Demand, Supply and MCP
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Transcript Demand, Supply and MCP
Unit 2
Law
of demand is an inverse (opposite)
relationship between the quantity
demanded and the price of a product.
Demand is the quantities of a particular
good or services that customers are
willing and able to buy at a particular
time at different prices.
Price Effect is the inclination (tendency)
of people to buy less of things at higher
prices than they would at a lower price.
Buying
Power
Diminishing
personal value
Diminishing
marginal (minor) utility (service
or value)
Price
and availability of substitutes
We
distinguish between changes in quantity
demanded, movements along a single
demand curve caused by price changes, and
shifts in the entire curve caused by a change
in a factor other than price.
A change in quantity demanded can be
illustrated by a movement between points along
a stationary demand curve. Once again, demand
is influenced by price.
A shift in demand can also occur. A shift in
demand refers to an increase (rightward
change) or decrease (leftward change) in the
quantity demanded at each possible price. This
shift is influenced by non-price determinants.
An example of an increase and a decrease in demand
are pictured below.
Income
Change
Price/availability
#
of substitutes
of buyers
Price/availability
Tastes
of complements
and preference (trends)
Expectations
Which of the following will not change the
demand for movie tickets
A change in the cost of babysitting services
b. A change in the price of movie tickets
c. A change in the quality of TV and Cable
programming
d. A change in the income of movie goers
a.
Elasticity refers to how responsive a product is
to a price change.
Price elasticity exists when the price effect is
large.
Price inelasticity exists when the price effect
is small or inexistent.
TR=PxQ
Total Revenue = Price x Quantity
Text p. 39
The
costs of producing additional goods and
services are know as marginal costs.
Marginal costs usually increase as a business
increases production.
A decision to produces something involves
opportunity costs. Marginal costs are the
opportunity cost of changing production
levels.
Supply
is the various quantities of a
product that producers and sellers are
willing and able to sell as different prices
at particular time.
Sellers want to sell more at higher prices
than at lower prices.
The Law of Supply is a positive
relationship between price and the
quantity supplied.
How is the Law of Demand and the Law of
Supply similar/different?
Changes
in the marginal cost of production
(tech industry)
Change
in the number of producers
Change
in expectations
Elastic-
responsiveness to price change; the
price effect is large
Inelastic-
less responsive to price change; the
price effect is relatively small
Market Clearing Price- the price that consumers are
willing to pay and suppliers are willing to sell at
Surplus- how much more of a product sellers want to sell
than buyers want to buy at a given price
Shortage- how much more of a product buyers want to buy
at any given price than sellers want to sell
Rationing- the distribution or allocation of a product
Market clearing price is important because…it helps
decide what to produce, how to produce it, and who
should receive it