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The market system. Outline 1. Introduction 2. Markets versus planning 3. The market mechanism 4. Estimating product demand. 1. Introduction. What is economics about? Scarce resources Choice Opportunity cost positivist & normative reasoning Some important concepts
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The market system • Outline • 1. Introduction • 2. Markets versus planning • 3. The market mechanism • 4. Estimating product demand
1. Introduction • What is economics about? • Scarce resources • Choice • Opportunity cost • positivist & normative reasoning • Some important concepts • marginal decision-making • equilibrium • Methods of analysis • model building (theory)
2. Markets versus central planning • How should resources be allocated? • Command economy - advantages • high investment & economic growth • low unemployment • equal distribution of income • environment • Disadvantages • complex economy - information? • Inefficient allocation of resources • absence of incentives • loss of liberty
Free market • Decentralised, self-interested behaviour. Price acts as a signal • resources allocated automatically • efficient allocation of resources • competition enhances consumer sovereignty • efficient firms make bigger profits • ‘The pursuit of private gain results in the social good’
Classifying economic systems Early 1980s Hong Kong N. Korea China Poland Cuba France UK USA Totally planned economy Totally free-market economy China Cuba N. Korea Poland France USA UK China (Hong Kong) Early 2000s
3. The market mechanism • Exchange • mediated through markets where prices play a key role • Producer (supply) • Consumer (demand) • Competitive market • medium of exchange • competition • full information • strong institutions & social custom
3.1 The role of price • Firms are price-takers • Negative relationship between price & quantity demanded • Positive relationship between price & quantity supplied • Excess supply (glut) - price falls • Excess demand (shortage) - price rises
3.2 Demand • Determinants of demand • income - level & distribution • price of substitutes & complements • demography & age structure • tastes & fashion - advertising • seasonal • The demand curve • movements along the curve • Shifts in the demand curve
Effect of a shift in the demand curve P S g Pe1 D1 O Qe1 Q fig
3.3 Elasticity of demand • (a) price elasticity of demand • (b) income elasticity of demand • (c) cross-price elasticity of demand
3.4 Sales revenue • Total revenue • Marginal revenue • Price elasticity and total revenue • Uses of elasticity • Government & taxes • Business - price & taxes on sales • Central Banks - competitiveness
3.5. Estimating product demand • Methods • a) consumer interviews - sampling, questionnaire design, cost • b) market experiments • c) regression analysis • Regression analysis • variable identification • obtaining data • estimation • interpretation
4. Supply • Determinants of supply • technological innovation - product and/or process • change in price of factor inputs • disasters - natural & human • strikes • regulation • organisation of the firm • The supply curve • Movements along the curve • Shifts in the supply curve
Effect of a shift in the supply curve P S1 g Pe1 D O Qe1 Q fig
5. The interaction of demand & supply • Equilibrium price and quantity • Excess demand (shortages) • Excess supply (gluts) • Impediments to the operation of markets • price ceiling (e.g. rents) - under-supply • minimum wage - unemployment
b B The determination of market equilibrium(potatoes: monthly) e E Supply d D c C Price (pence per kg) a A Demand fig Quantity (tonnes: 000s)