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How the Market System Works Study Questions 1. What is the law of demand? 2. What is the law of supply? 3. How does a market achieve equilibrium? 4. What causes buyers to change their demand behavior? Study Questions 5. What causes sellers (producers) to change their supply behavior? 6. What causes the price of a good to change? 7. What happens when government imposes a price on the market? Trade Everyone specializes in making one good We make an amount available for sale We receive income from the sale We buy goods we want from other specialists Types of Trade Simple trade barter Modern trade use money as a medium of exchange What is a Market? Any Place Where Goods and Services are Voluntarily Exchanged (brings together buyers and sellers) Price is a primary influence in determining allocation of resources in our free enterprise economy. Difference between Price, Value, Utility Price= value of product in terms of money Value= has to do with relative scarcity = exchange value Utility = satisfaction that good or service can provide Buyers Those willing and able to exchange money for goods they will buy if they perceive themselves to be better off after the sale Sellers Those willing and able to produce goods and exchange them for money they will sell if they perceive themselves to be better off after the sale Mutually Agreeable Trade Both buyer and seller perceive that they will be better off after the trade is made than they were before Both trade a good that has lower value (to them) for a good that has higher value (to them) Price The rate of exchange in a trade. Buyer pays the price (buyer’s MC) it must be less than buyer’s valuation (buyer’s MB) Seller receives the price (seller’s MB) it must be more than seller’s cost of acquiring or producing the good (seller’s MC) How is the Price Set? Price is determined by the interaction of: buyers’ demand behavior, and sellers’ supply behavior. Law of Supply As the price of the product increases, the quantity that the supplier tends to supply also increases. ****Ceteris Paribus Ceteris Paribus Assumption [KAY-ter-us PEAR-uh-bus] Nothing changes except the factor or factors being studied. Other things “constant” “equal” Economics as a Science Ceteris Paribus Assumption [KAY-ter-us PEAR-uh-bus] Nothing changes except the factor or factors being studied. “Other things constant” “Other things equal” Law of supply = positive relationship between the quantity of a good supplied and price. PRICE IS THE INDEPENDENT VARIABLE Determinants of Supply 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Technique of production (technology) (ovens, organic farming) Resource Prices (Factor Costs)– cost of inputs Taxes and Subsidies Prices of Other Goods – (decline in wheat will cause farmer to shift to corn) Expectations- (farmers expect price to rise.. Hold back production) Number of sellers in market – more sellers, greater supply…. Important Concepts Change in Supply (shifting of curve) Or Change in Quantity Supplied (movement along curve) Ability to Respond to Price varies Often the ability of an individual firm to respond to an increase in price is limited or constrained by its existing scale of operations, or capacity, or ability to obtain resources….. IN SHORT RUN Examples: IN LONG RUN… can adjust. The greater the amount of time producers have to adjust, the greater their output response. Law of Demand AS THE PRICE OF A GOOD DECREASES THE QUANTITY DEMANDED TENDS TO INCREASE…. ***Ceteris Paribus Price once again is the independent variable! Wishing for a new boat does not constitute demand… one must be WILLING AND ABLE to purchase a boat. Generally speaking…. The higher the price obstacle, the less of a product a consumers will buy. Bargain days are based on law of demand. The greater the want satisfaction…. The greater the utility… Marginal Utility… How much more utility do you get adding or subtracting units (more doughnuts… more cars… more steak in one day) DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY. As the number of units of a product a consumer has increases, the satisfying power for each extra unit decreases. Utility Purpose of Utility analysis is to study how people behave not how they think. Theory of consumer choice is based on the idea that each consumer spends his/her income in a way that yields the greatest satisfaction. Determinants of Demand 1.Preferences 2.Prices of Related Goods 3.Number of Buyers 4.Expectations of future price 5.Income Determinants of Demand 1. Tastes and preferences Taste changes throughout our lifetime. # 2 Determinant: Prices of Related Goods Your preference is Coke… price skyrockets…. Affected in the market by substitute goods and complimentary goods. *Substitute goods… anything that can be substituted for the product or service desired… (Coke/Pepsi, Millers/Coors, potato chips/popcorn). If price of Coke rises… and consumer doesn’t feel strongly about brand preference… will buy Pepsi until Coke price declines) When two products are substitutes, the price of one good and the demand for the other are DIRECTLY RELATED. *Complementary Goods… Goods that “go along with other goods consumer’s buy” peanut butter/jelly, beer/pretzels, milk/cookies, golf balls/golf tees, When two goods are complements, an increase in the price of one good adversely affects the demand for the other and creates an inverse relationship. Independent Goods… No connection between price and demand (cars/bread) Determinants Continued 3. Number of buyers The number of buyers will increase demand for the product which (if supply is fixed) will drive up the price.) Determinant #4 Income- RATHER OBVIOUS HERE. Show shifts… Superior or Normal goods= commodities whose demand varies DIRECTLY with money income. INFERIOR OR “POOR MAN’S” GOODS. Goods whose demand varies inversely with a change in money income. 5. Expectations… If you are in medical school or law school, the expectation of you getting a larger income when you get out of school will affect your demand for goods… Inheriting money, winning the lottery! IMPORTANT CONCEPTS OF DEMAND Change in Demand OR Change in Quantity Demanded Terms to Remember Profit: TR-TC Total Revenue PxQ Marginal Utility To maximize utility, consumers should choose that good which delivers the most marginal utility per dollar. Optimal utility is then achieved. Optimal consumption= mix of output that maximizes total utility for the limited amount of income you have to spend. Figure 2-1. Law of Demand P P Q Q As price rises, quantity demanded falls As price falls, quantity demanded rises Table Graph P P Q 9 2 7 6 5 10 D 3 14 Q Buyers’ Demand Behavior Income effect: if price rises and your income does not, you can not buy as much as you could before if price falls and your income does not, you can buy more than you could before Buyers’ Demand Behavior Substitution effect: if price of good X rises, you switch to lower price substitute good Y. if price of good X falls, you switch from higher priced substitute good Z. Figure 2-2. Law of Supply P P Q Q As price rises, quantity supplied rises As price falls, quantity supplied falls Table Graph P P Q S 10 15 8 11 6 7 4 3 Q Sellers’ Supply Behavior Sellers are in business to be profitable: if price rises and sellers’ costs do not, profit per unit rises, and they want to produce and sell more if price falls and sellers’ costs do not, profit per unit falls, and they want to produce and sell less Sellers’ Supply Behavior Limited Capacity to Expand Production: As output increases, so do costs Thus, sellers will only produce more if prices rise (to cover the added costs) In Short Run- can not change production drastically. Creating a Market Demand curve represents buyers’ current behavior Supply curve represents sellers’ current behavior Create a market by letting the demand curve and the supply curve intersect Figure 2-3. Making a Market Buyer behavior (demand) and seller behavior (supply) intersect. P S Pe D Qe Q Three Starting Possibilities Price starts out too high surplus situation Price starts out too low shortage situation Price starts out just right equilibrium situation Figure 2-4. Surplus Price is too high. P Quantity supplied Phigh (Qs) exceeds quantity demanded (Qd). Pe Qs > Qd Price will fall to Pe. S surplus D Qd Qe Qs Q Figure 2-5. Shortage Price is too low. Quantity demanded (Qd) exceeds quantity supplied (Qs) Qd > Qs Price will rise to Pe. P S Pe Plow shortage Qs Qe D Qd Q Figure 2-6. Equilibrium No shortage. No surplus. Qd = Qs = Qe. The price will not rise or fall until there is a shift in demand or in supply. P S Pe D Qe Q How Do Prices Change? In an equilibrium market, price will not change. If order to get price to change, a market must go into disequilibrium. Either demand behavior changes, or Supply behavior changes, or both. Figure 2-7. Demand increases Demand shifts right. Old equilibrium is upset: Shortage. A new equilibrium is established. Price rises from P1 to P2. Quantity rises from Q1 to Q2 P S P2 P1 D2 D1 Q1 Q2 Q Figure 2-8. Demand decreases Demand shifts left. Old equilibrium is upset: Surplus. A new equilibrium is established. Price falls from P1 to P2. Quantity falls from Q1 to Q2 P S P1 P2 D1 D2 Q2 Q1 Q Figure 2-9. Supply increases Supply shifts right. Old equilibrium is upset: Surplus. A new equilibrium is established. Price falls from P1 to P2. Quantity rises from Q1 to Q2. P S1 P1 P2 D Q1 Q2 Q S2 Figure 2-10. Supply decreases Supply shifts left. Old equilibrium is upset: Shortage. A new equilibrium is established. Price rises from P1 to P2. Quantity falls from Q1 to Q2. S2 P S1 P2 P1 D Q2 Q1 Q Figure 2-11. Demand increases and Supply decreases 1. Demand shifts right. 2. Supply shifts left.. A new equilibrium is established. Price rises from P1 to P2. Quantity moves to Q2 S2 P 1 2 S1 P2 P1 D2 D1 Q1 Q2 Q This summarizes how equilibrium P and equilibrium Q change as demand increases (decreases) and as supply increases (decreases) P Demand increases P increases Q increases P Q P P Demand decreases P decreases Q decreases Q Supply increases P decreases Q increases Q Supply decreases P increases Q decreases Q What if…? One seller sets a higher price than the equilibrium price? customers will shun him until goods selling at the equilibrium price are all gone What if…? One seller sets his price below equilibrium price? he will sell out first. but he could have sold everything at the higher equilibrium price. What if…? Government sets the price? Price controls. no longer a free market command dictator system is at work Two kinds: price ceiling price floor Figure 2-12. Price Ceiling Government sets a maximum legal price Purpose: to help the buyers P P < Pe Persistent shortage S Pe Highest legal P ceiling price D Qs shortage Qd Q Figure 2-13. Price Floor Government sets a minimum legal price Purpose: P to help the sellers > Pe Persistent surplusLowest legal price P surplus S P Pe floor D Qd Qs Q What if…? Government controls quantity, not price? restricts the amount? Supply shifts left and price rises. forbids all production? No legal amount is available. black market arises buyers’ and suppliers’ costs both rise product quality decreases Which System is Best? The market system! individual wants and needs more fully satisfied participants compete to acquire purchasing power rather than political favor scarce resources are directed to produce the most valued goods and services individuals’ behavior changes are immediately accommodated Kiley is my best friend… She Supplies a lot of love!