- Superior good
Superior goods make up a larger "proportion" of consumption as
income rises, and as such are a type ofnormal good s inconsumer theory . Such a good must possess two economic characteristics: it must be scarce, and, along with that, it must have a high price. [http://www.fao.org/docrep/field/003/AC231E/AC231E10.htm Shellfish Economics] A course outline for the FOA of the United Nations; "Fisheries and Aquaculture Department." RetrievedApril 18 2008 .] The scarcity of the good can be natural or artificial; however, the general population (i.e.,consumer s) must recognize the good as distinguishably "better". Possession of such a good usually signifies "superiority" in resources, and usually is accompanied byprestige . If the price of the good declines, consumers will purchase less of the good.See alsoBehavioral Economics ]The
income elasticity of a superior good is above one by definition, because it raises the expenditure share as income rises. A superior good also may be aluxury good that is not purchased at all below a certain level of income. Examples would includesmoked salmon andcaviar , and most otherdelicacies . On the other hand, superior goods may have a wide quality distribution, such aswine andholiday s; however, though the "number" of such goods consumed may stay constant even with rising wealth, the level of spending will go up, to secure a better experience.Confusion with normal goods
The choice of the word "superior" to define goods of this type suggests that they are the
antonym of "inferior goods ", but this is misleading; an inferior good can never be a superior good, but many goods are neither. [www.economist.com Economics A-Z] EvenThe Economist oversimplifiesnormal good s andinferior good s, and doesn't even mention superior goods. Retrieved from the online version of the publication at .] If the quantity of an itemdemand ed increases with income, "but" is not enough to increase the share of thebudget spent on it, then it is anormal good .Some texts on
microeconomics use the term Superior good as the sole alternative to an "inferior good", making "superior goods" and "normal goods" synonymous. Where this is done, a product making up an increasing share of spending under income increases is often called an Ultra-superior good. [http://www.janegalt.net/blog/archives/004015.html Asymmetrical Information] A blogpost about the housing market. RetrievedApril 18 2008 . ]ee also
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Necessity Good External links
:* [http://www-personal.umich.edu/~alandear/glossary/e.html Definition of superior good from the elasticity perspective] from the
University of Michigan :* [http://www.csun.edu/~dgw61315/PTlect3y.pdf Definition of "superior good" as a "normal good" synonym] fromCalifornia State University
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