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CHAPTER 3 DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND MARKET EQUILIBRIUM

CHAPTER 3 DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND MARKET EQUILIBRIUM. AP ECONOMICS. MICROECONOMICS. That part of economics that deals with behavior and decision making by small units, such as individuals and firms. The Market Forces of Supply and Demand.

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CHAPTER 3 DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND MARKET EQUILIBRIUM

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  1. CHAPTER 3 DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND MARKET EQUILIBRIUM AP ECONOMICS

  2. MICROECONOMICS • That part of economics that deals with behavior and decision making by small units, such as individuals and firms

  3. The Market Forces of Supply and Demand • Supply and Demand are the two words that economists use most often. • Supply and Demand are the forces that make market economies work! • Modern microeconomics is about supply, demand, and market equilibrium.

  4. Markets and Competition The terms supply and demand refer to the behavior of people. . . . . .as they interact with one another in markets.

  5. Market: any institution, mechanism, or arrangement which facilitates exchange. • A marketis a group of buyers and sellers of a particular good or service. • Buyers determine demand... • Sellers determine supply... • Markets bring together buyers and sellers. • Examples: • Gas station • E-commerce site • Local music store • Farmer’s roadside stand • NYSE • Auctions

  6. DEMAND • For this to work there has to be “wanting” of a product • Consumers have to desire the product and have the willingness and ability to buy a product • Use schedules and graphs to represent approximations of consumer behavior

  7. Ceteris Paribus . . . ...implies that all the relevant variables (e.g. determinants of demand) are held constant, except the one(s) being studied at the time.

  8. Demand Schedules a table listing that shows the quantity demanded at all prices that might prevail in the market at a given time Demand Curves graphs that plot the quantity demanded at all prices DEMAND

  9. The Concept of Demand. . . P • Quantity Demanded refers to the amount (quantity) of a good that buyers are willing and able to purchase at alternative prices for a given point in time. • Point in time is a specific period could mean a day, a week, or a month D Q

  10. LAW OF DEMAND • Demand for an economic product varies inversely with its price • Prices Quantity Demanded • Prices Quantity Demanded • The movement along a demand curve shows a CHANGE IN THE QUANTITY DEMANDED or a change in the quantity of the product purchased in response to a change in price

  11. Law of Demand: Market Price P Law of Demand: There exists an inverse relationship between Price and Quantity Demanded. (Negative Relationship) D Q

  12. Example: Demand For Ice Cream Demand Price of Ice Cream D Quantity of Ice Cream

  13. UTILITY • Usefulness or satisfaction from consumption • MARGINAL UTILITY • the extra usefulness or satisfaction a person gets from acquiring one more unit of a product • Example: Drinking glass of ice-cold lemonade after playing a hard game of tennis or basketball on a hot summer afternoon

  14. MARGINAL UTILITY CONT. • Consumers keep on buying a product until they reach a point where the last unit consumed gives enough, and only enough, satisfaction to justify the price. • When consumers reach the point that the marginal utility is less than the price, you will stop buying.

  15. DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY • The more units of a certain economic product a person can acquire, the less eager that person is to buy still more. • As people’s wants for a particular product become more fully satisfied, they become less willing to spend their limited incomes to buy more of that product. • The principle of diminishing marginal utility can also be used to explain the downward-sloping nature of the demand curve

  16. EFFECTS OF QUANTITY DEMANDED • Income Effect • the change in the quantity demanded because of a change in the consumer’s real income when the price of a commodity changes • Increases the purchasing power of a buyer’s money income enabling the buyer to purchase more of the product than before • Substitution Effect • the change in quantity demanded because of the change in relative price of the product • Buyers have the incentive to substitute a less expensive product for similar products that are now relatively more expensive

  17. QUANTITY DEMANDED AND DEMAND ARE NOT THE SAME • When QUANTITY DEMANDED (Qd) changes, it does so because of a change in the price (P) of a product, and movement occurs along the current demand curve • When DEMAND(D) changes, the entire demand curve moves or shifts. The change in demand results in an entirely new curve.

  18. Changes in Quantity Demanded Price $2.00 Quantity D 7

  19. Changes in Quantity Demanded Price $2.00 $1.00 Quantity D 7 13

  20. Change in Demand Price $2.00 Quantity D 7

  21. Change in Demand Price $2.00 D2 D Quantity 7 10

  22. Market Demand • Adding all the quantities demanded by all consumers at each of the various possible prices, we can get from individual demand to market demand

  23. Determinants of Demand • What factors determine how much ice cream you will buy? • What factors determine how much will you really purchase? • Demand Shifters

  24. Determinants of Demand • Consumers’ Tastes and Preferences • Number of Consumers (buyers) • Consumers’ Income • Price of Related Goods • Consumer Expectations

  25. Shift to the Right increase in demand Shift to the Left decrease in demand CHANGE IN DEMAND OR SHIFT IN DEMAND

  26. GOODS • Normal Goods • Goods for which demand increases when income increases • Most goods are normal goods • Inferior Goods • Goods and services for which demand decreases when income increases. • Inferior is not the products quality • Generic brand products, hamburgers, and used clothing Generic Fast Food Used

  27. Determinant of Demand: Income P • As income increases the demand for a normal goodwill increase. D D2 Q

  28. Determinant of Demand: Income P • As income increases the demand for a normal goodwill increase. • As income increases the demand for a inferior gooddecrease. D D2 Q

  29. CAUSES FOR CHANGES IN DEMAND (DETERMINANTS) • Consumer Income • Consumer Tastes • Price of Related Goods • Substitutes • Complements

  30. Determinant of Demand: Prices of Related Goods When the fall in price of one good reduces the demand for another good, the two goods are substitutes.

  31. Determinant of Demand: Prices of Related Goods When the fall in price of one good increases the demand for another good, the two goods are complements.

  32. CHAPTER 3--SUPPLY AP ECONOMICS

  33. SUPPLY • The quantity of goods and services that producers are willing to offer at various possible prices other things equal during a given time period • Example: During the winter months, for example, jacket manufacturers offer a certain quantity of jackets at each price.

  34. Supply of Ice Cream Price S Quantity

  35. LAW OF SUPPLY • States that producers supply more goods and services when they can sell them at higher prices and fewer goods and services when they must sell them at lower prices • Quantity supplied is directly related to the prices that producers can charge for their goods and services • Example: If producers of a compact disc (CD) players can charge $300 for their products, they will make more CD players than if they could charge only $200. • PRICE QUANTITY SUPPLIED • PRICE QUANTITY SUPPLIED

  36. The Concept of Supply. . . P S Quantity Suppliedrefers to the amount (quantity) of a good that sellers are willing and able to make available for sale at alternative prices for a given point in time. Q

  37. QUANTITY SUPPLIED • The amount of a good and service that a producer is willing to sell at each particular price • PRICE is the key factor affecting not only quantity demanded but also the quantity supplied

  38. Changes in Quantity Supplied S Price $2.00 Quantity 7

  39. Changes in Quantity Supplied S Price $2.00 $1.00 Quantity 1 7

  40. SUPPLIERS WANT A PROFIT • Suppliers actions are based on the pursuit of profits • PROFIT is the amount of money remaining after producers have paid all of their costs • Businesses make a profit when revenues are greater than the costs of production

  41. COSTS OF PRODUCTION • Wages, salaries, rent, interest on loans, bills for electricity, raw materials, and any other goods and services used to manufacture a product • To make a PROFIT, producers must provide goods and services that consumers want—at prices that consumers are willing and able to pay

  42. PROFIT MOTIVE • Governs how individual companies make decisions and it also helps direct the use of resources in the entire market • It can cause an increase or a decrease in production for one company or many companies

  43. Supply Schedule Lists each quantity of a product that producers are willing to supply at various market prices It shows the relationship between the price of a good or service and the quantity that producers will supply Supply Curves Plot the relationship on a graph between the price of a good or service and the quantity supplied SUPPLY

  44. CHANGES IN SUPPLY • PRICE CHANGES affect the QUANTITY SUPPLIED • DETERMINANTS OF SUPPLY are the non-price factors that can shift an entire supply curve of a product.

  45. Change in Supply S Price $2.00 Quantity 7

  46. Change in Supply S S2 Price $2.00 Quantity 7 11

  47. DETERMINANTS OF SUPPLY • Prices of resources • Government tools • Taxes and Subsidies and Regulations • Technology • Prices of related goods • Producer expectations • Competition or # of sellers (producers)

  48. Determinant of Supply: Market Price P S Law of Supply There exists an direct (positive) relationship between Price and Quantity Supplied. Q

  49. RESOURCES CAUSE SHIFTS • A change in the price of resources or factors of production can shift an entire supply curve • A RESOURCE is anything that can be used in the production of a good or service • Resources include raw materials, electricity, and workers’ wages  • These resources contribute to a business’s costs of production

  50. RESOURCES CONT. • Any price change for a resource increases or decreases a business’s production costs • When the price of a resource falls, production costs fall accordingly. Lower production costs mean that a business can supply more of the product for the same cost • Lower production costs also create greater profits, which will cause the businesses to increase production even more  • Higher production costs mean that the company cannot supply as much of the product at the same cost as before

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