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When an investor purchases income property, he should be aware that certain expenditures for upkeep, replacement, and management are necessary to produce greater income. When the point is reached beyond which adding to improvements will not result in increased returns, this is an example of the principle of:

  1. conformity

  2. diminishing returns

  3. supply and demand

  4. substitution

The correct answer is: conformity

The principle being referenced in the question relates to the concept where additional investment in property improvements results in a decrease in the marginal gain in income produced by those improvements. This is precisely what the principle of diminishing returns describes. Diminishing returns occurs when the incremental benefits of adding more resources, such as money spent on improvements, become less effective over time. In the context of income properties, if an investor continues to invest in upgrades or maintenance, there will be a point where those additional expenditures do not yield proportional increases in rental income or property value. Instead, the investor may find that after a certain level of improvement, each additional dollar spent yields a smaller and smaller return, thus emphasizing the importance of analyzing the cost-effectiveness of such investments. The other principles mentioned—conformity, supply and demand, and substitution—do not specifically encapsulate this idea of increasing costs resulting in lesser returns in a way that connects to income properties. Conformity relates more to property values aligning with the surrounding area, supply and demand pertains to how market dynamics affect property values, and substitution involves the relationship and potential switch between similar properties based on price and utility. Thus, diminishing returns aptly describes the phenomenon in question.