Linear utility

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linear_utility

In economics and consumer theory, a linear utility function is a function of the form: or, in vector form: where: * is the number of different goods in the economy. * is a vector of size that represents a bundle. The element represents the amount of good in the bundle. * is a vector of size that represents the subjective preferences of the consumer. The element represents the relative value that the consumer assigns to good . If , this means that the consumer thinks that product is totally worthless. The higher is, the more valuable a unit of this product is for the consumer. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Linear utility
xsd:integer 48291063
xsd:integer 1021892906
rdf:langString In economics and consumer theory, a linear utility function is a function of the form: or, in vector form: where: * is the number of different goods in the economy. * is a vector of size that represents a bundle. The element represents the amount of good in the bundle. * is a vector of size that represents the subjective preferences of the consumer. The element represents the relative value that the consumer assigns to good . If , this means that the consumer thinks that product is totally worthless. The higher is, the more valuable a unit of this product is for the consumer. A consumer with a linear utility function has the following properties: * The preferences are strictly monotone: having a larger quantity of even a single good strictly increases the utility. * The preferences are weakly convex, but not strictly convex: a mix of two equivalent bundles is equivalent to the original bundles, but not better than it. * The marginal rate of substitution of all goods is constant. For every two goods :. * The indifference curves are straight lines (when there are two goods) or hyperplanes (when there are more goods). * Each demand curve (demand as a function of price) is a step function: the consumer wants to buy zero units of a good whose utility/price ratio is below the maximum, and wants to buy as many units as possible of a good whose utility/price ratio is maximum. * The consumer regards the goods as perfect substitute goods.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 16800

data from the linked data cloud