Giffen goods are things you might buy more of when they get more expensive, which sounds a little strange, but it happens because you don’t have much money to begin with.
Imagine you’re playing with your favorite toys, and your piggy bank is almost empty. Your favorite toy is a giffen good for you. Let’s say it costs 10 candies to buy one. You only have 20 candies in your piggy bank. If the price of the toy goes up, now it costs 15 candies, you might feel like you can’t afford anything else, so you decide to just buy more of that toy instead.
That’s how giffen goods work: when something gets more expensive, and you don’t have much money, you end up buying even more of it because there’s nothing else you can really afford. It's like choosing the one toy you love most, even if it costs more, because everything else seems too far out of reach.
Why It Matters
This happens mostly with things that are very cheap and important to your daily life, like bread or rice for someone who doesn’t have much money. When the price goes up, they might end up buying more of it instead of other foods.
Examples
- A poor person buying cheap bread might end up eating less bread if its price drops, since they can spend the saved money on a more expensive food like meat.
- If the price of rice decreases and you're very poor, you might actually eat less rice to buy more meat.
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See also
- What is demand?
- What are unlimited wants and needs?
- What is Price Effect?
- Why Are Some Things Always More Expensive Than Others?
- Who is Consumer Behavior?