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Microeconomics 1000 Lecture 1 Demand and willingness to pay Copyright © 2004 South-Western Teacher • Vincenzo Denicolò • Room 104, Astley Clarke Building • E-mail address: [email protected] • Office hours: Thursdays 2p.m. – 4 p.m. Copyright © 2004 South-Western Timetable (but check course web page for possible changes!) Week starting on Wednesday 11a.m. Thursday 11a.m. Friday 10a.m. 2 (Oct. 10th) X X X 3 (Oct. 17th) X X 4 (Oct. 24th) 5 (Oct. 31st) X X 6 (Nov. 7th) X X 7 (Nov. 14th ) X X X 8 (Nov. 21st) No lectures this week 9 (Nov. 28th) X X X 10 (Dec. 5th) X X 11 (Dec. 12th) X X X Copyright © 2004 South-Western Copyright © 2004 South-Western Exam • 30 multiple choice questions • 1 essay (to be chosen out of 4 titles) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Classes and Tutorials • Staring from week 3 (the next week) you will have to attend also classes and tutorials • Classes discuss multiple choice questions • Tutorials will cover more complex exercises Copyright © 2004 South-Western Textbook • N Gregory Mankiw and Mark P. Taylor, Economics, 2010, South-Western Cengage Learning. ISBN 978 1 4080 2126 2 • Website: http://www.cengage.co.uk/mankiw_taylor_special • chapters 1-2 are introductory chapters that should be read before the course starts • Exercise 1 serves as a review of this preliminary material Copyright © 2004 South-Western Alternative textbook • Paul Krugman and Robin Wellas, Economics, 2009, Worth Publishers (or the Microeconomics only version) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Microeconomics… • Typical microeconomic issues • Strategic behaviour of firms (e.g., why did Microsoft decide to bundle Windows and Internet Explorer?) • Determinants of the demand for specific goods (e.g., why has health expenditure been increasing over time?) • Effect of specific taxes (e.g., why is alcohol generally taxed more heavily than milk, and what effect does this have on alcohol consumption?) Copyright © 2004 South-Western And Macroeconomics (II semester) • Typical macroeconomic issues: • Why is UK per capita income today ten times as large as in 1850? • Why is UK per capita income ten times as large as Bolivia’s? • What determines the inflation rate? • What are the consequences of large fiscal deficits? Copyright © 2004 South-Western That is: • Microeconomics studies the behaviour of single economic agents (firms, consumers), and the way in which they interact in the market place • Macroeconomics studies the behaviour of aggregate variables (national income, the average level of prices, imports and exports) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Market economy • Our main aim is to understand how a market economy works • In a market economy, the allocation of resources (in other words, who does what and who gets what) is determined by the market Copyright © 2004 South-Western A few definitions • Market: the set of trades concerning a particular good • Equilibrium: a situation in which no economic agent would want to change his or her behaviour, even if he or she is given the opportunity to • Efficiency: the property of not being further susceptible of improvement Copyright © 2004 South-Western Demand and willingness to pay • We start from the case of an indivisible good • To begin with, we further assume that the buyer wants at most one unit of it (e.g., a movie, or an economic textbook) • The willingness to pay is the maximum amount of money the buyer is willing to pay Copyright © 2004 South-Western Wtp and price • Note: in general, w.t.p. ≠ price, which is what the buyer actually pays (if he purchases the good) • We shall denote wtp by the letter v, and price by the letter p • Thus, v ≠ p • However, for a rational buyer who purchases the good, we can be sure that v ≥ p Copyright © 2004 South-Western What determines wtp? • There are two main determinants of the wtp of a buyer for a good: • His preferences • His income • These will be studied in greater detail in Lecture 15 Copyright © 2004 South-Western Uses of wtp • Two uses of the w.t.p. • To assess the value of the good to the buyer, and hence how much he gains from trade • To determine buyer’s behaviour (i.e. his demand for the good) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Gains from trade • The buyer’s benefit from trade is v – p; this is called consumer surplus or consumer rent • The implicit assumption is that the w.t.p. is a good measure of the value of the good to the consumer • However, recall that the w.t.p. depends also on the consumer’s income Copyright © 2004 South-Western Demand • If the buyer is rational, he will demand (that is, he is willing to purchase) the good if and only if p ≤ v (if p = v the buyer is actually indifferent between purchasing or not) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Demand schedule • Now imagine that there are several potential buyers (e.g., A, B, C and D) with different w.t.p.’s, vA, vB, vC and vD • If necessary, rename buyers so that v A ≥ vB ≥ vC ≥ vD • Suppose all buyers behave rationally Copyright © 2004 South-Western price 20 vA Consumer rent: 20 – 17 = 3 17 p vB 12 vC 8 vD 3 O 1 2 3 4 quantity Copyright © 2004 South-Western price 20 vA Consumer rent: (20 – 5) + (12 – 5) + (8 – 5) = 25 vB 12 vC 8 p 5 3 O vD 1 2 3 4 quantity Copyright © 2004 South-Western price With a large number of buyers, we can approximate the demand schedule by a smooth curve, the demand curve quantity Copyright © 2004 South-Western Summary • The demand schedule is a table that represents for each value of the price the total quantity consumers are willing to purchase at that price • The demand function is the relation between quantity and price • The demand curve represents the demand function (notice that the dependent variable, quantity, is represented on the horizontal axis, contrary to standard mathematical convention) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Summary • If the price goes down • Demand goes up (the number of consumers i such that vi ≥ p can only increase, or at most stay constant, if p decreases) • Consumer surplus goes up (more consumers are served, and each of them gains more from trade) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Many units • Assume again that the good is indivisible, but now suppose the consumer may consume more than one unit (e.g., shirts) • Successive units may be seen as separate goods • Let v(n) denote the total w.t.p. for n units • Then, v(n) – v(n – 1) is the willingness to pay for the nth unit (the marginal willingness to pay) Copyright © 2004 South-Western Optimal consumption • Assumption: the marginal w.t.p. is decreasing in n • Assumption (rationality): the consumer chooses n so as to maximise his net benefit from trade, v(n) – n×p • Optimal behavioural rule: consume one more unit as long as marginal w.t.p. ≥ price Copyright © 2004 South-Western Example • Suppose v(1) = 20 v(2) = 32 so v(2) – v(1) = 12 v(3) = 40 so v(3) – v(2) = 8 v(4) = 43 so v(4) – v(3) = 3 • We obtain exactly the same demand schedule as in our original example with four different consumers Copyright © 2004 South-Western Figure 1 Catherine’s Demand Schedule and Demand Curve Price of Ice-Cream Cone $3.00 2.50 1. A decrease in price ... 2.00 1.50 1.00 0.50 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Quantity of Ice-Cream Cones 2. ... increases quantity of cones demanded. 0 1 2 3 4 5 Copyright © 2004 Copyright © 2004South-Western South-Western