A person with a fixed budget for two months chooses to spend very little in the first month, affording only basic necessities, and then spends the large remaining amount on luxuries in the second month. According to the principle that the satisfaction gained from each additional dollar spent declines as spending increases, this person's total satisfaction over the two months will likely be ______ than if they had spent their budget evenly across both months.
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CORE Econ
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.3 Aggregate demand and the multiplier model - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.9 Lenders and borrowers and differences in wealth - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Application in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
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A Farmer's Two-Year Plan
An individual has 100 units of a desirable good to consume over two equal time periods. Assume that the satisfaction gained from each additional unit of the good decreases as more is consumed within a period. Which of the following consumption plans would likely provide the highest total satisfaction over the two periods, and why?
Consider an individual whose satisfaction from consuming an additional unit of a good is always the same, no matter how much of that good they have already consumed. This individual would be equally happy consuming 20 units today and 0 tomorrow as they would be consuming 10 units today and 10 units tomorrow.
Rationale for Stable Consumption
Evaluating Consumption Patterns
Match each consumption behavior scenario with the underlying economic principle that best explains it, assuming the goal is to maximize total satisfaction over time and ignoring any effects of interest or inflation.
An individual who receives a large, one-time bonus at work chooses to save most of it to supplement their spending over the next several years, rather than spending it all at once. This behavior is a rational response to the principle that the satisfaction gained from each additional dollar spent ________ as total spending in a short period increases.
An individual receives a large, one-time financial windfall. Assuming their goal is to achieve the greatest possible satisfaction from this money over time, arrange the following statements into the correct logical sequence that explains their decision-making process.
Freelancer's Budgeting Dilemma
An individual receives a large, one-time financial bonus. Their friend advises them, "You should spend it all this month! The total satisfaction you get from the money will be the same whether you spend it now or spread it out over a year, so you might as well enjoy it immediately." Which of the following statements provides the most accurate economic critique of the friend's advice, assuming the individual's goal is to maximize their total satisfaction from the bonus?
Evaluating Spending Plans
An individual is offered a $2,000 bonus, payable in two monthly installments. They can choose between receiving $1,000 each month (Option A) or receiving $1,900 this month and $100 next month (Option B). Assuming they cannot save or borrow and their goal is to maximize their total satisfaction from consuming the bonus money, which statement best explains why they would likely prefer Option A?
An individual who experiences constant, rather than diminishing, satisfaction from each additional dollar of consumption would be indifferent between a volatile spending pattern (e.g., $2,000 one month, $0 the next) and a stable spending pattern (e.g., $1,000 each month), assuming they cannot save or borrow and must spend all income in the month it is received.
Rationale for Stable Consumption
Analyzing Policy Design and Individual Well-being
An individual's satisfaction from spending money decreases with each additional dollar spent within a given period. Match each of the following two-month spending plans with the description that best reflects the total satisfaction the individual would likely experience from it, assuming they must spend the full amount each month and cannot save or borrow between months.
Financial Planning for a Freelancer
A person with a fixed budget for two months chooses to spend very little in the first month, affording only basic necessities, and then spends the large remaining amount on luxuries in the second month. According to the principle that the satisfaction gained from each additional dollar spent declines as spending increases, this person's total satisfaction over the two months will likely be ______ than if they had spent their budget evenly across both months.
An individual must spend a total of $2,000 over two equal time periods and cannot save or borrow between them. Their satisfaction from spending decreases with each additional dollar spent within a period. Arrange the following two-period spending plans in order from the one that would provide the most total satisfaction to the one that would provide the least.
A student argues, 'To maximize my overall happiness from a fixed, non-perishable food supply that must last for two weeks, I should feast and eat most of it in the first week while I'm really hungry, and then eat the small remaining portion in the second week. This way, I get intense pleasure at the beginning.' Which statement best identifies the economic flaw in this reasoning?