Transcript Revenue
MARKET DEMAND
Microeconomics Made Easy
by
William Yacovissi
Mansfield University
©William Yacovissi All Rights Reserved
Profits
Profit is the difference between money
earned from selling a good, and money paid
to produce the good.
Money earned from selling a good is called
Revenue, or Total Revenue.
Profits
Money used to pay for inputs to produce a
good are called Costs, or Total Costs
Profits = Total Revenue - Total Costs or
(PR = TR - TC)
A company is assumed to want to behave in
such a way as to maximize profits.
Revenue
Total Revenue = Price * Quantity or
(TR = P * Q).
For example, if I sell 100 units of a good at
a price of $5.00 then my total revenue
equals $5 * 100 or $500.
Revenue
Average Revenue = Total Revenue/
Quantity or AR = TR/Q.
For example, if I earn $50.00 from selling
10 units of a good, my Average Revenue =
$50.00/10 = $5.00. Notice that Average
Revenue is the same as the Price.
Revenue
Revenue is complicated by the fact that
often the price of a good and the quantity
sold are related.
This relationship is called Demand.
Revenue
The relationship between Price and
Quantity is assumed to be inverse.
That is, as the Price increases, the Quantity
sold decreases. Conversely, as the Price
decreases, the Quantity increases.
WAYS OF SHOWING
DEMAND
The relationship between price and quantity
sold, which is called demand, can be shown
as a table, a graph, or an equation
Each way shows the same information in a
different form.
MARKET DEMAND FOR VIDEO
RENTALS FOR EXAMPLE
Price
Quantity
Revenue
$1.00
500 a Day
$500
$2.00
400 a Day
$800
$3.00
300 a Day
$900
$4.00
200 a Day
$800
$5.00
100 a Day
$500
DEMAND AS A GRAPH
Demand For Video Rentals
$5.00
P r ic e
$4.00
$3.00
$2.00
$1.00
100
200
300
400
Rentals Per Day
500
DEMAND SHOWN AS AN
EQUATION
The equation:
Quantity Demanded = 600 - 100(Price)
fits the data for the demand for video
rentals shown in the table and graph.
Do you see why the table, graph, and
equation are all equivalent ways to show
demand.