1 / 58

Warm Up

Warm Up. I have one can of Coke that is up for grabs How are we going to decide who gets it? What will happen if I decide to auction it off? Will the soda go for the price you can buy it at the store? How do economists decide “who” when there are limited resources?. Going to a Concert?.

blythe
Télécharger la présentation

Warm Up

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. Warm Up • I have one can of Coke that is up for grabs • How are we going to decide who gets it? • What will happen if I decide to auction it off? • Will the soda go for the price you can buy it at the store? • How do economists decide “who” when there are limited resources?

  2. Going to a Concert? • Popular concert • Sold out? Shortage of tickets? • How many would buy for $25 • More? • Law of demand: consumers will demand more of a product at lower prices

  3. Introduction • There are many reasons why people decide to purchase or decide to sell • One element is always present • Price! • If price is too low – sellers will not sell • If price is too high – buyers will not buy • Supply and demand work together to establish “Market Price”

  4. Demand • Desire, willingness, and ability to purchase at the specified price and time • The quantity demanded varies with the price of an item • The lower the price, the greater number people are willing to buy

  5. Example: Demand SchedulePizza Slices

  6. Demand Curve • Draw a line graph illustrating the data in the demand schedule • Vertical Axis – Price • Horizontal Axis – Quantity • Demand curve slopes downward and to the right

  7. Law of Demand • Buyers will purchase more of an item at a lower price and less at a higher price • Reasons • More can afford it • People buy more at lower prices • Quantity demanded varies inversely with (in the opposite direction to) changes in price

  8. Example • As the price of pizza was reduced, more students demanded them • Storekeepers lower their price when they want to clear out merchandise

  9. Movement ALONG the Demand Curve • Change in Quantity Demanded is due to a change in PRICE

  10. Reasons for movement along the Demand Curve • INCOME EFFECT • The income effect happens when a person changes his or her consumption of goods and services as a result of a change in real income • SUBSTITUTION EFFECT • The substitution effect occurs when consumers react to an increase in a good’s price by consuming less of that good and more of other goods.

  11. Shift in Demand Curve • Willingness to buy different amounts at the same price. • The Demand curve SHIFTS • If the curve shifts to the RIGHT = INCREASE in Demand • If the curve shifts to the LEFT = DECREASE in Demand • Right = Left =

  12. What causes a shift in Demand 1. Income • Changes in consumers incomes affect demand. 2. Consumer Expectations Whether or not we expect a good to increase or decrease in price in the future greatly affects our demand for that good today. 3. Population Changes in the size of the population also affects the demand for most products. 4. Consumer Tastes and Advertising Advertising plays an important role in many trends and therefore influences demand.

  13. Prices of Related Goods • The demand curve for one good can be affected by a change in the demand for another • Compliments: 2 goods bought together • Skis and ski boots • Substitutes: 1 good bought in place of the other • Skis and snowboards

  14. Let’s take a look! • Demand Graphs

  15. Marginal Utility • Utility = usefulness or satisfaction • Defined as EXTRA usefulness or satisfaction a person gets from acquiring one more unit of a product

  16. Principle of Diminishing Marginal Utility • More units of a certain economic product a person acquires, the less eager that person is to buy more • I’m looking for a volunteer!

  17. Warm Up • What is the definition of demand? • Explain the law of demand • Describe marginal utility and diminishing marginal utility • What causes a change along the demand curve line? • What causes a shift in the demand curve? • Let’s practice: Demand Schedule/Graph

  18. Elasticity of Demand • The law of demand does NOT tell us by how much the quantity demanded will increase or decrease at different prices • One way to measure the degree of demand is through the concept of elasticity of demand • The percentage change in demand that follows a price change • The more demand expands or contracts after a price change, the great the elasticity of demand

  19. Application of Elasticity • Elastic: (Steak) • When a drop in the price of an item causes an even greater % increase in demand • The demand has STRETCHED a great deal • Rise in price results in a large drop in demand • Inelastic: (Milk) • When a drop in the price of an item causes a decrease or small increase in demand • Rise in price results in a small drop in demand

  20. What Makes Demand Elastic/Inelastic • Demand for a good that consumers will continue to buy despite a price increase is ??

  21. Inelastic! • Demand for a good that is very sensitive to changes in price is elastic!

  22. Significance of Demand Elasticity • The elasticity of demand determines how a change in prices will affect a firm’s total revenue or income • If a good has an elastic demand, raising prices may actually decrease the firm’s total revenue

  23. Quick Quiz: Elastic/Inelastic • When a small change in price causes a large change in quantity demanded

  24. Elastic

  25. There are very few substitutes for a good

  26. inelastic

  27. A change in price will cause a small change in quantity demanded

  28. inelastic

  29. A big ticket item’s price increases

  30. Elastic

  31. Activity • With a partner • Make a list • Elastic/Inelastic goods/services • Why elastic? • Why inelastic?

  32. Supply • The amount of a product that is offered for sale at all prices that could prevail in the market • Law states suppliers will offer more for sale at high prices and less at low prices • Quantity supplied = how much of a good/service is offered for sale at a given price • Increased revenues when prices are high encourage firms to produce more! • Also draws in more competition!!

  33. Supply Schedules

  34. A change in QUANTITY SUPPLIED • Is shown by movement ALONG the supply curve

  35. A SHIFT in Supply • A change in the quantity that will be supplied at all possible prices • Increase in supply – shifts right • Cost increase, supply will increase • Workers trained, more productive, supply increase • Decrease in supply – shifts left • Cost increase, supply will decrease • Temps, less productive, supply decreases

  36. Factors that SHIFT Supply • Productivity • Technology • Number of Sellers • Cost • Expectations If positive – shifts to right If negative – shifts to left

  37. Government Influence • By raising or lowering the cost of producing goods, the government can encourage or discourage an entrepreneur or industry • Subsidies • Taxes • regulation

  38. Forces that Affect Supply

  39. Supply Elasticity • Elasticity of supply is a measure of the way quantity supplied reacts to a change in price • If supply is not very responsive – inelastic • An elastic supply is very sensitive to changes in price

  40. Determinates of Supply Elasticity • When companies find it difficult to increase output because of huge capital and technology – supply will be inelastic • When companies can increase production easily, without the need for more capital or labor – supply will be elastic • Typically in the short run, a firm cannot easily change its output level, so supply is inelastic

  41. Demand v. Supply Elasticity • If quantities are being purchased – concept is demand elasticity • If quantities are being supplied – concept is supply elasticity • BOTH is a measure of responsiveness to CHANGE IN PRICE

  42. Equilibrium • By combining the supply and demand curves on the same graph, you can see how supply and demand together determine how much of a product will be produced and the equilibrium price • Equilibrium – price at which the quantity supplied exactly equals the quantity demanded • In other words, consumers are willing and able to buy the same amount of the product as producers are willing and able to supply

  43. Draw in Equilibrium

  44. Time to come to Equilibrium • Will bread come to equilibrium before red cars?

  45. Yes! Because it is perishable and no other reason!

  46. Market Disequilibrium • If the market price or quantity supplied is anywhere but equilibrium • 2 causes • Excess demand • Excess supply • Interactions between buyers and sellers will always push the market back towards equilibrium

  47. Surplus • Excess quantity supplied • Eventually will force producers to lower the price • As price comes down, consumers will buy more until it returns to equilibrium

  48. Shortage • Consumers are willing and able to buy a lot at low prices • They are willing to buy more than are available for sale • Producers will start raising the price again until it reaches equilibrium

  49. Role of Government in D&S • Price ceilings • Max price that can be legally charged for a good • Rent control • Price floors • Minimum price set by the government that must be paid for a good/service • Minimum wage • We need government when price is too high or low?

More Related