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2.1: Demand

Demand Defined

  • Demand: The Different Quantities Of Goods That Consumers Are willing And able To Buy At Different Prices

    • Eg. You Are able To Purchase Diapers, But If You Aren’t willing To Buy, There Is No Demand.

  • Law Of Demand: There Is An Inverse Relationship Between Price And Quantity Demanded

    • Result Of Three Separate Behavior Patterns That Overlap

      • Substitution Effect: If The Price Goes Up For A Product, Consumers Buy Less Of That Product And More Of Another Substitute Product (and Vise-versa)

      • Income Effect: If The Price Goes Down For A Product, The Purchasing Power Increases For Customers, Allowing Them To Purchase More

      • Law Of Diminishing Marginal Utility: As You Consume Anything, The Additional Satisfaction That You Receive Will Eventually Start To Decrease

        • Utility = Satisfaction → We Buy Goods To Get Utility From Them

        • The More You Buy Of Any Good, The Less Satisfaction You Get From Each New Unit Consumed

Graphing Demand

  • Demand Curve: A Graphical Representation Of A Demand Schedule

    • Downward Sloping, Showing The Inverse Relationship Between Price (on The Y-axis) And Quantity Demanded (on The X-axis)

    • When Reading A Demand Curve, Assume That All Outside Factors Such As Income Are Held Constant → “ceteris Paribus

Shifts In Demand

  • Ceteris Paribus: All Other Things Held Constant

    • When This Assumption Is Dropped, Movement No Longer Occurs Along The Demand Curve; Rather, The Entire Demand Curve Shifts

    • A Shift Means That At The Same Prices, More People Are Willing And Able To Purchase That Good

    • This Is A Change In Demand, Not A Change In Quantity Demanded → Price Doesn’t Shift The Curve!!

  • What Causes Shifts In Demand? 5 Shifters [determinants] Of Demand

    1. Tastes And Preferences

    2. Number Of Consumers

    3. Price Of Related Goods

      • The Demand Curve Of One Good Can Be Effected By A Change In The Price Of Another Related Good

        • substitutes: Goods Used In Place Of One Another

          • If The Price Of One Increases, The Demand For The Other Will Increase (or Vise Versa)

          • Eg. If The Price Of Pepsi Falls, Demand For Coke Will Fall

        • complements: Two Goods That Are Bought And Used Together

          • If The Price Of One Increases, The Demand For The Other Will Fall (or Vise Versa)

          • Eg. If The Price Of Hot Dogs Falls, Demand For Hot Dog Buns Will Increase

    4. Income

      • The Incomes Of Consumers Change The Demand, But How Depends On The Type Of Good

        • Normal Goods — As Income Increases, Demand Increases +v/v

          • Eg. Luxury Cars, Seafood, Jewelry, Homes

        • Inferior Goods — As Income Increases, Demand Falls +v/v

          • Eg. Top Ramen, Used Cars

    5. Future Expectations

  • Changes In Price Don’t Shift The Curve, They Only Cause Movement Along The Curve.

Price Elasticity Of Demand

  • Law Of Demand — Consumers Will Buy More When Prices Go Down And Less When Prices Go Up

    • elasticity: The Concept Of Determining How Much More/less

  • price Elasticity Of Demand (PED): Measurement Of How Sensitive Quantity Demanded Is To A Change In Price

    • Knowing How Consumers Will Respond To A Change In Price Is Extremely Useful To Firms

      • Helps Decide What To Charge, When/if To Have Sales

      • Helps Determine How Many Substitutes Are In The Market

    • Used By Government To Decide When & How Much To Tax

  • Elasticity Varies Along A Linear Demand Curve; Elasticity Is Not Slope

Elastic And Inelastic Demand

Elastic Demand

  • Elastic Demand: When A Quantity Is Sensitive To A Change In Price

    • If Price Increases, Quantity Demanded Will Fall A Lot

    • If Price Decreases, Quantity Demanded Will Rise A Lot

    • The Amount People Buy Is Sensitive To Changes In Price

    • Elastic Demand Curve Is Flat

    • General Characteristics Of Elastic Goods

      • Many Substitutes

      • Luxury Goods

      • Large Portion Of Income

      • Plenty Of Time To Decide On Purchases

      • Elasticity Coefficient Greater Than One

Inelastic Demand

  • Inelastic Demand: When A Quantity Is Insensitive To A Change In Price

    • If Price Increases, Quantity Demanded Will Fall A Little

    • If Price Decreases, Quantity Demanded Will Rise A Little

    • People Will Continue To Buy Regardless Of Changes In Price

    • Inelastic Demand Curve Is Steep

    • General Characteristics Of Inelastic Goods

      • Few Substitutes

      • Necessities

      • Small Portion Of Income

      • Required Immediately Rather Than Later

      • Elasticity Coefficient Less Than One

Calculating Percent Change

  • % Change = [(new #-old #)/(old #)] X 100

Total Revenue Test

  • Total Revenue Test: Test That Uses Elasticity To Show How Changes In Price Will Affect Total Revenue (TR)

    • Elastic Demand — Price Increase = TR Decrease +v/v

    • Inelastic Demand — Price Increase = TR Increase +v/v

    • Unit Elastic — Price Changes, TR Remains Constant

R

2.1: Demand

Demand Defined

  • Demand: The Different Quantities Of Goods That Consumers Are willing And able To Buy At Different Prices

    • Eg. You Are able To Purchase Diapers, But If You Aren’t willing To Buy, There Is No Demand.

  • Law Of Demand: There Is An Inverse Relationship Between Price And Quantity Demanded

    • Result Of Three Separate Behavior Patterns That Overlap

      • Substitution Effect: If The Price Goes Up For A Product, Consumers Buy Less Of That Product And More Of Another Substitute Product (and Vise-versa)

      • Income Effect: If The Price Goes Down For A Product, The Purchasing Power Increases For Customers, Allowing Them To Purchase More

      • Law Of Diminishing Marginal Utility: As You Consume Anything, The Additional Satisfaction That You Receive Will Eventually Start To Decrease

        • Utility = Satisfaction → We Buy Goods To Get Utility From Them

        • The More You Buy Of Any Good, The Less Satisfaction You Get From Each New Unit Consumed

Graphing Demand

  • Demand Curve: A Graphical Representation Of A Demand Schedule

    • Downward Sloping, Showing The Inverse Relationship Between Price (on The Y-axis) And Quantity Demanded (on The X-axis)

    • When Reading A Demand Curve, Assume That All Outside Factors Such As Income Are Held Constant → “ceteris Paribus

Shifts In Demand

  • Ceteris Paribus: All Other Things Held Constant

    • When This Assumption Is Dropped, Movement No Longer Occurs Along The Demand Curve; Rather, The Entire Demand Curve Shifts

    • A Shift Means That At The Same Prices, More People Are Willing And Able To Purchase That Good

    • This Is A Change In Demand, Not A Change In Quantity Demanded → Price Doesn’t Shift The Curve!!

  • What Causes Shifts In Demand? 5 Shifters [determinants] Of Demand

    1. Tastes And Preferences

    2. Number Of Consumers

    3. Price Of Related Goods

      • The Demand Curve Of One Good Can Be Effected By A Change In The Price Of Another Related Good

        • substitutes: Goods Used In Place Of One Another

          • If The Price Of One Increases, The Demand For The Other Will Increase (or Vise Versa)

          • Eg. If The Price Of Pepsi Falls, Demand For Coke Will Fall

        • complements: Two Goods That Are Bought And Used Together

          • If The Price Of One Increases, The Demand For The Other Will Fall (or Vise Versa)

          • Eg. If The Price Of Hot Dogs Falls, Demand For Hot Dog Buns Will Increase

    4. Income

      • The Incomes Of Consumers Change The Demand, But How Depends On The Type Of Good

        • Normal Goods — As Income Increases, Demand Increases +v/v

          • Eg. Luxury Cars, Seafood, Jewelry, Homes

        • Inferior Goods — As Income Increases, Demand Falls +v/v

          • Eg. Top Ramen, Used Cars

    5. Future Expectations

  • Changes In Price Don’t Shift The Curve, They Only Cause Movement Along The Curve.

Price Elasticity Of Demand

  • Law Of Demand — Consumers Will Buy More When Prices Go Down And Less When Prices Go Up

    • elasticity: The Concept Of Determining How Much More/less

  • price Elasticity Of Demand (PED): Measurement Of How Sensitive Quantity Demanded Is To A Change In Price

    • Knowing How Consumers Will Respond To A Change In Price Is Extremely Useful To Firms

      • Helps Decide What To Charge, When/if To Have Sales

      • Helps Determine How Many Substitutes Are In The Market

    • Used By Government To Decide When & How Much To Tax

  • Elasticity Varies Along A Linear Demand Curve; Elasticity Is Not Slope

Elastic And Inelastic Demand

Elastic Demand

  • Elastic Demand: When A Quantity Is Sensitive To A Change In Price

    • If Price Increases, Quantity Demanded Will Fall A Lot

    • If Price Decreases, Quantity Demanded Will Rise A Lot

    • The Amount People Buy Is Sensitive To Changes In Price

    • Elastic Demand Curve Is Flat

    • General Characteristics Of Elastic Goods

      • Many Substitutes

      • Luxury Goods

      • Large Portion Of Income

      • Plenty Of Time To Decide On Purchases

      • Elasticity Coefficient Greater Than One

Inelastic Demand

  • Inelastic Demand: When A Quantity Is Insensitive To A Change In Price

    • If Price Increases, Quantity Demanded Will Fall A Little

    • If Price Decreases, Quantity Demanded Will Rise A Little

    • People Will Continue To Buy Regardless Of Changes In Price

    • Inelastic Demand Curve Is Steep

    • General Characteristics Of Inelastic Goods

      • Few Substitutes

      • Necessities

      • Small Portion Of Income

      • Required Immediately Rather Than Later

      • Elasticity Coefficient Less Than One

Calculating Percent Change

  • % Change = [(new #-old #)/(old #)] X 100

Total Revenue Test

  • Total Revenue Test: Test That Uses Elasticity To Show How Changes In Price Will Affect Total Revenue (TR)

    • Elastic Demand — Price Increase = TR Decrease +v/v

    • Inelastic Demand — Price Increase = TR Increase +v/v

    • Unit Elastic — Price Changes, TR Remains Constant