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Gossen's laws
Gossen's
laws
, named for
Hermann Heinrich Gossen
, are
three laws
of economics:
Gossen's
First Law
is the "law" of diminishing
marginal
utility: that
marginal utilities
are diminishing across the
ranges
relevant
to
decision-making
.
Gossen's
Second Law
, which presumes that
utility
is at least weakly quantified, is that in
equilibrium
an
agent
will allocate
expenditures
so that
the ratio
of
marginal utility
to
price
is
equal
across all
goods and services
.
Gossen's
Third Law
is that
scarcity
is a
precondition
for
economic value
.