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marginal utility
(redirected from Diminishing marginal utility)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Financial, Acronyms, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

marginal utility

In economics, the additional satisfaction or benefit (utility) that a consumer derives from buying an additional unit of a commodity or service. The law of diminishing utility implies that utility or benefit is inversely related to the number of units already owned. For example, the marginal utility of one slice of bread offered to a family that has five slices will be great, since the family will be less hungry and the difference between five and six is proportionally significant. An extra slice offered to a family that has 30 slices will have less marginal utility, since the difference between 30 and 31 is proportionally smaller and the family's appetite may be satisfied by what it already has. The concept grew out of attempts by 19th-century economists to explain the fundamental economic reality of price.



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He focused his presentation on four key areas: Technology solutions provide diminishing marginal utility, focus on better understanding cybernetics (human machine interactions), understand cyber-terrorism at enterprise level, the need to perform certain unconventional roles (building technology tracking systems ahead of attacks, prepare to accept the complexity of digital security and plays the roles of educator and mentor).
Al-Shaybani, for example, discussed the issue of consumption behaviour and touched on the idea of what nowadays in economics is called the law of diminishing marginal utility.
Too many choices generate a diminishing marginal utility and actually hinder conversion.
 
 
 
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