Transcript Chapter 4

Chapter 4
Demand
Key terms
 Page
91
 Define all 9 key terms using Cornell style
notes to present terms and definitions.
 Vocab quiz will be _____________.
Chapter launching Activity
 Select
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two agriculture products
One that you expect to increase in popularity in the
next few years
One that you expect to decrease in popularity.
For each product explain why you expect the change.
What causes the desire, or demand, for each product.
Students can use the internet to look up financial
records. Site source
Create charts and graphs to support your position on
the two products.
 Transparency
10
 Demand video clip
Demand
 The
desire, ability, and willingness to buy
a product.
 Microeconomic concept
 Is essential to answer what, how, and for
who questions.
 Involves two variables- the price and
quantity of a specific product at a given
point in time.
Demand Curve
 
Demand Schedule
 Is
a collection of data that covers price and
quantity at each given price.
Demand Curve
 Shows
the various quantities demanded of
a particular product at all prices that might
prevail in the markets at a given time.
Figure 2: Increase in Demand
Figure 3: Decrease in Demand
The Law of Demand
 There
is an inverse relationship between
price of a product and the quantity
demanded.
Market Demand Curve
A
curve that shows how much of a product
all consumers will buy at all possible
prices.
Demand and Marginal Utility
 As
we buy more of an item, we get less
satisfaction from each additional purchase.
 Diminishing marginal utility: decrease in
satisfaction or usefulness from having one
or more unit of the same product.
Factors Affecting Demand
 Change
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in Quantity demanded.
Only a change in price can cause a change in
quantity demanded.
Income effect: price change alters consumers
real income.
Substitution effect: replacing a more costly
product with a cheaper product.
Determinates of Demand
Determinate
Example
price
Falling price
income
Gas price
decreases so
more money to
spend on other
items.
Hay prices high
substitute with
cubes
substitution
Effect on
Demand
increase
increase
Substitute
demand
increases
Change in Demand
 Consumer
income
 Consumer taste
 Substitutes
 Complements
 Expectations
 Number of consumers
Elasticity of Demand
 Elasticity
is a general measure of
responsiveness- an important cause-andeffect relationship in economics.
 How a change to a dependent variable
such as quantity demanded, responds to
an independent variable, such as price.
 When price changes the quantity
demanded can change a little or a lot.
 Demand
elasticity = consumers reaction
 Example: price changes of seasonal fruits
and veggies.
Inelastic Demand
 Change
in price has a very little change in
demand.
 Example: unlimited resources or items that
consumers can only consume so much of
the product.
Unit Elastic Demand
 Given
change in price causes a
proportional change in quantity demanded.
Total Expenditure Test
 Used
to estimate the demand elasticity of
a product.
 To find total expenditure:
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Price of product (p) x quantity (q) for any
point along demand curve
Example:
Demand Curve

(p)$2 x (q) 3 = 6
 (p) $3 x (q) 0 = 0
 Demand elasticity
would be high.
Results from expenditure test
 Elastic
=Price drops and demand
increases.
 Inelastic = Price drops the increase in
demand is so small that total expenditure
falls
 Unit elastic = total expenditures remain
unchanged when price decreases.
 See page104 figure 4.5
Determinates of Demand Elasticity
 Can
the purchased delayed?
 Are adequate substitutes available?
 Does the Purchase use a large portion of
income?
Determinates of
elasticity
Yes=elastic
No= inelastic
Fresh
tomatoes
Gasoline
Butter
Water/
irrigation
water
Can the purchased
delayed?
Yes
No
Yes
No
Are adequate
substitutes
available?
Yes
No
Yes
No
Does the Purchase
No
use a large portion of
income?
Yes
No
Yes
Type of elasticity
inelastic
elastic
inelastic
Elastic