Explore how welfare and value are measured in economics, from utility to the social impact of consumption.
This rigorous work outlines how welfare links to economic conditions and why understanding utility matters for both theory and policy.
This nonfiction edition surveys how goods satisfy people, how satisfaction changes with more or different goods, and how complementary relations shape value. It blends theory with practical implications, offering a framework for analyzing consumption, saving, and the role of money in economic welfare.
- How utility is defined and measured as a contributor to satisfaction
- The different species of utility, including direct, indirect, and existential uses
- How diminishing utility and complementary relations affect demand and price
- How variety, substitution, and social context influence what people value
Ideal for readers of economics and social science who seek a clear, structured approach to welfare as an economic quantity and its implications for policy and everyday decision making.