When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Price signal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_signal

    Conversely, on the consumer side, a monopsony may negotiate or demand prices that do not reflect the cost of production. The pricing power owned by an enterprise reflects the position of its products in the market. In this case, the price signal may no longer be able to affect such products.

  3. Utility maximization problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_maximization_problem

    The consumer would like to buy the best affordable package of commodities. It is assumed that the consumer has an ordinal utility function, called u. It is a real-valued function with domain being the set of all commodity bundles, or : + + .

  4. Consumer choice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_choice

    The theory of consumer choice is the branch of microeconomics that relates preferences to consumption expenditures and to consumer demand curves.It analyzes how consumers maximize the desirability of their consumption (as measured by their preferences subject to limitations on their expenditures), by maximizing utility subject to a consumer budget constraint. [1]

  5. Consumer economy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_economy

    Consumer spending in the US rose from about 62% of GDP in 1960, where it stayed until about 1981, and has since risen to 71% in 2013. [ 14 ] In the first economic quarter of 2010, a report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis in the U.S. Department of Commerce stated that real gross domestic product rose by about 3.2 percent, and that this ...

  6. Indifference curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indifference_curve

    In economics, an indifference curve connects points on a graph representing different quantities of two goods, points between which a consumer is indifferent. That is, any combinations of two products indicated by the curve will provide the consumer with equal levels of utility, and the consumer has no preference for one combination or bundle ...

  7. Slutsky equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slutsky_equation

    The right-hand side of the equation is equal to the change in demand for good i holding utility fixed at u minus the quantity of good j demanded, multiplied by the change in demand for good i when wealth changes. The first term on the right-hand side represents the substitution effect, and the second term represents the income effect. [1]

  8. 'Biden got it absolutely wrong': Pa. officials condemn ...

    www.aol.com/biden-got-absolutely-wrong-pa...

    "President Biden got it absolutely wrong and created a lot of pain here in Northeastern Pennsylvania," Gov. Josh Shapiro said after President Joe Biden's commutation of a judge in Pennsylvania's ...

  9. Substitute good - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitute_good

    Rather, a consumer who prefers Coca-Cola (for example) will be willing to exchange more Pepsi for less Coca-Cola, in other words, consumers who prefer Coca-Cola would be willing to pay more. The degree to which a good has a perfect substitute depends on how specifically the good is defined.