumers want to consume? Would they ever consume the other good?
b. If utility maximization was only about price
(as opposed to marginal utility divided by price), which good (apples or cars) would consumers want to consume? Would they ever consume the other good?
c. Given your answers to parts a and
b, and given the observation that some people eat apples and drive cars, explain why utility maximiza tion involves a comparison of marginal utility divided by price, and not just one or the other.
Step by Step Answer:
Modern Principles Microeconomics
ISBN: 9781429239998
2nd Edition
Authors: Tyler Cowen, Alex Tabarrok