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Supply and Demand Chapter 3 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Market Participants • More than 300 million individual consumers, 30 million business firms, and many thousands of government agencies participate directly in the U.S. economy. • Millions of foreigners also participate by buying and selling goods in American markets while Americans participate in foreign markets. 3-2 LO-1 3-2 Goals of Market Participants • Consumers — maximize happiness or satisfaction from goods and services. • Businesses — maximize profits. • Government — maximize general welfare of society. • Foreigners—pursue same goals as consumers, producers, and government agencies. 3-3 LO-1 3-3 Constraints • Limited resources: – Consumers need to make choices from available products. – Producers must choose how to best use their limited resources. 3-4 LO-1 3-4 Market and Interactions • A market is any place where goods are bought and sold and includes the interaction of all buyers and sellers. • Four groups of Market Participants: – Consumers – Business firms – Governments – Foreigners 3-6 LO-1 3-5 The Two Markets • Factor Market: – Any place where factors of production (land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship) are bought and sold. • Product Market: – Any place where finished goods and services (products) are bought and sold. 3-7 LO-1 3-6 Figure 3.1 3-7 Product Market • Consumers buy and producers sell in the product market. • Imports and exports are also a part of the product market. • Governments supply goods and services in product markets. 3-8 LO-1 3-8 Locating Markets • A market is anywhere an economic exchange occurs. • A market exists wherever and whenever an exchange takes place. 3-9 LO-1 3-9 Dollars and Exchange • Some market transactions involve barter. – Barter is the direct exchange of one good for another, without the use of money. • Bartering has limits as it requires a seller who wants whatever good is up for exchange. 3-10 LO-1 3-10 Dollars and Exchange • Nearly every market transaction involves an exchange of dollars for goods (in product markets) or resources (in factor markets). • Money plays a critical role in facilitating market exchanges and the specialization these exchanges permit. 3-11 LO-1 3-11 Supply and Demand • Market transactions require two sides: -Supply -Demand 3-12 LO-2 3-12 Supply and Demand • Supply – The ability and willingness to sell (produce) specific quantities of a good at alternative prices in a given time period, ceteris paribus (other things being equal). 3-13 LO-2 3-13 Supply and Demand • Demand – The ability and willingness to buy specific quantities of a good at alternative prices in a given time period, ceteris paribus (other things being equal). 3-14 LO-2 3-14 Supply and Demand • Every market transaction involves an exchange and thus some element of both supply and demand. 3-15 LO-2 3-15 Individual Demand • A demand exists only if someone is both willing and able to pay for a good. • How much someone is willing to pay for something is determined by his/her income and the opportunity cost. – Opportunity cost – the most desired goods or services foregone in order to obtain something else. 3-16 LO-2 3-16 Demand Schedule • A table showing the quantities of a good a consumer is willing and able to buy at alternative prices in a given time period, ceteris paribus. • Demand is an expression of buyer intentions—of a willingness to buy—not a statement of actual purchases. 3-17 LO-2 3-17 Demand Curve • A curve describing the quantities of a good a consumer is willing and able to buy at alternative prices in a given time period, ceteris paribus. • The demand curve does not state actual purchases, rather only what consumers are willing and able to purchase. 3-18 LO-2 3-18 Figure 3.2 3-19 Law of Demand • The quantity of a good demanded in a given time period increases as its price falls, ceteris paribus. • There is an inverse or negative relationship between price and quantity demanded, ceteris paribus. 3-19 LO-2 3-20 Determinants of Demand • Tastes (desire for this and other goods) • Income (of the consumer) • Other goods (their availability and price) • Expectations (for income, prices, tastes) • Number of buyers 3-20 LO-2 3-21 Ceteris Paribus • The assumption that nothing else changes. – Focus on one or two forces at a time. • Allows us to focus on the relationship between quantity demanded and price. • Tells us what independent influence price has on consumption decisions. 3-21 LO-2 3-22 Shift in Demand • The demand schedule and curve remain unchanged only so long as the underlying determinants of demand remain constant. 3-22 LO-2 3-23 Shift in Demand • Changes in any of the determinants of demand will cause the demand curve to shift. • The quantity demanded at any (every) given price changes. • The demand curve always shifts only to the right or to the left. 3-23 LO-2 3-24 Figure 3.3 3-25 Movement versus Shifts • Movements along a demand curve are a response to price changes for that good. • Shifts of the demand curve occur only when the determinants of demand change. 3-24 LO-2 3-26 Movement versus Shifts • Changes in quantity demanded: – Movements along a given demand curve in response to changes in price. • Changes in demand: – Shifts of the demand curve due to changes in tastes, income, other goods, or expectations. 3-25 LO-2 3-27 Market Demand • The total quantities of a good or service people are willing and able to buy at alternative prices in a given time period. • The sum of individual demands. • Market demand is determined by the number of potential buyers and their respective tastes, incomes, other goods, and expectations. 3-26 LO-2 3-28 The Market Demand Curve • A picture of the total quantities demanded by all consumers within a market at different prices. 3-27 LO-2 3-29 The Use of Demand Curves • Show how much consumers will spend at different prices. • Predict the amount to produce at a given price. • Determine the price that will result in desired output levels. 3-28 LO-2 3-30 Market Supply • Supply interacts with demand to determine the price that will be charged. • The total quantities of a good or service that sellers are willing and able to sell at alternative prices in a given time period, ceteris paribus. • The sum of individual supplies. 3-29 LO-2 3-31 Market Supply • Market supply is an expression of sellers’ intentions—of the ability and willingness to sell—not a statement of actual sales. 3-30 LO-2 3-32 Figure 3.5 3-33 Determinants of Supply • • • • • • 3-31 Technology Factor (or resource) costs Other goods Taxes and subsidies Expectations Number of sellers LO-2 3-34 Law of Supply • The quantity of a good supplied in a given time period increases as its price increases, ceteris paribus. • There is a direct or positive relationship between price and quantity supplied, ceteris paribus. 3-32 LO-2 3-35 Shifts in Supply • Changes in a quantity supplied: – Movement along a given supply curve. • Changes in supply: – Shifts in the supply curve due to a change in one of the determinants of supply. 3-33 LO-2 3-36 Equilibrium • Only one price and quantity are compatible with the existing intentions of both buyers and sellers. • The price at which the quantity of a good demanded in a given time period equals the quantity supplied. 3-34 LO-3 3-37 Figure 3.6 3-38 Equilibrium Price • The equilibrium price occurs at the intersection of the supply and demand curves. • There is only one equilibrium price. • The market will naturally move toward this price. 3-35 LO-3 3-39 Market Clearing • Collective actions of sellers and buyers create an equilibrium price. • The equilibrium price and quantity reflect a compromise between buyers and sellers. • No other compromise yields a quantity demanded that is exactly equal to the quantity supplied. 3-36 LO-3 3-40 Invisible Hand • The market behaves as if it is directed by some unseen force. Adam Smith (1776) called this the invisible hand. – It means that the equilibrium price is determined by the collective behavior of many buyers and sellers. 3-37 LO-3 3-41 Surplus and Shortage • A market surplus or a market shortage emerges whenever the market price is set above or below the equilibrium. 3-38 LO-3 3-42 Market Shortage • The amount by which the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at a given price. • Occurs when the selling price is lower than the equilibrium price. • Sellers supply less than buyers demand at the current price. 3-39 LO-3 3-43 Market Surplus • The amount by which the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded at a given price. • Occurs when the selling price is higher than the equilibrium price. • Sellers supply more than buyers demand at the current price. 3-40 LO-3 3-44 Changes in Equilibrium • Equilibrium price and quantity change whenever the supply or demand curves shift. • This happens when the determinants of supply or demand change. 3-42 LO-4 3-45 Figure 3.7 3-46 Disequilibrium Pricing • Price Ceiling: – Upper limit (maximum price) imposed on the price of a good or service. • Price Floor: – Lower limit (minimum price) imposed on the price of a good or service. 3-43 LO-5 3-47 Price Ceilings • Price ceilings have three predictable effects: – They increase quantity demanded. – They decrease quantity supplied. – They create a market shortage. • Rent controls on housing are an example. • There will be less housing for everyone when rent controls are imposed. 3-44 LO-5 3-48 Figure 3.8 3-49 Price Floors • Price floors have three predictable effects: – They increase quantity supplied. – They decrease quantity demanded. – They create a market surplus. • Minimum wages and price supports for agriculture are examples. 3-45 LO-5 3-50 Figure 3.9 3-51 Price Floors • A government imposed price floor may create: – A wrong mix of output. – An increased tax burden. – An altered distribution of income. • Government failure – a government intervention that fails to improve economic outcomes. 3-46 LO-5 3-52 Laissez Faire • The doctrine of "leave it alone”, or of nonintervention by government in the market mechanism. • Adam Smith, the founder of modern economic theory, advocated laissez faire in 1776. 3-47 LO-5 3-53 Optimal, Not Perfect • Market outcomes are optimal, not perfect. • Optimal outcomes are the best possible, given the level and distribution of incomes and scarce resources. • We expect the choices made in the marketplace to be the best possible choices for each participant. 3-50 LO-3 3-54 End of Chapter 3