Title: Explaining The Choices People Make
1Lecture 2
2Explaining The Choices People Make
- How do we go about it?
- need method for coming up with explanations and
evaluating them - Scientific method
- steps
- develop theory from basic postulates or
assumptions - derive implications (predictions) about
real-world behavior - test predictions to see if they fit the facts
3Explaining The Choices People Make
- Scientific method
- comparison between economic science and hard
sciences like chemistry - use same methodology
- often difficult to run controlled experiments in
economics - must use actual behavior and try to statistically
control for other influences
4Explaining The Choices People Make
- Evaluating a theory
- theory must be general
- not useful if different theory required for each
situation
5Explaining The Choices People Make
- Evaluating a theory
- theory must have testable implications
- potentially refutable predictions
- will only be concerned with positive issues
- positive questions are of the form what is?
- can be definitely answered by an appeal to the
facts (testable) - normative questions are of the form what should
be? - even if agree on facts, can disagree on whether
statement is correct
6Explaining The Choices People Make
- Evaluating a theory
- theory must correctly predict actual behavior
- do predictions fit the facts?
- whether theory is realistic or not is of little
importance - since theories are based on simplifying
assumptions, by their nature they must be
somewhat unrealistic
7Economic Theory of Human Behavior
- General
- focus on the choices that individuals make
- individual is the decision making unit
8Economic Theory of Human Behavior
- Behavioral Postulates
- Scarcity
- for each person, at least some goods are scarce
- must make choices
- Substitution
- each person is willing to give up some of one
good to get more of others - willing to substitute (make tradeoffs) at the
margin - substitutes always exist
- nothing you need
- need depends on cost
9Economic Theory of Human Behavior
- Behavioral Postulates
- Substitution
- rate of substitution is measured by marginal
value - maximum amount willing to give up in order to
receive one more unit - minimum willing to accept to give up one unit
- note that value is subjective
- depends on preferences
10Economic Theory of Human Behavior
- Behavioral Postulates
- Diminishing marginal value
- the more one has of a good, the lower its
marginal value - the more you have of a good, the less you are
willing to sacrifice to get another unit
11Economic Theory of Human Behavior
- Behavioral Postulates
- Rationality
- people make decisions purposefully
- seek options that make themselves as well off as
possible - people make decisions that are consistent
- example if prefer wine to beer and beer to
soda, will prefer wine to soda
12Economic Theory of Human Behavior
- Behavioral Postulates
- Rationality
- implies people will adjust in a predictable way
to changes in costs and benefits - if people were not rational, could not predict
their behavior - rationality does not imply greed
13Economic Theory of Human Behavior
- Behavioral Postulates
- Uniqueness
- not all people have the same preferences and
endowments - for any good, some people will have different
marginal values
14Marginal Value (MV) Schedule
- Summarizes behavioral postulates
- scarcity
- says that we possess a quantity of the good such
that marginal value is positive - if goods were free, would not be willing to give
up anything to obtain them and MV must equal zero
15Marginal Value (MV) Schedule
- Summarizes behavioral postulates
- diminishing marginal value
- means that marginal values decrease as quantity
increases - substitution
- implies schedule exists and marginal values are
finite - rationality
- says person will choose spot on schedule that
leaves them best off
16Marginal Value (MV) Schedule
- Summarizes behavioral postulates
- uniqueness
- different people have different marginal value
schedules or if have same schedule, located at
different quantity
17EndLecture 2