* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chapter 3- Presentation 1
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Chapter 3- Presentation 1 Demand Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility • Each buyer of a product will get less utility from each extra unit consumed • Consumers will only buy more units if the prices become progressively cheaper • Ex- the 4th Big Mac will give less satisfaction than the 3rd, 2nd, 1st Demand • A schedule or curve that shows how much of a product that consumers are willing and able to purchase at a each of a series of possible prices at a specified period of time Quantity Demanded • The amount of a good or service that buyer(s) want to purchase at a particular price during some time period Law of Demand • Ceteris Paribas, as price falls, the quantity demanded rises, and as the price rises, the quantity demanded falls. • ***inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded • Ex- if the price of Nike goes up, and Adidas and Reebok stays the same, less Nikes will be purchased Individual Demand Remember- Demand goes Down P 6 P $5 Qd 10 4 20 3 35 2 55 1 80 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Demand 4 3 2 1 0 D 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Quantity Demanded (bushels per week) Q Individual Demand Demand Can Increase or Decrease An Increase in Demand Means a Movement of the Line P 6 P $5 Qd 10 4 20 3 35 2 55 1 80 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Demand A Movement Between Any Two Points on a Demand Curve is Called a Change in Quantity Demanded 4 3 2 1 0 D2 Decrease in Demand 2 4 6 8 10 D1 D3 12 14 16 18 Q Quantity Demanded (bushels per week) Explanations for the Law of Demand • 1. Common sense- the lower the price, the more people will buy (hence clearance sales) • 2. Diminishing Marginal Utility • 3. Income and Substitution Effects Income Effect • A lower price increases the purchasing power of a buyer’s income • A higher price has the opposite effect Substitution Effect • At a lower price, buyers will substitute a good in exchange for the higher priced alternative and vice versa • Ex- If the price of chicken lowers, the buyer will buy less beef, pork etc. http://www.reffonomics.com/TRB/ chapter4/quantitydemanded.swf Quantity Demanded v Demand Market Demand • Assume all the buyers in a market are willing and able to buy the same amounts of a product at each of the possible prices • ***adding/multiplying the individual quantities demanded Changes in Demand • A new demand curve is drawn • Shift to the left for a decrease and right for an increase in demand Determinants of Demand • • • • • • Changes In: TRIBE T- Tastes R- Related Goods’ Price I- Income of Buyers B- # of Buyers E- Expectations of the Future Normal (Superior) Goods • As income increases, consumers buy more of a good • Direct relationship • Ex- steaks, luxury cars Inferior Goods • As income increases, demand for the goods falls • Inverse relationship • Ex- Ramen noodles, cheap beer, retread tires Substitute Goods • one that can be used in place of another good • An increase in the price of one good will increase the demand of its substitutes and vice versa Complementary Goods • One good that is used together with another good • If the price of one goes up, the demand for the complement will decline and vice versa • Ex- Peanut butter and Jelly, tuition and textbooks