🧠 What Does 'Rational' Mean in Economics?
The Assumption: Traditional economic theory assumes that consumers are rational — they always choose the option that gives them the greatest satisfaction for the lowest cost.
Consumer rationality
- Consumers aim to maximise utility (satisfaction/happiness)
- They have complete information about all options
- They can rank all options and choose the best one
- They respond predictably to price changes (law of demand)
Producer rationality
- Firms aim to maximise profit (revenue minus costs)
- They have full information about costs and market conditions
- They make production decisions based on marginal analysis
- They respond predictably to cost and price changes
The rational model is the foundation of the demand and supply curves you learned in Topics 2.1–2.3. If consumers were not rational, the demand curve might not slope downward.
✅ Why Economists Use This Model
Even though the rational model is a simplification, it is useful because it allows us to make predictions about how markets work.
- Predicts that demand curves slope downward (people buy less at higher prices)
- Predicts that supply curves slope upward (firms produce more at higher prices)
- Explains how markets reach equilibrium
- Provides a baseline to compare real-world behaviour against
Models are simplifications of reality. They do not need to be perfectly accurate to be useful — they need to make predictions that are good enough most of the time.
Get feedback like a real examiner
Submit your answers and get instant feedback — what you did well, what's missing, and exactly what to write to score full marks.
❌ Where the Model Falls Short
In reality, people do NOT always behave rationally. Here are the key criticisms:
- Incomplete information — consumers rarely know all options or prices
- Limited processing ability — humans cannot evaluate thousands of choices perfectly
- Emotions and impulse — purchases are often driven by feelings, not calculation
- Habits — people repeat past behaviour rather than optimising each time
- Social influences — peer pressure, advertising, and cultural norms shape choices
- Time pressure — decisions made quickly use mental shortcuts, not full analysis
Buying an expensive coffee every morning when you could make one at home for a fraction of the cost is 'irrational' in the traditional model, but perfectly normal human behaviour.