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Transcript market equilibrium
6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
1
6
Market Forces
6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market
Equilibrium
6.2 Shifts of Demand and Supply
Curves
6.3 Market Efficiency and Gains
from Exchange
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
2
CONSIDER
How is market competition different from competition in
sports and in games?
Why do car dealers usually locate together on the
outskirts of town?
What’s the difference between making stuff right and
making the right stuff?
Why do government efforts to keep rents low usually
lead to a housing shortage?
Why do consumers benefit nearly as much from a low
price as from a zero price?
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
6.1 Price, Quantity, and
Market Equilibrium
Objectives
Understand how markets reach
equilibrium.
Explain how markets reduce
transaction costs.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
6.1 Price, Quantity, and
Market Equilibrium
Key Terms
market equilibrium
surplus
shortage
transaction cost
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
5
Market Equilibrium
When the quantity that consumers are
willing and able to buy equals the quantity
that producers are willing and able to sell,
that market reaches market equilibrium.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
6
Equilibrium in the Pizza Market
Figure 6.1
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
7
Surplus Forces the Price Down
At a given price, the amount by which
quantity supplied exceeds quantity
demanded is called the surplus.
As long as quantity supplied exceeds
quantity demanded, the surplus forces the
price lower.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
8
Shortage Forces the Price Up
At a given price, the amount by which
quantity demanded exceeds quantity
supplied is called the shortage.
As long as quantity demanded and
quantity supplied differ, this difference
forces a price change.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
Market Forces Lead to
Equilibrium Price and Quantity
9
The equilibrium price, or market-clearing
price, equates quantity demanded with
quantity supplied.
Because there is no shortage and no
surplus, there is no longer any pressure
for the price to change.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
10
Market Exchange
Markets answer the questions
What to produce
How to produce it
For whom to produce it
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
11
Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand
Although each individual pursues his or
her own self-interest, the “invisible hand”
of market competition promotes the
general welfare.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
12
Market Exchange Is Voluntary
Neither buyers nor sellers would
participate in the market unless they
expected to be better off.
Prices help people recognize market
opportunities to make better choices as
consumers and as producers.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
6.1 Price, Quantity, and Market Equilibrium
SLIDE
13
Markets Reduce Transaction Costs
Transaction costs are the cost of time
and information needed to carry out
market exchange.
The higher the transaction cost, the less
likely the exchange will take place.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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