A software company considering whether to hire a tenth engineer doesn't care what the first nine cost — it cares what the tenth will contribute versus what they will cost. That framing — comparing the incremental benefit and incremental cost of one additional unit — is marginal analysis, and it is the core decision-making logic of economics.
The formula
Marginal analysis rests on two quantities:
Marginal Benefit (MB) — the additional value gained from one more unit of an action
Marginal Cost (MC) — the additional cost incurred from one more unit of the same action
The decision rule: take the action if MB ≥ MC; stop if MB < MC.
At the optimum — where a firm maximizes profit or a consumer maximizes utility — MB equals MC exactly. Any unit where MB exceeds MC is worth taking; any unit where MC exceeds MB destroys value. The Bureau of Labor Statistics productivity data tracks how marginal output per worker changes with hiring — the real-world expression of the MB side of the calculus.
Reading the result
When MB > MC: take the action. Value is being created. Keep going. When MB = MC: stop. This is the optimum — no additional value is created by going further. When MB < MC: the action destroys value. If already committed, cut losses.
The critical insight is that the margin, not the total, determines the right decision at any point. A firm with high average profits may still be making a mistake by operating the last unit if that unit's MC exceeds its MR. A person who has already spent $500 on a concert ticket should not attend a terrible show just because they paid — the $500 is gone (a sunk cost), and the forward-looking marginal cost of attending (their time and suffering) exceeds the marginal benefit.
Worked example
A restaurant is considering adding a dinner service on Mondays (it currently closes Mondays). The relevant analysis:
- Estimated additional revenue (MB): $1,800 per Monday
- Additional variable costs — food, labor, utilities (MC): $1,400 per Monday
- Marginal profit: $400 per Monday
MB > MC — the Monday service adds value and should open. Now suppose the owner considers extending to 11 PM. The additional revenue for the last hour is $200 (MB), but late-shift labor and overtime costs are $280 (MC). MB < MC — close at 10 PM.
The Federal Reserve's discussion of monetary policy decisions applies the same logic at macro scale: each incremental rate change is evaluated against its expected marginal benefit (reduced inflation, supported employment) versus its marginal cost (slowed growth, tightened credit).
Where it's used
Marginal analysis is the decision framework behind every major economic model. Firms use it to set output, price, and hiring. Consumers use it (implicitly) to allocate spending across goods. Governments use it to evaluate whether an additional dollar of spending on a program produces more benefit than cost. Environmental economists apply it to set pollution permit prices equal to the marginal external damage — the core logic of the EPA's social cost of carbon methodology.





