marginal utility

(noun)

The additional utility to a consumer from an additional unit of an economic good.

Related Terms

  • Surplus value
  • utility

Examples of marginal utility in the following topics:

  • Principle of Diminishing Marginal Utility

    • The principle of diminishing marginal utility states that as more of a good or service is consumed, the marginal benefit of the next unit decreases.
    • This is a simple illustration of diminishing marginal utility .
    • While there are some circumstances where there will always be some marginal utility to producing or consuming more of a good, there are also circumstances where marginal utility can become negative.
    • While utility may increase for a period, there is usually a "tipping point" where afterwards marginal utility decreases.
    • Getting a third ticket for your date will have low marginal utility than the second.
  • Marginal Utility

    • Marginal utility of a good or service is the gain from an increase or loss from a decrease in the consumption of that good or service.
    • A person should produce or purchase an additional item when the marginal utility exceeds the marginal cost .
    • Marginal utility is measured on a per unit basis.
    • When evaluating the marginal utility of any item, it is important to know in what unit utility is measured.
    • The marginal utility of owning a second house is likely less than the marginal utility of owning the first house.
  • Individuals Make Decisions at the Margins

    • Also suppose Car A provides you $15,000 worth of utility, Car B provides $15,000, and Car C provides $25,000.
    • Those utilities, in dollar terms, are the marginal benefit of each car.
    • The tools of marginal analysis can illustrate the marginal costs and the marginal benefits of reducing pollution.
    • Marginal utility is the amount that a certain action will change total utility.
    • Individuals use net marginal utility to make decisions.
  • Optimal Quantity of a Public Good

    • The government is providing an efficient quantity of a public good when its marginal benefit equals its marginal cost.
    • It is equal to the marginal benefit curve.
    • Due to the law of diminishing marginal utility, the demand curve is downward sloping.
    • Output activity should be increased as long as the marginal benefit exceeds the marginal cost.
    • An activity should not be pursued when the marginal benefit is less than the marginal cost.
  • Value and Relative Value

    • They find a greater utility in the object.
    • This increase in utility is called marginal utility, and this is all known as the marginal theory of value.
    • And here again it is marginal utility that comes in.
    • Here we also get into the utility for resellers.
    • How much work will it take, and what margins are possible?
  • Economic Way of Thinking

    • If there are two or more goods that have a price (or cost), the process of utility maximization requires that each additional expenditure be made on the good that has the highest marginal utility.
    • The rate of change in total utility associated with a change in consumption (marginal utility) becomes the basis of value.
    • Hermann Heinrich Gossen [1810-1858] clearly stated the principle of diminishing marginal utility and the equimarginal principle by 1854.
    • Marshall synthesized the cost of production theory of value of the classical school with the marginal utility of the marginalists.
    • The marginal utility approach attributes value to subjective choices and holds that price is determined by utility.
  • Marginal Analysis

    • Choices are always made at the margin.
    • A consumer must understand that a change in quantity consumed alters the level of utility.
    • Generally, the marginal benefits of berries will tend to decrease primarily because of diminishing marginal utility.
    • The marginal cost (MC) of berries rises.
    • MC represents the marginal cost of each unit.
  • Ratio Analysis

    • Ratios used to determine a project's health include operating margins, profitability margins, efficiency ratios, and debt.
    • Operating margin and total margin calculate the revenue a project is producing over expenses (a profitable output ratio).
    • Operating margin considers only operating revenues and expenses (such as salaries, utilities, supplies) while total margin considers all revenues and expenses.
    • There are many smaller ratios built into these broader operating margins as well, including output per employee, inventory turnover, and specific cost components in comparison with one another.
    • The operating margin is found by dividing net operating income by total revenue.
  • The DuPont Equation

    • Profit Margin = 400,000/1,000,000 = 40%.
    • Profit margin is a measure of profitability.
    • Companies with low profit margins tend to have high asset turnover, while those with high profit margins tend to have low asset turnover.
    • Financial leverage refers to the amount of debt that a company utilizes to finance its operations, as compared with the amount of equity that the company utilizes.
    • High margin industries, on the other hand, such as fashion, may derive a substantial portion of their competitive advantage from selling at a higher margin.
  • Introduction to Markets for Inputs and Distribution of Income

    • Remember that the decisions of the producers reflects the preferences and ability In the goods markets, each individual consumer will maximize their utility when:
    • The consumer cannot alter their expenditure and improve their welfare or increase their utility.
    • The marginal product of a factor can be described as:
    • Q = ALαKβ , the marginal products of the factors is:
    • The change in the value of the output associated with a change in an input is called the value of marginal product (VMP) or the marginal revenue product (MRP).
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