Rational Behaviour - people try to make decisions to maximise their private benifit
utility is the satisfaction an individual gains from consuming a good or service
Marginal utility is the additional satisfaction an individual gains from consuming an extra unit of something
diminishing marginal utility is the marginal utility lost from each additional unit consumed
utility maximisation is the assumption of maximising behaviour by economic agents
margin is a concept used to describe the current level of production or consumption of a good or service
asymmetric information is when one party of a market has more information than another
behavioural economics is a method of economic analysis that applies psychological insights into human behaviour to explain how individuals make choices and decisions
bounded rationality is when an individual is making a decision limited by the information and resources available
bounded self control is when individuals lack the self control to act within their self interests
cognitive bias is a systematic error in thinking that affects the decision making process
availability bias occurs when individuals make judgements of future events based on how easy it is to recall previous examples of that event
anchoring is a cognitive bias where human decisions are impaired based on the reliance of relying too heavily on the first piece of information given to them
social norms are patterns of behaviour considered ”normal” by society
nudges are factors which encourage people to act in certain ways
altruism is a concern for the welfare of others
fairness is the quality of being impartial
choice architecture is a framework setting out how choices are presented to consumers
default choice is an option selected automatically