The transformation of the classical labor-leisure choice into the labor-search-leisure choice enables the analysis of the individual behavior under price dispersion. The consumer maximizes his consumption-leisure utility with respect to the equality of marginal loss on the search with its marginal benefit. The satisficing approach challenges this equality but the analysis of the moment of the intention to buy, when real balances and supplies as well as the knowledge about the price distribution are close to zero, discovers the unit elasticity of total consumer’s efforts on purchase with respect to any level of consumption for the given time horizon. If at the beginning the consumer evaluates correctly his purchasing power with respect to th...