When the price of a product changes, it affects the consumption behavior of the consumer. This change in consumption is called the price effect or the total effect of price change.
Here, the price of only one product changes. For example, a student's monthly allowance is $100 for books and snacks. The price of a book drops from $20 per unit to $10 per unit, while the price of snacks remains at $5 per unit. This affects the budget constraint or the budget line. Now, the student can purchase ten books by spending his entire allowance on them. This rotates the budget towards a new budget line. After the price decreases, the student can make purchases anywhere on the new budget line.
When the price of books drops, the usual response from the student would be to purchase more books. However, how this change in the price of the books affects the consumption of both goods can be understood by learning about two effects. These are the substitution effect and the income effect.
From Chapter 5:
Now Playing
Consumer Behavior
95 Views
Consumer Behavior
253 Views
Consumer Behavior
263 Views
Consumer Behavior
509 Views
Consumer Behavior
146 Views
Consumer Behavior
149 Views
Consumer Behavior
168 Views
Consumer Behavior
91 Views
Consumer Behavior
133 Views
Consumer Behavior
365 Views
Consumer Behavior
169 Views
Consumer Behavior
216 Views
Consumer Behavior
82 Views
Consumer Behavior
59 Views
Consumer Behavior
77 Views
See More
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved