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Experimental Economics and the Production Possibility Frontier IBEconomics
28

Experimental economics utility

Oct 20, 2014

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Page 1: Experimental economics   utility

Experimental Economics and the Production Possibility Frontier

IBEconomics

Page 2: Experimental economics   utility

Objectives

• To complete coverage of production possibility curves / frontiers

• Take part in the first economic experiment

• To analyse results• To draw conclusion and prove a

fundamental law of Economics – link to TOK!

Page 3: Experimental economics   utility

Recap - PPF

• Shows the maximum output of a combination of goods and services that can be achieved with a given set of inputs

Page 4: Experimental economics   utility

Production Possibility Frontiers

Capital Goods

Consumer Goods

Ym

Xm

Page 5: Experimental economics   utility

Production Possibility Frontiers

• No ‘ideal’ point on the curve• Any point inside the curve – suggests resources

are not being utilised efficiently• Any point outside the curve – not attainable with

the current level of resources• Useful to demonstrate economic growth and

opportunity cost

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Why is it curved?

• Think carefully about the idea of opportunity cost

• The easiest way to draw a ppf would be a straight line, why would this be

wrong??wrong??

Page 7: Experimental economics   utility

Guns or Butter?

Page 8: Experimental economics   utility

Brain stretcher!!

• Draw a new ppf diagram using guns and butter as the two axis.

• Look at the opportunity cost of moving between different points on the frontier.

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Ideas

• What sort of things are needed to produce butter?

• Milk• Cows• What about things needed to produce

guns?• Metal • Machinery

Not very easily transferable Not very easily transferable are they???are they???

Page 10: Experimental economics   utility

Utility

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What is utility?

• Simply another word for usefulness• Some products give more utility than

others.

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Extra Thought Question

• The satisfaction from consuming a good.

• How can we measure it?

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Measuring Utility

• The accepted way of measuring utility is to have units called utils

Page 14: Experimental economics   utility

The Experiment!

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Volunteer????

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The Experiment

• This experiment is designed to test a central economic law relating to utility

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Recording the results

• Your handout has a table like this on one side.

• Record the values for utility (satisfaction gained) as the experiment continues.

Number of biscuits

consumed

Total satisfaction

gained

Extra satisfaction

gained

Page 18: Experimental economics   utility

What do the results mean?Number of

biscuits consumed

Total satisfaction gained

Extra satisfaction gained

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Drawing a graph.U

tili

ty (

uti

ls)

Quantity of Biscuits consumed

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Law of Diminishing Utility

• This simple law basically states that as a consumer has more and more of a good her total utility will rise up to a point.

• The extra utility from each extra good consumed will get smaller and smaller.

• The extra utility could even become negative if consuming more of the unit actually makes her total utility fall!

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Right, and……………?

• This is one of the things that underpins everything in Economics.

• From this we can draw conclusions about DEMAND.

Page 22: Experimental economics   utility

Demand

• Demand looks at the quantity of products consumers will want to buy at different prices.

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Your task

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So many things!

• In Economics we need to make a few assumptions for any of our models to work, otherwise it would be impossible to make any sort of analysis

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Assumptions

• Consumers act in a rational way• Ceteris Paribus

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Ceteris What?

• Ceteris Paribus Ceteris Paribus means other things being equal

i.e. no other factors change.

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Summary

• Diminishing Returns means• Utility is a major part of the law of • People would be willing to pay more

for products that give greater utility

Page 28: Experimental economics   utility

Why do people pay massively more for diamonds than water when water is immensely more

useful????