Market Demand 3-1 The Law of Demand 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve 3-3

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Demand.
Advertisements

Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Chapter 4 Notes Demand.
Demand Ch. 4.
Chapter 5: Demand and Supply Supply and Shifters of Supply.
Explorations in Economics
Chapter 4 Demand.
Chapter 4SectionMain Menu Understanding Demand What is the law of demand? How do the substitution effect and income effect influence decisions? What is.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Economics: Principles in Action C H A P T E R 4 Demand.
Economics Chapter 4 - Demand. What Is the Law of Demand? The law of demand states that consumers buy more of a good when its price decreases and less.
What is the law of demand?
Law of Demand Lecture.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
What Is the Law of Demand?
Chapter 4 - Demand What is Demand? Law of Demand Determinants of Demand Demand v. Quantity Demanded Elasticity of Demand.
Shifts in the Demand Curve Objectives: Explain the difference between change in quantity demanded and change in demand Identify demand shifter variables.
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.
Chapter 4SectionMain Menu Demand when you are willing and able to buy at that price The law of demand states that consumers buy more of a good when its.
Shifts of the Demand Curve (Ch.4-2) What is the difference between a change in quantity demanded and a shift in the demand curve? What factors can cause.
Chapter 4SectionMain Menu Understanding Demand What is the law of demand? How do the substitution effect and income effect influence decisions? What is.
Economics Chapter 4 - Demand What Is the Law of Demand? The law of demand states that consumers buy more of a good when its price decreases and less.
CHAPTERS 4-6 SUPPLY & DEMAND Unit III Review. 4.1 Understanding Demand Demand: the desire to own something and the ability to pay for it. The law of demand:
Explorations in Economics Alan B. Krueger & David A. Anderson.
Economics Chapter 4 - Demand. What Is the Law of Demand? The law of demand states that consumers buy more of a good when its price decreases and less.
Unit 3 SUPPLY AND DEMAND. Chapter 4 DEMAND  To have demand for a product you must be WILLING and ABLE to purchase the product  WILLING + ABLE = DEMAND.
Chapter 4- Demand. Section 1: Understanding Demand 2/11/ What is the law of demand? How do the substitution effect and income effect influence decisions?
Chapter 4SectionMain Menu Demandslide 1 MODEL OF DEMAND The model of demand is an attempt to explain the amount demanded of any good or service. DEMAND.
THE LAW OF DEMAND. The quantity demanded is the amount of a good that consumers are willing and able to purchase at a particular price over a given period.
Lecture by: Jacinto F. Fabiosa Fall 2005 Demand. 2 A household’s quantity demanded of a good –Specific amount household would choose to buy over some.
Chapter 4: Demand  Section I: Understanding Demand  Section II: Shifts of the Demand Curve  Section III: Elasticity of Demand.
Chapter 4SectionMain Menu Understanding Demand What is the law of demand? How do the substitution effect and income effect influence decisions? What is.
Chapter 4SectionMain Menu Topic 3 Lesson 1 Understanding Demand What is the law of demand? How do the substitution effect and income effect influence decisions?
UNDERSTANDING DEMAND  What is the law of demand?  How do the substitution effect and income effect influence decisions?  What is a demand schedule?
 A market is an institution or mechanism which brings together buyers and sellers of particular goods and services. ◦ May be local, national, or international.
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
SUPPLY and DEMAND EQUILIBRIUM. Demand Demand is the desire, ability, and willingness to buy a product.
Economics: Principles in Action
Demand P S D Q.
Demand Chapter 4.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Economics Chapter 4 Review.
Coach Ramsey is Demand September 9, 2008.
Demand.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Demand Demand is a relationship which shows the various quantities consumers are willing and able to buy of a good at different possible prices of a good.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Demand.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
ECONOMICS : CHAPTER 4-- DEMAND
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Demand.
Unit 3: Microeconomics Lesson 1: Demand.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Demand Chapter 4.
Demand.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Chapter 4: Demand Economics Mr. Robinson.
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Understanding Demand What is the law of demand?
Supply and Demand January 14, 2015.
Presentation transcript:

Market Demand 3-1 The Law of Demand 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve 3-3 Elasticity of Demand

3-1 The Law of Demand LO1-1 Explain the law of demand and how a demand schedule is represented in a demand curve. LO1-2 Understand the difference between an individual and a market demand curve.

The Law of Demand 3-1 demand quantity demanded law of demand The Demand Curve demand quantity demanded law of demand demand schedule demand curve Market Demand individual demand curve market demand curve

The Demand Curve Demand is the relationship between the price and quantity demanded for a good or service, then there variables are held constant. In a market, demand is the buying side. Demand is based on the assumption that other variables remain constant or unchanged. Quantity demanded is the amount of goods and services purchased at a given price. 3-1 The Law of Demand

The Demand Curve The law of demand states there is an inverse relationship between the price of a good or service and the quantity buyers purchase. 3-1 The Law of Demand

Quantity Demanded per Year The Demand Curve A demand schedule is a table that lists the quantity of a good or service consumers purchase at various possible prices. 3-1 The Law of Demand Point Price per DVD Quantity Demanded per Year A $20 4 B 15 8 C 10 12 D 5 16

The Demand Curve A demand curve is formed by the line connecting points that represent possible combinations of price and quantity purchased by consumers. 3-1 The Law of Demand By moving along the curve, you can find the quantity demanded by a buyer at any possible selling price.

An individual demand curve is the demand for a single consumer. Market Demand 3-1 The Law of Demand An individual demand curve is the demand for a single consumer. A market demand curve is the sum of all individual demand curves in a market.

Shifts in the Demand Curve 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve LO 2-1 Explain the difference between change in quantity demanded and change in demand. LO 2-2 Identify demand shifter variables that cause changes in demand.

Shifts in the Demand Curve 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve Difference in Change in Quantity Demanded and Change in Demand change in quantity demanded change in demand Demand Shifter Factors normal good inferior good substitute complement

Difference in Quantity Demanded and Change in Demand A change in quantity demanded is a movement between points along a demand curve, based on the assumption all other demand shifter factors remain constant. 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve

Difference in Quantity Demanded and Change in Demand A change in demand is an increase (rightward shift) or a decrease (leftward shift) in the demand curve. This increase means that at all possible prices consumers are buying more than before the shift. 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve

Difference in Quantity Demanded and Change in Demand A change in demand is an increase (rightward shift) or a decrease (leftward shift) in the demand curve. This decrease means that at all possible prices consumers are buying less than before the shift. 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve

Demand Shifter Factors A normal good is any good for which there is a direct relationship between change in income and its demand curve. An inferior good is any good for which there is a inverse relationship between change in income and its demand curve. 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve

Demand Shifter Factors Substitutes are goods that compete for consumer purchases. Examples: soda – Sports drink, juice, starbucks Complements are goods that consumers purchase together with another good. Examples: Peanut Butter & Jelly, or CellPhone & cellphone case, or an Automobile & Gasoline, Iphone 7 & wireless headphones 3-2 Shifts in the Demand Curve

3-3 Elasticity of Demand LO 3-1 Understand the difference between elastic, inelastic, and unitary elastic demand. LO 3-2 Explain how total revenue is related to price elasticity of demand.

Elasticity of Demand 3-3 total revenue elasticity of demand Why Elasticity of Demand Matters total revenue elasticity of demand elastic demand inelastic demand unitary elastic demand Total Revenue Test

Why Elasticity of Demand Matters Total revenue is the total dollars a firm receives from the sale of a good or service. It is equal to the price multiplied by the quantity demanded. You need to measure the relative size of changes in the price and the quantity demanded. You must calculate and compare the percentage change in quantity demanded that is caused by a percentage change in price. 3-3 Elasticity of Demand

Why Elasticity of Demand Matters Elasticity of demand is the ratio of the percentage change in the quantity demanded of a product to a percentage change in its price. These formulas are used to measure the degree of elasticity of demand. 3-3 Elasticity of Demand

Unitary elastic demand - Why Elasticity of Demand Matters Elastic demand - Inelastic demand - Unitary elastic demand - 3-3 Elasticity of Demand

Total Revenue Test Business need to know about elasticity of demand because it determines the size of total revenue or sales. Knowledge of the elasticity of demand helps a business make pricing decisions that result in the greatest total revenue.