Demand, Supply, & Market Equilibrium

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Presentation transcript:

Demand, Supply, & Market Equilibrium Chapter 2 Demand, Supply, & Market Equilibrium

Demand Quantity demanded (Qd) Amount of a good or service consumers are willing & able to purchase during a given period of time

Demand Six variables that influence Qd Generalized demand function Price of good or service (P) Incomes of consumers (M) Prices of related goods & services (PR) Expected future price of product (Pe) Number of consumers in market (N) Generalized demand function

Generalized Demand Function b, c, d, e, f, & g are slope parameters Measure effect on Qd of changing one of the variables while holding the others constant Sign of parameter shows how variable is related to Qd Positive sign indicates direct relationship Negative sign indicates inverse relationship

Generalized Demand Function Variable Relation to Qd Sign of Slope Parameter P b = Qd/P is negative Inverse c = Qd/M is positive Direct for normal goods M c = Qd/M is negative Inverse for inferior goods d = Qd/PR is positive Direct for substitutes PR d = Qd/PR is negative Inverse for complements e = Qd/ is positive Direct Pe f = Qd/Pe is positive Direct N g = Qd/N is positive Direct

Demand Function Demand function, or demand, shows relation between P & Qd when all other variables are held constant Qd = f(P) Law of Demand Qd increases when P falls & Qd decreases when P rises, all else constant Qd/P must be negative

Graphing Demand Curves Traditionally price (P) is plotted on the vertical axis & quantity demanded (Qd) is plotted on the horizontal axis The equation plotted is the inverse demand function P = f(Qd)

Graphing Demand Curves A point on a demand curve shows either: Maximum amount of a good that will be purchased for a given price Maximum price consumers will pay for a specific amount of the good

Graphing Demand Curves Change in quantity demanded Occurs when price changes Movement along demand curve Change in demand Occurs when one of the other variables, or determinants of demand, changes Demand curve shifts rightward or leftward

Shifts in Demand (Figure 2.2) Qd 1,100 700 100 Quantity Price (dollars) 900 P 300 500 1,500 1,300 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 D1 Demand increase D0 • $50, 300 $50, 600 • $40, 200 $40, 500 D2 Demand decrease

Supply Quantity supplied (Qs) Amount of a good or service offered for sale during a given period of time

Supply Six variables that influence Qs Generalized supply function Price of good or service (P) Input prices (PI ) Prices of goods related in production (Pr) Technological advances (T) Expected future price of product (Pe) Number of firms producing product (F) Generalized supply function

Generalized Supply Function k, l, m, n, r, & s are slope parameters Measure effect on Qs of changing one of the variables while holding the others constant Sign of parameter shows how variable is related to Qs Positive sign indicates direct relationship Negative sign indicates inverse relationship

Generalized Supply Function Variable Relation to Qs Sign of Slope Parameter P k = Qs/P is positive Direct PI l = Qs/PI is negative Inverse m = Qs/Pr is negative Inverse for substitutes Pr m = Qs/Pr is positive Direct for complements T n = Qs/T is positive Direct Pe r = Qs/Pe is negative Inverse F s = Qs/F is positive Direct

Supply Function - thurs Supply function, or supply, shows relation between P & Qs when all other variables are held constant Qs = g(P)

Graphing Supply Curves A point on a supply curve shows either: Maximum amount of a good that will be offered for sale at a given price Minimum price necessary for producers to voluntarily offer a particular quantity for sale

Graphing Supply Curves Change in quantity supplied Occurs when price changes Movement along supply curve Change in supply Occurs when one of the other variables, or determinants of supply, changes Supply curve shifts rightward or leftward

Shifts in Supply (Figure 2.4) 80 S0 70 Price (dollars) S1 $60, 700 $60, 400 • 60 Supply decrease 50 • $40, 500 $40, 650 40 Supply increase 30 20 10 Qs 100 300 500 700 900 Quantity

Market Equilibrium Equilibrium price & quantity are determined by the intersection of demand & supply curves At the point of intersection, Qd = Qs Consumers can purchase all they want & producers can sell all they want at the “market-clearing” price

Market Equilibrium (Figure 2.5) P 80 S0 70 Price (dollars) D0 60 • 50 • 40 30 • 20 10 Qd , Qs 100 300 500 700 900 1,100 1,300 1,500 Quantity

Shortage When demand shifts outward, initially there will be what could be seen as a shortage of goods supplied at the original equilibrium price.

Demand Shifts (Supply Constant) (Figure 2.6) 80 D1 S0 70 Price (dollars) 60 • B 50 D2 A • • • 40 • C 30 20 10 D0 Qd , Qs 100 300 500 700 900 1,100 1,300 1,500 Quantity

Surplus When supply shifts out, it appears to be a surplus of goods at the old equilibrium price

Supply Shifts (Demand Constant) (Figure 2.7) 80 S1 S0 70 Price (dollars) 60 • T 50 R • • • 40 • S 30 20 10 D0 Qd , Qs 100 300 500 700 900 1,100 1,300 Quantity

Simultaneous Shifts When demand & supply shift simultaneously Can predict either the direction in which price changes or the direction in which quantity changes, but not both The change in equilibrium price or quantity is said to be indeterminate when the direction of change depends on the relative magnitudes by which demand & supply shift

Simultaneous Shifts: (D, S) P D’ S D S’ S’’ B • P’ A • Q’ P C • P’’ Q’’ Q Q Price may rise or fall; Quantity rises

Simultaneous Shifts: (D, S) P S D S’ S’’ D’ A • P B • P’ Q’ C • P’’ Q’’ Q Q Price falls; Quantity may rise or fall

Simultaneous Shifts: (D, S) P S’’ D’ S’ C • P’’ S D Q’’ B • P’ Q’ A • P Q Q Price rises; Quantity may rise or fall

Simultaneous Shifts: (D, S) P S’’ S’ D S D’ C • P’’ • A P Q’’ B • P’ Q’ Q Q Price may rise or fall; Quantity falls

Ceiling & Floor Prices Ceiling price Floor price Maximum price government allows sellers to charge for a good When ceiling price is below equilibrium, a shortage occurs Floor price Minimum price government allows sellers to charge for a good When floor price is above equilibrium, a surplus occurs

Ceiling & Floor Prices (Figure 2.11) Px Px Price (dollars) Price (dollars) Sx Dx 2 50 Panel B – Floor price Sx 3 32 84 2 50 1 62 22 Dx Qx Qx Quantity Quantity Panel A – Ceiling price

Homework Read Chapter 2 Do Technical problems: 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 17 Do Applied Problems: 1, 2, 5, 11, 13, 14, Do Mathematical exercise : 2