[[File:Income consumption curve graph - upward sloping (normal goods).svg|alt=Graph of a normal good|frame| Example of a normal good:
As income increases from B1 to B3, the outward movement of utility curve I dictates that the quantity of good X1 increases in tandem. Therefore, X1 is a normal good. Put another way, the positively sloped income consumption curve demonstrates that X1 is normal. The Engel curve of X1 would also be positively sloped. ]] In economics, a normal good is a type of a good for which consumers increase their demand due to an increase in income, unlike , for which the opposite is observed. When there is an increase in a person's income, for example due to a wage rise, a good for which the demand rises due to the wage increase, is referred as a normal good. Conversely, the demand for normal goods declines when the income decreases, for example due to a wage decrease or layoffs.
Whether a good is categorized as a normal good or an inferior good is based on empirical observations, not some essential element of a good. Indeed, the same good may be a normal good for one group of consumers and an inferior good for another group. For example, for moderate-income consumers, a BMW 3 Series car might be a normal good, but for an upper-income group, it might be an inferior good.Piros, Christopher D and Jerald E. Pinto. Economics for Investment Decision Makers: Micro, Macro and International Economics. Wiley, New Jersey. 2013. p.48
In economics, the concept of elasticity, and specifically income elasticity of demand is key to explain the concept of normal goods. Income elasticity of demand measures the magnitude of the change in demand for a good in response to a change in consumer income. the income elasticity of demand is calculated using the following formula,
Income elasticity of demand= % change in quantity demanded / % change in consumer income.
In mathematical terms, the formula can be written as follows:
, where is the original quantity demanded and is the original income, before any change.
A good is classified as a normal good when the income elasticity of demand is greater than zero and has a value less than one. If we look into a simple hypothetical example, the demand for apples increases by 10% for a 30% increase in income, then the income elasticity for apples would be 0.33 and hence apples are considered to be a normal good.
However, the classification of normal and luxury goods vary from person to person. A good that is considered to be a normal good to a lot of people may be considered to be luxury good to someone else. This depends on a lot of factors such as geographical locations, socio-economic conditions in a country, local traditions and many more. For example, in the 1980s in the Soviet Union, regular consumer items imported from the United States, such as Levis blue jeans and popular music cassettes, were costly, rare luxury goods.
According to economic theory, there must be at least one normal good in any given bundle of goods (i.e. not all goods can be inferior). Economic theory assumes that a good always provides marginal utility (holding everything else equal). Therefore, if consumption of all goods decrease when income increases, the resulting consumption combination would fall short of the new budget constraint frontier. This would violate the economic rationality assumption.
When the price of a normal good is zero, the demand is infinite.
| +Examples of normal vs. inferior goods !Category !Normal good !Inferior good |
As well, another caveat is that the categorization depends on which studies one uses. Piros and Pinto note that one study indicates that beer, which has a slightly negative income elasticity of demand is an inferior good and wine, which has a "significantly positive" income elasticity of demand, is a normal good.Piros, Christopher D and Jerald E. Pinto. Economics for Investment Decision Makers: Micro, Macro and International Economics. Wiley, New Jersey. 2013. p.48
Another potential caveat is brought up by "The Notion of Inferior Good in the Public Economy" by Professor Jurion of University of Liège (published 1978). Public goods such as online news are often considered inferior goods. However, the conventional distinction between inferior and normal goods may be blurry for public goods. (At least, for goods that are non-Rival good enough that they are conventionally understood as "public goods.") Consumption of many public goods will decrease when a rational consumer's income rises, due to replacement by private goods, e.g. building a private garden to replace use of public parks. But when effective congestion costs to a consumer rises with the consumer's income, even a normal good with a low income elasticity of demand (independent of the congestion costs associated with the non-Excludable good nature of the good) will exhibit the same effect. This makes it difficult to distinguish inferior public goods from normal ones.
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