Demand. Demand is the quantities of a particular good or service consumers are willing and able to...

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Chapter 3Demand

Demand is the quantities of a particular good or service consumers are willing and able to buy at different possible prices at a particular time.

The Definition of Demand

Demand and “want” are not the same.

To economists, you demand things only when you are willing and able to buy them.

The Definition of Demand

If the price of a hamburger at McDonalds soared to $10, you would probably buy less.

In contrast, if the price dropped to 50 cents, you would probably buy more.

Demand and the Price Effect

Price effect—People buy less of something at a higher price than they do at a lower price.

This is sometimes called the Law of Demand.

Demand and the Price Effect

Drawing Demand Curves

Demand Schedule:

Price (of Gas) Quantity Demanded

$6.00 5

$5.00 10

$4.00 15

$3.00 20

$2.00 25

$1.00 30

The Demand Curve is simply the demand schedule in graph form.

Price will always be on the vertical axis—quantity on the horizontal

Drawing the Demand Curve

How to Read the Demand Curve

If price is $4, how much quantity isdemanded?

If price is $1, how much quantity is demanded?

Buying PowerDiminishing Personal ValueDiminishing Marginal UtilitySubstitutes

Why do prices effect demand?

If the price of a product drops, your money can buy more of that product.

Buying Power

As prices of a good rise, a person usually values the product for certain uses over others.

(ex, if price of gas goes up, you will buy only enough to go on your most important trips).

Diminishing Personal Value

The point reached when the next item consumed is less satisfying than the one before.

How many cookies can you eat before it’s just too much?

Diminishing Marginal Utility

A good or service that can replace another good or service.

It may be less expensive and hold less appeal for a buyer.

(substitute for gas = walking)Substitutes increase as price goes up

Substitutes

Market Demand is the sum of all individual demands in a given market at a particular time.

Suppliers of goods and services must look at the entire market’s demand when setting prices.

Market Demand

Your friend owns a small business, and she wants to increase her revenue. However, she doesn’t know if she should increase or decrease the price of her goods to accomplish this.

What should she do? Discount or Markup?

Take these two examples…

IT DEPENDS!!!

Southwest would decrease price National Fuel would increase price

WHY the DIFFERENCE????!!!

Demand curves for all products slope downward from left to right, but their shape and steepness can be quite different.

The price effect is greater for some products than for others.

Price Elasticity of Demand

Elastic—When a small change in price causes a sharp change, or “stretch” in demand.

Inelastic—When the price effect is small, the demand is inelastic.

Price Elasticity of Demand

According to the graph on the board, which product is inelastic/elastic?

At which price is total revenue (TR) for both products the same?

TR = P x Q (what is the TR for both milk and cola at $1)?

If the price of cola increases from $1 to $1.50, what happens to TR? Do the same for milk.

Activity

The elasticity of demand is different for different goods and services for the following reasons:◦Availability of Substitutes◦Percentage of Budget◦Time

Elasticity of Demand

When substitutes are more plentiful demand is more elastic.

Example—Cola has an elastic demand because there are many substitutes for it. (Juice, other sodas, etc)

Availability of Substitutes

The bigger the percentage of people’s budget they spend on a product, the more elastic its demand tends to be.

Percentage of Budget

The longer people have to adjust to a price change, the more elastic demand tends to be.

Time

Market demand is the various quantities of a product people are willing and able to buy at different possible prices.

This means the demand for a product is not one quantity and one specific price.

It is all quantities at all different prices.

The Price Effect Verses a Change in Demand

For demand to change, the entire curve must move.

The Price Effect vs. A Change in Demand

Brainstorm with your group, and come up with a list of what factors would make you buy more or less of something if the price of the good DID NOT change.

What would make demand shift?

Causes of Change in Demand—take your responses and fit them under the following categories

If income rises, people are willing to pay higher prices for the same quantities—or buy greater quantities at the same prices.

Change in Income

Demand of a product will change if the price or availability of a substitute changes.

Prices or the Availability of Substitutes

Goods that are used together are called complementary goods.

Example: If the peanut crop fails, the demand for jelly would drop.

Price or Availability of Complementary Goods

Demand for goods can change according to season or weather.

Ex—sales of lemonade and loganberry increase

during summer.

Change in Weather or Season

Population changes in an area effect demand.

More people—more demand.

Change in the Number of Buyers

Changes in fashions and designs have an impact on demand.

Changes in Styles,Tastes, Habits

If people suddenly decide a product will be more scarce and higher priced in the future, then the current demand for that product will change.

Change in Expectations

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