Consumer Preferences
The cardinal approach of utility uses an imaginary measure of satisfaction, utils. In the ordinal approach, consumer preferences refer to the ranking a consumer makes between different product bundles or baskets. A market basket is a collection of products a consumer can purchase. Two goods are taken in a basket to explain consumer preferences. For example, a market basket could have coffee and sandwiches.
Assumptions about Consumer Preferences
The following assumptions are made:
Completeness
It means that consumers can compare and rank all possible combinations of products, known as baskets. A consumer can definitively state their preference for any two baskets, say A and B. They might prefer basket A over B, B over A, or view them as equally desirable.
Monotonic Preferences or More is Better
It means that consumers prefer more of any good to less. For instance, if a consumer is comparing baskets of goods, under the monotonic preferences assumption, they would always prefer the basket with more quantity.
Из главы 5:
Now Playing
Consumer Behavior
163 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
267 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
280 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
522 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
162 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
184 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
99 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
149 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
379 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
177 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
221 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
84 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
63 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
82 Просмотры
Consumer Behavior
61 Просмотры
See More
Авторские права © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Все права защищены