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Starter Think of products you buy on a regular basis. Who influences the prices and availability of those products? How do they influence the prices and availability? Demand Chapter 4.1, 4.2, 4.3 Why does it matter? The concept of demand is demonstrated every time you buy something. Demand is linked to the very human desire to meet wants. What is Demand? Demand--the desire for an item and the ability to pay for it Law of demand (Explains consumer behavior as well as economic concepts) when price of good or service goes up, quantity demand goes down when price of good or service goes down, quantity demand goes up Demand Schedules Identifies preferences for pricing to get the most product or service for your $ Demand schedule--a table that summarizes one consumer's behavior lists how much of an item an individual will buy at each price Demand Curves Demand curves graphically show information found on demand schedules Demand curve--a graph that shows amount of an item a consumer will buy at each price Changes in Quantity Demand Change in quantity demanded change in amount consumers buy because of change in price each change shown by new point on demand curve does not shift the demand curve itself Starter Brainstorm examples of times when something other than price affected your decision to buy. Change in Demand Change in demand is caused by a change in the marketplace prompts people to buy different amounts at every price also called shift in demand Six factors can cause a change in demand Income Market size Consumer taste Consumer expectations Substitutes Complements Six Factors of Demand Income- persons’ ability to buy (normal and inferior goods) Market size- population size (rise-rise, drop-drop) Consumer taste- tastes change to drive product popularity Consumer expectations- expectations about future pricing affect behavior Substitutes- products used in place of others Complements- goods that are used together (if one price changes the demand for both products changes) Elasticity of Demand Elasticity of demand- measure of how responsive consumers are to price changes Elastic - quantity demanded changes greatly as price changes Inelastic - quantity demanded changes little as price changes What determines elasticity? Three factors affect elasticity of demand availability of substitutes proportion of income spent on good or service whether product is a necessity or luxury Why is elasticity important? Knowing elasticity of demand tells sellers whether to cut prices if demand is elastic, price cuts might increase earnings if demand is inelastic, price cuts will not increase earnings