3: Demand and Supply
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Transcript 3: Demand and Supply
Ch. 3: Demand and Supply
Objectives
Determinants of demand and supply
Use demand and supply to
understand how markets determine prices and
quantities
make predictions about how various shocks or
government intervention affects prices and quantities
Markets and Prices
• Market
– any arrangement that enables buyers and sellers to get
information and do business with each other.
• Competitive market
– a market that has many buyers and many sellers
– no single buyer or seller can influence the price.
• Money price of a good
– the amount of money needed to buy it.
Demand
• Quantity demanded of a good or service
– the amount that consumers plan to buy during a
particular time period at a particular price.
• The Law of Demand
– Ceteris paribus, the higher the price of a
good, the smaller is the quantity demanded.
– The law of demand results from
• a substitution effect
• an income effect
– Normal versus inferior good
Demand
Demand
– the relationship between the price of the good
and quantity demanded of the good.
Demand curve
– shows the relationship between the QD of a
good and its price, ceteris paribus
Law of Demand
• A rise in the price, ceteris
paribus, brings a decrease
in the quantity demanded
and
• Demand curves are
downward sloping.
• A change in price creates a
movement along the
demand curve, not a
change in demand.
Price
D
# gallons per week
Demand
A D-curve is also
– Willingness-to-pay
curve.
– Willingness to pay
measures marginal
benefit
Price
D=MB
# gallons per week
Demand
• A Change in Demand
Quantity of the good that people plan to buy
changes at each and every price
Shift of demand curve.
When demand increases,
– QD increases at each and every price
– the demand curve shifts rightward.
When demand decreases,
– QD decreases at each and every price
– the demand curve shifts leftward.
Demand
Change in Demand vs. Change in Quantity Demanded
Factors that change demand
1. Prices of related goods
substitute in consumption
complement in consumption
2. Income
Normal good
Inferior good
Luxury good
3. Expected future prices
4. Population
5. Taxes on buyers
6. Consumer preferences
Supply
Quantity supplied (QS) of a good or service
• the amount that producers plan to sell during a given
time period at a particular price.
The Law of Supply
• Other things remaining the same, the higher the price
of a good, the greater is the quantity supplied.
results from tendency for the marginal cost of
producing a good or service to increase as the
quantity produced increases (more later)
Producers are willing to supply only if they at least
cover their marginal cost of production.
Supply
– Supply
• the entire relationship between the quantity
supplied and the price of a good.
– Supply curve
• shows relationship between QS and price of a
good, ceteris paribus.
Supply Curve
•A supply curve for
gasoline.
•A rise in the price,
ceteris paribus,
brings an increase
in QS and a
movement along
the supply curve.
$ per gallon
S
Gallons per day
Supply
–A supply curve is
also a minimumsupply-price curve.
–The greater the
quantity produced,
the higher is the price
that producers must
be offered to be
willing to produce
that quantity.
S
Gallons per day
Supply
• A Change in Supply
occurs when the quantity of the good that
producers plan to sell changes at each and
every price, so there is a new supply curve.
When supply increases,
• QS increases at each and every price
• supply curve shifts rightward.
When supply decreases,
• QS decreases at each and every price
• supply curve shifts leftward.
Supply
Change in supply vs. change in quantity supplied
Factors that change supply.
1. Prices of inputs
2. Prices of related goods produced
Substitutes in production
Complements in production
3.
4.
5.
6.
Expected future prices
Number of sellers
Taxes on Sellers
Technology
Market Equilibrium
Equilibrium
situation in which opposing forces balance
each other.
occurs when the price balances the plans of
buyers and sellers.
Equilibrium price
price at which the quantity demanded equals
the quantity supplied.
Equilibrium quantity
quantity bought and sold at the equilibrium
price.
Market Equilibrium
Price Adjustments
If P>Pequil:
– a surplus forces the price
down.
If P<Pequil:
– a shortage forces the
price up.
At the equilibrium price,
– QS=QD
– and the price doesn’t
change.
S
D
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity
Illustrate Effect on Equilibrium Price and Quantity if:
a. Demand increases
b. Supply increases
c. Demand and supply simultaneously increase.
Practice with Supply/Demand to:
a. Predict effect of “shock” to market.
b. Understand the type of “shock” that might have
caused an observed change in P & Q.
Price controls
1. A price ceiling is a maximum allowable
price.
• Results in a continuing shortage if ceiling is
BELOW equilibrium price.
2. A price floor is a minimum allowable price.
Results in a continuing surplus if floor is ABOVE
equilibrium price.