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Competitive Markets

Competitive Markets. Supply and Demand Model. Competitive Markets A market in which there are many buyers and sellers of the same good or service. A competitive market’s behavior is described by the supply and demand model. There are 5 Key Elements of the Supply and Demand Model Demand Curve

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Competitive Markets

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  1. Competitive Markets Supply and Demand Model

  2. Competitive Markets • A market in which there are many buyers and sellers of the same good or service. • A competitive market’s behavior is described by the supply and demand model.

  3. There are 5 Key Elements of the Supply and Demand Model • Demand Curve • Supply Curve • Set of Factors that cause the demand curve to shift and set of factors that cause the supply curve to shift • Market equilibrium- includes the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity • The way the market equilibrium changes when the supply curve or demand curve shifts

  4. Demand Curve • Demand is determined by how much consumers want (are willing and able to buy) and the price.

  5. Economist use the demand schedule (table) to show how much of a good or service consumers will want to buy at different prices. • It can show the maximum price people will buy a good or service before the price falls. • So as price goes up, demand will go down; as price goes down, demand will go up.

  6. The demand schedule can also be shown a graph. Each point corresponds to one of the entries in a demand schedule. The curve that connects them is the demand curve *In the real world the demand curve almost always slopes downward Vertical Axis shows price Horizontal axis shows quantity demanded

  7. The downward slope of the demand curve is reflected in the Law of Demand • The proposition that a higher price for a good, all other things being equal, leads people to demand a smaller quantity of that good.

  8. Shifts in the Demand Curve • A Change in Demand • This shows the increase in the quantity demanded at any given price. It is represented by the shift in position of the original demand. *This is shift is different from movements along the demand curve.

  9. Movements are the changes in quantity demanded of a good that result from a change in that goods price.

  10. Quantity demanded can also rise when price is unchanged. This is because there is an increase in demand (a rightward shift). • If a demand was to decrease the shift would leftward.

  11. Check your understanding • Explain whether each of the following events represents (i) a change in demand (shift) (ii) movement along the demand curve (change in the quantity demanded) • A store owner finds that customers are willing to pay more for umbrellas on rainy days. • The quantity of umbrellas is higher at any given price on a rainy day than on a dry day.This is a rightward shift of the demand curve, since at any given price the quantity demanded rises. This implies that any specific quantity can now be sold at a higher price.

  12. b. When XYZ Telecom, a long-distance telephone service provider, offered reduced rates on weekends, its volume of weekend calling increased sharply. • The quantity of weekend calls demanded rises in response to a price reduction. This is a movement along the demand curve for weekend calls.

  13. c. People buy more long-stem roses the week of Valentine’s Day, even though the prices are higher than at other times during the year. • The demand for roses increases the week of Valentine’s Day. This is a rightward shift of the demand curve.

  14. d. A sharp rise in the price of gasoline leads many commuters to join carpools in order to reduce their gasoline purchases. • The quantity of gasoline demanded falls in response to a rise in price. This is a movement along the demand curve.

  15. 5 Principal Factors that shift the demand curve. 1. Changes in price • Substitute goods- a pair of goods are substitutes if a rise in price of one good makes consumers more willing to buy the other good (ex: coffee and tea) • They are usually goods that in some way serve a similar function • However a fall in price of one good can make consumers more will to buy another good- such pairs are known as complements • Can be goods that in some sense are consumed together (ex: computers and software; cars and gasoline; coffee and doughnuts) • So with complement goods a change in price in one will also cause a change in demand in the other.

  16. 2. Changes in income • Most goods are what we call normal goods, the demand for them increases when consumer income rises. • However the demand for some goods falls when income rises- these are called inferior goods.

  17. 3. Changes in taste • People have certain preferences or tastes that determine what they choose to consume and these tastes can change.

  18. 4. Changes in expectations • When consumers have some choice about when to make a purchase, current demand for a good is often reflected by expectations about its future price.

  19. 5. Changes in the number of consumers • Individual Demand Curve • Shows the relationship between quantity demanded and price for an individual consumer • Market demand curves show the combined quantity demanded by all consumers depends on the market price of that good.

  20. Market demand curve is a horizontal sum of the individual demand curves of all consumers. • This shows that an increase of consumers in a market leads to increase in demand.

  21. Answer the Following Questions • Which of the following would increase demand for a normal good? A decrease in • Price • Income • The price of a substitute • Consumer taste • The price of a complement Answer is: e

  22. 2. A decrease in the price of butter would most likely decrease the demand for: • Margarine • Bagels • Jelly • Milk • Syrup Answer is: a

  23. 3. If an increase in income leads to a decrease in demand, the good is • A complement • A substitute • Inferior • Abnormal • Normal Answer is: c

  24. 4. Which of the following will occur if consumers expect the price of a good to fall in the coming months? • The quantity demanded will rise today • The quantity demanded will remain the same today • Demand will increase today • Demand will decrease today • No change will occur today Answer is: d

  25. 5. Which of the following will increase the demand for disposable diapers? • A new “baby boom” • Concern over the environmental effects of landfills • A decrease in the price of cloth diapers • A move toward earlier potty training of children • A decrease in the price of disposable diapers Answer is: a

  26. Free Response Questions 1. Create a table with two hypothetical prices for a good and two corresponding quantities demanded. Choose the prices and quantities so that they illustrate the law of demand. Using your data, draw a correctly labeled graph showing the demand curve for the good. Using the same graph, illustrate an increase in demand for the good. 2. Draw a correctly labeled graph showing the demand for apples. On your graph, illustrate what happens to the demand for apples if a new report from the Surgeon General finds that an apple a day really does keep the doctor away.

  27. All questions come from Krugman’s Microeconomics for AP.

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