1 / 83

Supply and Demand Models

Supply and Demand Models. Chapter 3,4. Volatile oil prices . St. Louis Fed FRED database. Prices and Production 1996-2011. BP Statistical Review of World Energy. Laws of Supply and Demand. Supply and Demand Framework.

grover
Download Presentation

Supply and Demand Models

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Supply and Demand Models Chapter 3,4

  2. Volatile oil prices St. Louis Fed FRED database

  3. Prices and Production 1996-2011 BP Statistical Review of World Energy

  4. Laws of Supply and Demand

  5. Supply and Demand Framework • A description of a market includes the quantity of goods that are sold in that market, Q, and the price, P, at which they are sold. • Outcomes in the market are a function of the laws of supply and demand

  6. Law of Demand • Ceteris parabis, There is an inverse relationship between the price of a good and the quantity that consumers would like to purchase. What does Ceteris Parabis mean?

  7. Law of Demand Two Explanations: • Substitution Effect – Goods purchased to satisfy needs but other goods (substitutes) may also do so. When price rises, consumers have an incentive to switch goods. • Income Effect – Consumers have a limited budget. When price of a major item goes up, less money for purchase of all items.

  8. Mathematical representations of Law of Demand • Demand Schedule (Spreadsheet) • Demand Curve (Geometry) • Demand Function (Algebra)

  9. Global Daily Demand Schedule for Oil2010 P = US$ QD = Thousand barrels daily

  10. General Demand Curve P D P2 P1 Q Q2 Q1

  11. Demand Functions • An algebraic equation representing demand as a function of the price plus consumer income levels and other factors • Example: Linear: QD = a – b × P Exponential: QD = A × P-b

  12. Natural Logarithm z = ln(Z) Common for professional economists to deal with prices and quantities in natural logarithms z Z

  13. Natural Logarithm: p = ln(P) qD = ln(QD) Log-linear Demand qD = a - b × p Natural Logarithm

  14. Law of Supply: • Ceteris parabis, there is a positive relationship between the price of a good and the quantity producers bring to the market.

  15. Law of Supply Explanation • Increasing Costs Producers will bring goods to market only if the price obtained from selling an extra good will exceed the cost of producing an extra good. If per unit production costs are rising in the number of goods produced, higher prices will be demanded to bring a larger quantity of goods to market.

  16. Mathematical representation of Law of Supply • Supply Schedule (Spreadsheet) • Supply Curve (Geometry) • Supply Function (Algebra)

  17. Global Daily Supply Schedule for Oil2010

  18. Supply Curve S P P2 P1 Q Q1 Q2

  19. Supply Functions • An algebraic equation representing supply as a function of the price plus input costs and other factors • Examples:

  20. Elasticity as Price Sensitivity

  21. Price Elasticity:The % impact on quantity demanded/suppliedof a 1% change in price

  22. Midpoint Method • If you want to calculate a % difference between two points which is the same regardless of which you designate as the reference point (denominator), you can use the average of the two points as the reference point.

  23. Demand Elasticity

  24. A demand curve is classified as INELASTIC if the elasticity is between 0 and 1 Unit elasticity (elasticity equal to 1) is the cutoff point A demand curve is classified as ELASTIC if the elasticity is more than 1

  25. Prices and Revenue • Revenue in a market is Revenue = P∙Q • If prices change, revenue will change for two reasons: • Direct Effect of the Price Change (positive) • Indirect Effect of the Price Change on Quantity Demanded (negative) • Rule of Thumb: The percentage change in the product of two variables is approximately the sum of the % change in each variable.

  26. Price Elasticity of Revenue • If demand is elastic, a price rise reduces revenues • If demand is inelastic, a price rise increases revenues

  27. Differences in logarithms approximate midpoint measure of % changes z1 – z0 ≡ ln(Z1) – ln(Z0) ≈ %Z/100

  28. Equilibrium

  29. Equilibrium in the competitive market occurs when the price is set at a level (P*) such that the amount that consumers want to buy is equal to the amount that sellers want to sell (Q*). Excess SupplyIf P were above equilibrium, sellers would want to sell more goods than buyers would want to buy. Competition between sellers would force prices down. Excess DemandIf P were below equilibrium, customers would want to buy more goods than people would want to sell. Competition between buyers would force prices up.

  30. Competitive Market Equilibrium P S D P* Q* Q

  31. Excess Supply at P S D P* Q* Q

  32. Excess Demand at P S D P* Q* Q

  33. Market Equilibrium(Spreadsheet Problem) At what price and quantity (to closest $5) will the oil market clear?

  34. Algebra of Equilibrium QD = a - b×P QS = c + d ×P Linear Functions a - b×P* = c+d×P* (a-c) = (b+d) ×P*

  35. Example

  36. Algebra of Equilibrium qD = a - b×p qS = c + d ×p Log Linear Functions a - b×p* = c+d×p* (a-c) = (b+d) ×p*

  37. Algebra of Equilibrium qD = 11.53 - .05×p qS = 11.14 + .04 ×p Log Linear Functions 11.53 - .05×p* = 11.14+.04×p* (.39) = .09 ×p* 3=11.316

  38. If you know q* and p*, then use antilog function to get Q* and P*

  39. Market Changes:Shifts in Demand & Supply Curves

  40. Shifting Curves/Changing Equilibrium • Changes in equilibrium result from shifts in either the demand or supply schedule. We think of shifts in the curves as changes in supply or demand that are caused by factors other than changes in the price of the good. • Shifts in the demand curve lead to movements along the supply curve resulting in changes in prices and quantities that move in the same direction. • Shifts in the supply curve lead to movements along the demand curve resulting in changes in prices and quantities that move in different directions.

  41. A Shift in the Demand Curve: A parallel increase in the demand schedule at every price point.Price and Quantity Demanded move in same direction P S Shift in the demand curve ① P** ⓪ D′ P* D Q* Q** Q

  42. A Shift in the Supply Curve is a Movement along the Demand curve- Price and Quantity Supplied Move in opposite Directions P S′ S D ① P** ⓪ P* Q** Q* Q

  43. Equilibrium Effects • Price system means that shifts in demand will cause accommodating changes in quantity supplied but also an attenuating change in quantity demanded. • Shifts in supply will cause accommodating changes in quantity demanded but also attenuating change in quantity supplied.

  44. A Shift in the Demand Curve: Equilibrium Effect: Movement along the supply curve increases quantity supplied; movement along demand curve ameliorates quantity demanded. S P Along demand curve Along supply curve ① P** ⓪ D′ P* D Q* Q** Q

  45. A Shift in the Supply Curve:Equilibrium Effect: Movement along the demand curve reduces quantity demanded; movement along supply curve ameliorates quantity supplied. D S P S′ Along supply curve ① P** Along demand curve P* ⓪ Q** Q* Q

  46. What Shifts the CurveS? What Shifts the Demand Curve? What Shifts the Supply Curve? Price of Inputs Price of Related Goods Technology/Nature Expected Future Prices Market Entry • Price of Related Goods • Income • Consumer Preferences • Expected Future Prices • Expected Future Income

  47. Income Elasticity/ Cross Price Elasticity Changing Equilibrium

  48. Income Elasticity • We measure the effect of income on demand for a good as % effect on demand of a 1% increase in income: (m). Ex. • For normal goods, income elasticity is positive (m > 0) . • For inferior goods income elasticity is negative. (m < 0) qD = a - b×p + m × y y = ln(Income)

More Related