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Encyclopedia > Revealed preference

Pioneered by American economist Paul Samuelson (1915- ), revealed preference theory is a method by which it is possible to discern the best possible option on the basis of consumer behaviour. Essentially, this means that the preferences of consumers can be revealed by their purchasing habits. Revealed preference theory came about because the theories of consumer demand were based on a diminishing MRS (marginal rate of substitution). This diminishing MRS is based on the assumption that consumers make consumption decisions based on their intent to maximize their utility. While utility maximization was not a controversial assumption, the underlying utility functions could not be measured with great certainty. Revealed preference theory was a means to reconcile demand theory by creating a means to define utility functions by observing behavior. Paul Anthony Samuelson Paul A. Samuelson (born May 15, 1915, in Gary, Indiana) is an American economist known for his work in many fields of economics. ... 1915 (MCMXV) was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). ... In economics, the marginal rate of substitution (MRS for short) is the rate at which consumers are willing to give up units of one good in exchange for more units of another good. ... In economics, the marginal rate of substitution (MRS for short) is the rate at which consumers are willing to give up units of one good in exchange for more units of another good. ... Consumer theory relates preferences, indifference curves and budget constraints to consumer demand curves. ...


Theory

If a person chooses a certain bundle of goods (ex. 2 apples, 3 bananas) while another bundle of goods is affordable (ex. 3 apples, 2 bananas), then we say that the first bundle is revealed preferred to the second. It then follows that the first bundle of goods is always preferred to the second. Therefore if the consumer ever purchases the second bundle of goods then it must be the case that the first bundle is unaffordable. Further theory states that preferences are transitive. In other words if we have bundles A, B, C, ...., Z, and A is revealed preferred to B which is revealed preferred to C and so on then it can be concluded that A is revealed preferred to C through Z. With this theory economists can chart indifference curves which adhere to already developed models of consumer theory. In microeconomics, an indifference curve is a graph showing combinations of two goods to which an economic agent (such as a consumer or firm) is indifferent, that is, it has no preference for one combination over the other. ...


References

Nicholson, W. (2005) Microeconomics, Thomson, Southwestern.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Usability News - 4.1 2002 -- A Comparison of Popular Online Fonts: Which Size and Type is Best? (1863 words)
Verdana was the most preferred and Times was the least preferred font at this size, which is not that surprising since Verdana was designed specifically for the computer screen whereas Times was not.
Arial, which was the most preferred font, was significantly preferred to Times, which was the least preferred font at this size.
It is likely the preference differences were not as striking at this size because at the 14-point size, the letters for all fonts were generally large enough to be comfortably read.
Preference - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (930 words)
Preference (or "taste") is a concept, used in the social sciences, particularly economics.
In microeconomics, preferences of consumers and other entities are modelled with preference relations.
Then ≤ is a preference relation on S if it is a binary relation on S such that a ≤ b if and only if b is at least as preferable as a.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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