Transcript Chapter 1
Chapter 4
Individual and
Market Demand
Topics to be Discussed
Individual Demand
Income and Substitution Effects
Market Demand
Consumer Surplus
Chapter 4
Slide 2
Individual Demand
Price Changes
Chapter 4
Using the figures developed in the
previous chapter, the impact of a
change in the price of food can be
illustrated using indifference curves.
Slide 3
Effect of a Price Change
Clothing
(units per
month)
Assume:
•I = $20
•PC = $2
•PF = $2, $1, $.50
10
A
6
U1
5
D
B
U3
4
Three separate
indifference curves
are tangent to
each budget line.
U2
4
Chapter 4
12
20
Food (units
per month)
Slide 4
Effect of a Price Change
The price-consumption
curve traces out the
utility maximizing
market basket for the
various prices for food.
Clothing
(units per
month)
A
6
Price-Consumption Curve
U1
5
D
B
U3
4
U2
4
Chapter 4
12
20
Food (units
per month)
Slide 5
Effect of a Price Change
Price
of Food
Individual Demand relates
the quantity of a good that
a consumer will buy to the
price of that good.
E
$2.00
G
$1.00
Demand Curve
$.50
H
4
Chapter 4
12
20
Food (units
per month)
Slide 6
Individual Demand
The Individual Demand Curve
Two Important Properties of Demand
Curves
1) The level of utility that can be
attained changes as we move
along the curve.
Chapter 4
Slide 7
Individual Demand
The Individual Demand Curve
Two Important Properties of Demand
Curves
2) At every point on the demand
curve, the consumer is maximizing
utility by satisfying the condition that
the MRS of food for clothing equals
the ratio of the prices of food and
clothing.
Chapter 4
Slide 8
Effect of a Price Change
Price
of Food
When the price falls: Pf /Pc & MRS also fall
E
$2.00
•E: Pf/Pc = 2/2 = 1 = MRS
•G: Pf/Pc = 1/2 = .5 = MRS
•H:Pf/Pc = .5/2 = .25 = MRS
G
$1.00
Demand Curve
$.50
H
4
Chapter 4
12
20
Food (units
per month)
Slide 9
Individual Demand
Income Changes
Chapter 4
Using the figures developed in the
previous chapter, the impact of a
change in the income can be illustrated
using indifference curves.
Slide 10
Effects of Income Changes
Clothing
(units per
month)
Assume: Pf = $1
Pc = $2
I = $10, $20, $30
Income-Consumption
Curve
7
D
5
U2
B
3
An increase in income,
with the prices fixed,
causes consumers to alter
their choice of
market basket.
U1
A
4
Chapter 4
U3
10
16
Food (units
per month)
Slide 11
Effects of Income Changes
Price
of
food
An increase in income,
from $10 to $20 to $30,
with the prices fixed,
shifts the consumer’s
demand curve to the right.
E
$1.00
G
H
D3
D2
D1
4
Chapter 4
10
16
Food (units
per month)
Slide 12
Individual Demand
Income Changes
The
income-consumption curve traces
out the utility-maximizing combinations
of food and clothing associated with
every income level.
Chapter 4
Slide 13
Individual Demand
Income Changes
An increase in income shifts the budget
line to the right, increasing consumption
along the income-consumption curve.
Simultaneously, the increase in income
shifts the demand curve to the right.
Chapter 4
Slide 14
Individual Demand
Normal Good vs. Inferior Good
Income Changes
Chapter 4
When the income-consumption curve
has a positive slope:
The quantity demanded increases
with income.
The income elasticity of demand is
positive.
The good is a normal good.
Slide 15
Individual Demand
Normal Good vs. Inferior Good
Income Changes
Chapter 4
When the income-consumption curve
has a negative slope:
The quantity demanded decreases
with income.
The income elasticity of demand is
negative.
The good is an inferior good.
Slide 16
An Inferior Good
Steak15
(units per
month)
Income-Consumption
Curve
C
10
Both hamburger
and steak behave
as a normal good,
between A and B...
U3
B
5
U2
…but hamburger
becomes an inferior
good when the income
consumption curve
bends backward
between B and C.
A
U1
5
Chapter 4
10
20
Hamburger
30 (units per month)
Slide 17
Individual Demand
Engel Curves
Engel curves relate the quantity of good
consumed to income.
If the good is a normal good, the Engel
curve is upward sloping.
If the good is an inferior good, the Engel
curve is downward sloping.
Chapter 4
Slide 18
Engel Curves
Income
($ per
month) 30
Engel curves slope
upward for
normal goods.
20
10
0
Chapter 4
4
8
12
16
Food (units
per month)
Slide 19
Engel Curves
Income
($ per
month) 30
Inferior
Engel curves slope
backward bending
for inferior goods.
20
Normal
10
0
Chapter 4
4
8
12
16
Food (units
per month)
Slide 20
Individual Demand
Substitutes and Complements
1) Two goods are considered
substitutes if an increase
(decrease) in the price of one
leads to an increase (decrease) in
the quantity demanded of the
other.
Chapter 4
e.g. movie tickets and video rentals
Slide 21
Individual Demand
Substitutes and Complements
2) Two goods are considered
complements if an increase
(decrease) in the price of one
leads to a decrease (increase) in
the quantity demanded of the
other.
Chapter 4
e.g. gasoline and motor oil
Slide 22
Individual Demand
Substitutes and Complements
3) Two goods are independent when a
change in the price of one good has
no effect on the quantity demanded
of the other
Chapter 4
Slide 23
Individual Demand
Substitutes and Complements
If the price consumption curve is
downward-sloping, the two goods are
considered substitutes.
If the price consumption curve is
upward-sloping, the two goods are
considered complements.
They could be both!
Chapter 4
Slide 24
Remember the Effect of a Price Change
Clothing
(units per
month)
A
6
Price-Consumption Curve
U1
5
D
B
U3
4
U2
4
Chapter 4
12
20
Food (units
per month)
Slide 25
Income and Substitution Effects
A fall in the price of a good has two
effects: Substitution & Income
Substitution Effect
Chapter 4
Consumers will tend to buy more of
the good that has become relatively
cheaper, and less of the good that is
now relatively more expensive.
Slide 26
Income and Substitution Effects
A fall in the price of a good has two
effects: Substitution & Income
Income Effect
Consumers
experience an increase
in real purchasing power when the
price of one good falls.
Chapter 4
Slide 27
Income and Substitution Effects
Substitution Effect
The substitution effect is the change in
an item’s consumption associated with
a change in the price of the item, with
the level of utility held constant.
When the price of an item declines, the
substitution effect always leads to an
increase in the quantity of the item
demanded.
Chapter 4
Slide 28
Income and Substitution Effects
Income Effect
The income effect is the change in an
item’s consumption brought about by
the increase in purchasing power, with
the price of the item held constant.
When a person’s income increases, the
quantity demanded for the product may
increase or decrease.
Chapter 4
Slide 29
Income and Substitution Effects
Income Effect
Even with inferior goods, the income
effect is rarely large enough to outweigh
the substitution effect.
Chapter 4
Slide 30
Income and Substitution
Effects: Normal Good
Clothing
(units per
month) R
When the price of food falls,
consumption increases by F1F2
as the consumer moves from A
to B.
The substitution effect,F1E,
(from point A to D), changes the
A
relative prices but keeps real income
(satisfaction) constant.
C1
D
B
C2
U2
Substitution
Effect
O
Chapter 4
F1
Total Effect
The income effect, EF2,
( from D to B) keeps relative
prices constant but
increases purchasing power.
U1
E
S
F2
T
Income Effect
Food (units
per month)
Slide 31
Income and Substitution
Effects: Inferior Good
Clothing
(units per
month) R
Since food is an
inferior good, the
income effect is
negative. However,
the substitution effect
is larger than the
income effect.
A
B
U2
D
Substitution
Effect
O
F1
E
Total Effect
Chapter 4
U1
S
F2
T
Food (units
per month)
Income Effect
Slide 32
Income and Substitution Effects
A Special Case--The Giffen Good
The income effect may theoretically be
large enough to cause the demand
curve for a good to slope upward.
This rarely occurs and is of little
practical interest.
Chapter 4
Slide 33
A Giffen Good
Quantity of
Potatoes
Initial budget constraint
B
Optimum with high
price of potatoes
Optimum with low
price of potatoes
D
E
2. . . . which
increases
potato
consumption
if potatoes
are a Giffen
good.
1. An increase in the price of
potatoes rotates the budget
constraint inward . . .
C
New budget
constraint
0
I2
A
I1
Quantity
of Meat
Copyright©2004 South-Western
Market Demand
From Individual to Market Demand
Market Demand Curves
A
curve that relates the quantity of a
good that all consumers in a market buy
to the price of that good.
Chapter 4
Slide 35
Determining the
Market Demand Curve
Price Individual A Individual B Individual C Market
($)
(units)
(units)
(units)
(units)
1
6
10
16
32
2
4
8
13
25
3
2
6
10
18
4
0
4
7
11
5
0
2
4
6
Chapter 4
Slide 36
Summing to Obtain a
Market Demand Curve
Price
5
The market demand
curve is obtained by
summing the consumer’s
demand curves
4
3
Market Demand
2
1
0
Chapter 4
DA
5
DB
10
DC
15
20
25
30
Quantity
Slide 37
Market Demand
Two Important Points
1) The market demand will shift to
the right as more consumers
enter the market.
2) Factors that influence the
demands of many consumers will
also affect the market demand.
Chapter 4
Slide 38
Consumer Surplus
Consumer Surplus
The
difference between the maximum
amount a consumer is willing to pay for
a good and the amount actually paid.
Chapter 4
Slide 39
Consumer Surplus
Price
($ per
ticket)
The consumer surplus
of purchasing 6 concert
tickets is the sum of the
surplus derived from
each one individually.
20
19
18
17
16
15
Consumer Surplus
6 + 5 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 1 = 21
Market Price
14
13
0
Chapter 4
1
2
3
4
5
6
Rock Concert Tickets
Slide 40
Consumer Surplus
The stepladder demand curve can be
converted into a straight-line demand
curve by making the units of the good
smaller.
Chapter 4
Slide 41
Consumer Surplus
Price
($ per
ticket)
Consumer Surplus
for the Market Demand
20
19
18
17
16
15
Consumer
Surplus
1/2x(20 14)x6,500 $19,500
Market Price
14
13
Demand Curve
Actual
Expenditure
0
Chapter 4
1
2
3
4
5
6
Rock Concert Tickets
Slide 42
Consumer Surplus
Combining consumer surplus with
the aggregate profits that producers
obtain we can evaluate:
1) Costs and benefits of different
market structures
2) Public policies that alter the
behavior of consumers and firms
Chapter 4
Slide 43
Summary
Individual consumers’ demand
curves for a commodity can be
derived from information about their
tastes for all goods and services and
from their budget constraints.
Engel curves describe the
relationship between the quantity of a
good consumed and income.
Chapter 4
Slide 44
Summary
Two goods are substitutes if an increase
in the price of one good leads to an
increase in the quantity demanded of the
other. They are complements if the
quantity demanded of the other declines.
The effect of a price change on the
quantity demanded can be broken into a
substitution effect and an income effect.
Chapter 4
Slide 45
Summary
The market demand curve is the
horizontal summation of the
individual demand curves for all
consumers.
Chapter 4
Slide 46
End of Chapter 4
Individual and
Market Demand