Utility functions on divisible goods

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This page compares the properties of several typical utility functions of divisible goods. These functions are commonly used as examples in consumer theory.

The functions are ordinal utility functions, which means that their properties are invariant under positive monotone transformation. For example, the Cobb–Douglas function could also be written as: w_x \log{x} + w_y\log{y}. Such functions only become interesting when there are two or more goods (with a single good, all monotonically increasing functions are ordinally equivalent).

The utility functions are exemplified for two goods, x and y. p_x and p_y are their prices. w_x and w_y are constant positive parameters and r is another constant parameter. u_y is a utility function of a single commodity (y). I is the total income (wealth) of the consumer.

class="wikitable"
NameFunctionMarshallian Demand curveIndirect utilityIndifference curvesMonotonicityConvexityHomothetyGood typeExample
Leontief\min\left({x\over w_x},{y\over w_y}\right)hyperbolic: I \over w_x p_x+w_y p_y?L-shapesWeakWeakYesPerfect complementsLeft and right shoes
Cobb–Douglasx^{w_x} y^{w_y}hyperbolic: \frac{w_x}{w_x+w_y} {I \over p_x}I \over p_x^{w_x} p_y^{w_y} hyperbolicStrongStrongYesIndependentApples and socks
Linear{{x\over w_x}+{y\over w_y}}"Step function" correspondence: only goods with minimum {w_i p_i} are demanded?Straight linesStrongWeakYesPerfect substitutesPotatoes of two different farms
Quasilinearx + u_y(y)Demand for y is determined by: u_y'(y) = p_y/p_xv(p) + I where v is a function of price onlyParallel curvesStrong, if u_y is increasingStrong, if u_y is quasiconcaveNoSubstitutes, if u_y is quasiconcaveMoney (x) and another product (y)
Maximum\left({x\over w_x},{y\over w_y}\right)Discontinuous step function: only one good with minimum {w_i p_i} is demanded?ר-shapesWeakConcaveYesSubstitutes and interferingTwo simultaneous movies
CES\left(\left({x\over w_x}\right)^r + \left({y\over w_y}\right)^r\right)^{1/r}See Marshallian demand function#Example?colspan=6| Leontief, Cobb–Douglas, Linear and Maximum are special cases
when r=-\infty,0,1,\infty, respectively.
Translogw_x \ln{x} + w_y \ln{y} + w_{xy} \ln{x} \ln{y}??colspan=6| Cobb–Douglas is a special case when w_{xy}=0.
Isoelasticx^{w_x}+y^{w_y}????????

References

  • {{Cite book|author=Hal Varian|author-link=Hal Varian|title=Intermediate micro-economics|isbn=0393927024|year=2006|publisher=W.W. Norton & Company }} chapter 5.

Acknowledgements

This page has been greatly improved thanks to comments and answers in [http://economics.stackexchange.com/questions/9523/utility-function-types-request-for-review Economics StackExchange].

See also