Transcript Demand

Demand: Know your market
Interdependent demands: Poiuyts & Qwerts
 Poiuyts and Qwerts are substitutes (qwerts
are left-handed poiuyts)
If you sell more qwerts, you’ll sell fewer poiuyts
xp = 9000 – 100 Pp – xq/3 (or Pp=90 - xp/100 - xq/300)*
If you sell more poiuyts, you’ll sell fewer qwerts
xq = 1200 –100Pq – 2 xp/3 or (Pq=120- xq/100-xp/150 )*
Suppose that total cost is given by
TC = 1000 + 10 xp + 20 xq
Optimal outputs of poiuyts and qwerts are where
Mp=0 given xq and Mq=0 given xp
* Your text calls price as a function of quantities the “inverse
demand function.”
Poiuyts and Qwerts
When we optimize using Solver,
xp = 2000 Pp = 56.67 xq = 4000 Pq = 66.67
Notice, if we increase xp by +1 at this point,
Pp declines by 1/100 and Pq declines by
1/150. Thus,
MRp= 56.67(+1) - .01(2000) -.0067(4000)
= 56.67 – 20.00 – 26.67 =56.67– 46.67
= 10.00
Since MCp= 10.00, Mp = 0 at the optimal
solution.
Demand

When we speak of “demand” for a product, we
think of a uniform product, a commodity.
– When we dealt with demand for GM light trucks, we
didn’t distinguish between Buick vans and Chevy
pick-ups; we certainly didn’t distinguish between
blue pick-ups and red pick-ups. We thought of a
generic product, “light trucks.”
– Even products we normally think of as
“commodities” are subtly differentiated: Saudi oil
has less(?) sulfur content than North Sea oil and
accordingly sells for a different price.

We can get important insights into how the light
truck market responds to rebates and how the
oil market responds to business cycles without
concerning ourselves with detailed product
differentiation.

Demand Analysis: The Product and its
Market
How you define the product and its market
depends on the questions you want to ask.
– If all you care about is sales of red Chevy pickups to women in Las Vegas in October
… red Chevy pick-ups is your product
… women in Las Vegas in October is your market
– Even then, you’re abstracting from red Chevy
pick-ups with different accessories and Las
Vegas women of different marital status.

When you’re the analyst,
– you get to define the product.
– you get to define the geography, the
demographics, and the time period of your
analysis.
Demand: The Industry, The Firm
Competitive Industry
Industry
Firm
Firm With
Market Power
Firm is Price Taker
Firm is Price Maker
Decides Quantity Decides Price-Quantity
To Produce
Combination
P
P
P
Price Elasticity of Demand: Once More
Price elasticity of demand = 

Percent change in quantity
dx/x
=
=

Percent change in price
dp/p

Linear Demand
x small high; x large   low
P
Constant 
x = k P-a or xPa = k
P
Price Elasticity of Demand:
Industry and Firm
Short – Run and Long – Run
Price elasticity of demand increases the more
substitutes there are for a product
 The products of the all the other firms in an
industry are good substitutes for a particular firm’s
product
 Demand for the firm’s product is more elastic than
demand for the industry’s product as a whole
– Demand for a competitive firm’s product is infinite
Price elasticity of demand increases the more
time buyers have to adjust to price changes
– Elasticity is greater in the long-run than in the short-run