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Chapter 7 Supply & Demand. The Marketplace. Demand is amount of g/s consumers are willing/able to buy at various prices during specific time frame Supply is amount of g/s producers are willing/able to sell at various prices during specific time frame. The Marketplace.
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The Marketplace • Demand is amount of g/s consumers are willing/able to buy at various prices during specific time frame • Supply is amount of g/s producers are willing/able to sell at various prices during specific time frame
The Marketplace • Market is process of freely exchanging g/s between buyer & sellers • Local • National • International • With your neighbor, come up w/ as many examples of markets as you can think of in a minute • Classify as local, national or international
The Marketplace • Voluntary exchange – transaction that buyers & sellers work out on their own terms • What are some factors that buyers consider? • What are some factors that sellers consider? • In a market economy prices are set by voluntary exchange
Which are markets? • Gap • McDonalds • Overstock.com • Hair Salon • Concert • Dentist • Movie theatre • Ebay • Shopko
Law of Demand • As price goes up, quantity goes down and vice versa • Example: Dark Knight DVD
Law of Demand • Characteristics of Demand(Factors Affecting Quantity Demanded) • Real income effect • Substitutes • Diminishing marginal utility
Law of Demand • Real Income Effect • States we cannot keep buying same quantity of products if price rises while our income stays the same • Forces us to make tradeoffs • Real income is purchasing power
Law of Demand • Substitution Effect • States have if have 2 similar items and the price of one rises, people will buy more of the other item • Examples?????
Law of Demand • Utility is power that a g/s has to satisfy a want • Marginal utility is the additional amount of satisfaction • Law of diminishing marginal utility says that the additional satasfaction a consumer gets from buying one more unit will lessen w/ each additional one purchased • Example: Peanuts at bball game
Graphing the Demand Curve • Demand curve shows relationship between price & quantity demanded • Downward sloping line (falls from left to right) • Demand schedule is table of quantities at difference prices
Determinants of Demand • Change in demand for an items shifts the demand curve to the left or right
Determinants of Demand • Change in population • Change in income • Change in taste/preference • Substitutes • Complementary goods
Determinants of Demand • Change in population • Naturally if increases so does demand b/c there are more opportunities to buy/sell • Increases shifts demand curve to right • Decreases shifts to left
Determinants of Demand • Change in income • Demand for g/s depends on your income • Income increase, demand curve shifts to right • If decreases, shifts to left
Determinants of Demand • Change in taste/preference • When a fad is hot or not affects demand • If fad hot, shifts curve to right • When fad is over, shifts back to left
Determinants of Demand • Substitutes
Determinants of Demand • Complementary goods • Produces used w/ another product
Price Elasticity of Demand • Elasticity measures how much the quantity demanded changes when price goes up/down • If prices lower, we buy more • But how much lower should they be for us to buy • Price elasticity of demand is how much demand varies according to changes in price
Elastic Demand • Rise/fall in price affects the amount we are willing to buy • Flexible about buying or not • Luxury items • Item has many substitutes
Inelastic Demand • Price has little impact on quantity demanded • Consumers not flexible (purchase not matter what) • Staple items (milk, bread, salt, etc.) • Necessities
What affects demand elasticity • Availability of substitutes • How much you have (budget) • Amount of time you have to adjust to change in price
Law of Supply • As price goes up, quantity supplied goes up and vice versa
Law of Supply • Profit incentive motivated people in market economy • At higher prices, greater incentive to produce more
Law of Supply • Supply schedule is table showing quantities supplied at different prices • Supply curve is graph showing relationship between price & quantity supplied
Supply Curve • Supply curve is an upward sloping line showing quantities supplies at possible prices
Supply curve • Change in supply causes entire curve to shift to left/right
Determinates of Supply • Price of inputs • Number of firms in industry • Taxes • Technology
Price of Inputs • Items needed to make product • If price of inputs drops (raw materials, wages) producers can supply more at lower production costs – (shifts curve to right)
Number of Firms in Industry • As more enter industry, greater quantities of product/service, which would cause a shift to right
Taxes • If gov’t imposes taxes on production of certain items, businesses will NOT supply as much b/c production costs are higher • Causes shift to left
Technology • New products & new methods of producing increase supply • Allows to produce more goods at lower cost • Shift to right
Law of Diminishing Returns • Adding units of one factor of production increases total output, however, after a certain point output continues to increase but at a diminishing rate
Equilibrium Price • Price where amount producers are willing to supply is equal to the amount consumers are willing to buy
Prices as signals • Price communicates information and coordinates activities of producers and consumers
Prices as Signals • Shortage – quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied at current price • Surplus – quantity supplied is greater than demanded at current price
Price Controls • In certain circumstances, gov’t set price limits
Price Controls • Price ceiling – legal maximum price that can be charged for g/s • Price floors – legal minimum price that can be charged for g/s