Demand and Supply
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Transcript Demand and Supply
Demand and Supply
Chapter 3
Demand
demand is a schedule that shows the
various amounts of a product
consumers are WILLING and ABLE to
BUY at each specific price at a
specific time.
Demand Schedule: listing that shows
the # demanded at different prices
Demand Schedule for Donuts
Price
Quantity
$2
0
$1.50
1
$1.00
3
$.75
6
$.50
15
$.25
25
Demand Curve: the schedule on a
graph
See graph on document camera
Law of Demand
There
is an inverse relationship
between price & quantity demanded
– If price , demand
– If price , demand
Marginal
Utility: Extra satisfaction
from getting one more unit of a
product
Diminishing
marginal utility: the
extra satisfaction we get from one
more unit begins to diminish
– i.e., the third donut, yields less extra
satisfaction than the first.
Demand Curve
Always
Downward sloping—indicating
lower quantity demanded at higher
prices, higher quantities at lower
prices
Change in PRICE reflects movement
along the curve = change in
quantity demanded
If
a change in demand is NOT caused
by a change in PRICE, the entire
curve will shift = change in
demand
Determinants that affect demand
(other than price)
Consumer
tastes
# of buyers
Income
Prices of related goods
– Substitute goods
– Complementary goods
Expectations
Demand Schedule for Donuts
Price
Quantity1
Quantity2
$2
0
1
$1.50
1
3
$1.00
3
6
$.75
6
15
$.50
15
25
$.25
25
35
Demand has increased so the curve has
shifted to the right.
Income
Effect: Lower prices increase
the purchasing power of money
income enabling the consumer to buy
more at lower prices
Substitution
Effect: a lower price
gives an incentive to substitute the
lower-priced good for the higher
priced good
Supply
Supply
is a schedule that shows the
amount of a product a producer is
WILLING and ABLE to produce and
SELL at each specific price at a
specific time.
Law of supply
Producers
will produce and sell more
of their product at a high P than at a
low P.
There is a direct relationship in P and
Q supplied
– If price , supply will
– If price , supply will
Explanation of the Law of Supply
Given
product costs, a higher P
means greater profits and thus an
incentive to increase the Q supplied.
Supply Curve
Supply Schedule for cakes
Upward
sloping—
indicating higher
Qs supplied at
higher P, lower
Qs at lower P
P (Price)
Q
(Quantity)
$20
15
$15
10
$10
8
$5
3
Supply Curve for cakes
See board or document camera
Change
in PRICE reflects movement
along the curve = change in quantity
supplied
If
a change in supply is NOT caused
by a change in PRICE, the entire
curve will shift = change in supply
Determinants that affect supply
(other than price)
Resource
prices
Technology
Taxes and subsidies
Price of related goods
Expectations
Number of sellers
Supply Schedule for cakes
$
Q1
Q2
20
15
10
15
10
8
10
8
5
5
3
1
Market Equilibrium
Quantity
supplied = quantity
demanded
– Where the two curves intersect
Prices
above equilibrium = surplus of
supply
Prices below equilibrium = shortage
of supply
Market Clearing or Market Price is
another name for equilibrium
Price
Floors: a legally determined
price at or above the equilibrium
price (can’t go below)
Price Ceiling: a legally
established maximum price for a
good or service (can’t go above)