Monotone Preferences
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economics Economics () is the social science that studies the Production (economics), production, distribution (economics), distribution, and Consumption (economics), consumption of goods and services. Economics focuses on the behaviour and intera ...
, an agent's preferences are said to be weakly monotonic if, given a consumption bundle x, the agent prefers all consumption bundles y that have more of all goods. That is, y \gg x implies y\succ x. An agent's preferences are said to be strongly monotonic if, given a consumption bundle x, the agent prefers all consumption bundles y that have more of at least one good, and not less in any other good. That is, y\geq x and y\neq x imply y\succ x. This definition defines monotonic increasing preferences. Monotonic decreasing preferences can often be defined to be compatible with this definition. For instance, an agent's preferences for pollution may be monotonic decreasing (less pollution is better). In this case, the agent's preferences for lack of pollution are monotonic increasing. Much of consumer theory relies on a weaker assumption,
local nonsatiation In microeconomics, the property of local nonsatiation of consumer preferences states that for any bundle of goods there is always another bundle of goods arbitrarily close that is strictly preferred to it.''Microeconomic Theory'', by A. Mas-Colel ...
. An example of preferences which are weakly monotonic but not strongly monotonic are those represented by a
Leontief utility function In economics, especially in consumer theory, a Leontief utility function is a function of the form: u(x_1,\ldots,x_m)=\min\left\ . where: * m is the number of different goods in the economy. * x_i (for i\in 1,\dots,m) is the amount of good i in the ...
. If an agent has Monotone preferences which means the marginal rate of substitution of the agent's indifference curve is positive. Given two products X and Y. If the agent is strictly preferred to X, it can get the equivalent statement that X is weakly preferred to Y and Y is not weakly preferred to X. If the agent is indifferent to X and Y, it can get the equivalent statement that X is weakly preferred to Y and Y is weakly preferred to X. If the agent is weakly preferred to X, it can get the equivalent statement that X is strictly preferred to Y or Y is indifferent to X.


See also

* *
Monotonicity criterion The monotonicity criterion is a voting system criterion used to evaluate both single and multiple winner ranked voting systems. A ranked voting system is monotonic if it is neither possible to prevent the election of a candidate by ranking them h ...
in voting. *
Resource monotonicity Resource monotonicity (RM; aka aggregate monotonicity) is a principle of fair division. It says that, if there are more resources to share, then all agents should be weakly better off; no agent should lose from the increase in resources. The RM pri ...
* Strict


References

* Mas-Colell, Andreu, Whinston, Michael D., Green, Jerry R. ''Microeconomic Theory.'' Oxford University Press. 1995. Utility function types {{microeconomics-stub