MARGINAL UTILITY OF INCOME: The change in utility resulting from a given change in income. This is a specialized case of the general notion of marginal utility, which is simply the change in utility resulting from a given change in the consumption of a good. Marginal utility of income is key to identifying alternative risk preferences, including risk aversion, risk neutrality, and risk loving. These three risk preferences are indicated by three marginal utility of income possibilities, decreasing (risk aversion), increasing (risk loving), and constant (risk neutrality).The marginal utility of income is defined as the incremental change in utility (or satisfaction) that is due to a unit change in income. The broader concept of marginal utility is the change in utility resulting from a given change in the consumption of a good. The assumption of decreasing marginal utility is important to understanding the negative slope of the market demand curve. As a general rule the marginal utility of income also declines with an increase in income. However, it can also increase or remain constant. Decreasing marginal utility of income gives rise to risk aversion. Increasing marginal utility of income leads to risk loving. And constant marginal utility of income is the source of risk neutrality. Differences in the marginal utility of income indicate the relative value a person places on risky income. If a person stands a risky chance of winning or losing income, the marginal utility of income determines how much the person values the income lost versus the income gained. Risk PreferencesSome people enjoy a risky situation and others do not. This gives rise to three alternative risk preferences -- risk aversion, risk neutrality, and risk loving. These three alternatives are more precisely defined based on the marginal utility of income. As a general rule the marginal utility of income declines with an increase in income. However, it can also increase or remain constant.Suppose, for example, that you have $100 of income and are confronted with a $50 wager on the flip of a coin. If the coin comes up heads, then you win $50 and thus have a total of $150. If the coin comes up tails, then you lose $50 and thus have a total of only $50. Risk preferences determine your willingness to decline the wager and keep the $100 of income that you have (certain income) or agree to the wager not knowing whether you will win or lose (risky income). It is important to note that the income expected from the wager (so called expected income) is actually equal to certain income ($100). That is, because the coin has an equal chance of coming up heads or tails, if you undertake this wager 100 times, you can expect to win 50 times and lose 50 times. The loses exactly equal the wins and the income you can expect the end up with is $100. The three risk preferences are risk aversion, risk neutrality, and risk loving.
Three Curves
The three alternatives for the marginal utility of income are:
Check Out These Related Terms... | risk preferences | risk aversion | risk neutrality | risk loving | risk | uncertainty | risk pooling | risk premium | economics of uncertainty | Or For A Little Background... | economics | microeconomics | market | scarcity | efficiency | sixth rule of ignorance | marginal utility | demand curve | paper economy | consumer demand theory | And For Further Study... | public choice | economics of information | innovation | good types | market failures | financial markets | institutions | insurance | information | efficient information search | information search | asymmetric information | adverse selection | moral hazard | signalling | screening | rational ignorance | market failures | Recommended Citation: MARGINAL UTILITY OF INCOME, AmosWEB Encyclonomic WEB*pedia, http://www.AmosWEB.com, AmosWEB LLC, 2000-2025. [Accessed: December 17, 2025]. |
