Imagine you’re on a game show and you can choose between two prizes: a diamond … or a bottle of water. It’s an easy choice – the diamonds are more valuable. But if given the same choice when you were dehydrated in the desert, after wandering for days, would you choose differently? Why? Aren’t diamonds still more valuable? Akshita Agarwal explains the paradox of value.
Lesson by Akshita Agarwal, animation by Qa'ed Mai.
00:00Imagine you're on a game show, and you can choose between two prizes, a diamond or a bottle of water.
00:14It's an easy choice. The diamonds are clearly more valuable.
00:18Now imagine being given the same choice again, only this time you're not on a game show,
00:23but dehydrated in the desert after wandering for days.
00:26Do you choose differently? Why? Aren't diamonds still more valuable?
00:31This is the paradox of value, famously described by pioneering economist Adam Smith.
00:38And what it tells us is that defining value is not as simple as it seems.
00:43On the game show, you were thinking about each item's exchange value, what you could obtain for them at a later time.
00:50But in an emergency like the desert scenario, what matters far more is their use value, how helpful they are in your current situation.
00:59And because we only get to choose one of the options, we also have to consider its opportunity cost, or what we lose by giving up the other choice.
01:08After all, it doesn't matter how much you could get from selling the diamond if you never make it out of the desert.
01:13Most modern economists deal with the paradox of value by attempting to unify these considerations under the concept of utility, how well something satisfies a person's wants or needs.
01:25Utility can apply to anything from the basic need for food to the pleasure of hearing a favorite song, and will naturally vary for different people and circumstances.
01:34A market economy provides us with an easy way to track utility. Put simply, the utility something has to you is reflected by how much you'd be willing to pay for it.
01:44Now imagine yourself back in the desert. Only this time you get offered a new diamond or a fresh bottle of water every five minutes.
01:51If you're like most people, you'll first choose enough water to last the trip, and then as many diamonds as you can carry.
01:58This is because of something called marginal utility, and it means that when you choose between diamonds and water, you compare utility obtained from every additional bottle of water to every additional diamond.
02:09And you do this each time an offer is made. The first bottle of water is worth more to you than any amount of diamonds, but eventually, you have all the water you need.
02:18After a while, every additional bottle becomes a burden. That's when you begin to choose diamonds over water.
02:24And it's not just necessities like water. When it comes to most things, the more of it you acquire, the less useful or enjoyable every additional bit becomes.
02:33This is the law of diminishing marginal utility. You might gladly buy two or three helpings of your favorite food, but the fourth would make you nauseated,
02:42and the hundredth would spoil before you could even get to it. Or you could pay to see the same movie over and over until you got bored of it or spent all of your money.
02:50Either way, you'd eventually reach a point where the marginal utility for buying another movie ticket became zero.
02:57Utility applies not just to buying things, but to all our decisions. And the intuitive way to maximize it and avoid diminishing returns is to vary the way we spend our time and resources.
03:08After our basic needs are met, we'd theoretically decide to invest in choices only to the point they're useful or enjoyable.
03:15Of course, how effectively any of us manage to maximize utility in real life is another matter.
03:20But it helps to remember that the ultimate source of value comes from us. The needs we share, the things we enjoy, and the choices we make.
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