Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byIris Perkins Modified over 9 years ago
3
US has free enterprise economy – To make profit – consumers serve own interest by purchasing best product at lowest possible price forces of supply and demand establish price that serves both
4
demand – may want different things (cruise, house) – but may not be able to afford then have no actual demand may want newest CD at $12-$15 – you can afford then you have a demand for them price is one major factor that influences demand
5
Law of demand – Quantity demanded and price have an inverse, or opposite relationship
6
Cheryl likes DVD movies, has a job – some extra money to spend wants a $69.95 Star Wars movie Trilogy – has money but out of stock decides to buy others, but number will depend on price – wants to save half of for the trilogy to purchase next week Law of demand is a description of how consumers behave
7
Demand schedule – shows law of demand in chart form Market demand schedule –
8
2 column table that follows a predictable format left hand column list various prices of goods or services right hand column shows the quantity demanded of the goods or services at each price Figure 4.2 shows Cheryl’s demand for DVD’s Price per DVDQuantity Demanded 300 251 202 153 104 57
9
Figure 4.2 shows how many DVD’s Cheryl is willing and able to buy at each price in the market Shows that quantity of DVD’s that Cheryl demands rises and falls according to price Price per DVDQuantity Demanded 3050 2575 20100 15125 10175 5300
10
Business owners need more information than about 1 consumer Need a market demand schedule – similar to individual demand schedule except quantities are much larger also shows market demand depends on price Price per DVDQuantity Demanded 3050 2575 20100 15125 10175 5300
11
Survey customers asking how many DVD’s they would buy at different prices review sales figures to see how many DVD’s sold at each price these techniques –
12
Demand curve – displays data from an individual demand schedule Market demand curve – shows the quantity that all consumers or market as a whole are willing and able to buy at each price shows the sum of the information on the individual demand curve of all consumers in a market
13
When prices go up, the quantity demanded goes down When prices go down, the quantity demanded goes up Created using the assumption that all other economic factors except price remain the same
14
Figure 4.5 shows the quantity demanded at different prices shows inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded price goes down, quantity demanded goes up price goes up, quantity demanded goes down Curve constructed on the assumption that all other economic factors remain constant – only price changes
15
B. – June 27, 1949 In fashion industry 15 years when planning her own weddingcould not find a dress fashionable enough for herself Year following her wedding – decided to fill this need – make designer wedding dresses Celebrities were choosing her dresses – and demand grew other designers began to create similar dresses Her style then spread to other products – ready to wear dresses, perfume, accessories
17
Shape of demand curve – why? Law of diminishing marginal utility – Utility is the satisfaction gained from the use of a good or service glass of lemonade – 2 nd and 3 rd glass less satisfying then the 1 st Consumers do not want to pay as much for additional purchases – consumers will buy more glasses of lemonade if the price is lower for each addition
18
Income effect – if you buy a $7 book rather than a $15 book – you feel $8 richer – so may buy another book – also works vice versa Substitution effect – is the pattern of behavior that occurs when consumers react to a change in the price of a good or service by buying a substitute product – one whose price has not changed and that offers a better relative value if paperback books go above $10, consumers might buy fewer book and more $4 mags
19
Change in quantity demanded – each change in quantity demanded is shown by a new point of the demand curve a change in quantity demanded does not shift the demand curve itself
20
Figure 4.7 – follow changes on the demand curve shows the change for one person a market demand curve provides similar info for an entire market have larger quantities demanded and larger changes to quantity demanded
21
If people lose job – people more likely to spend limited funds on food and housing than on entertainment – market demand then drops Change in demand – also called a shift in demand – shifts the position of the demand curve 6 factors can cause a change in demand: income, market size, consumer expectations, consumer taste, substitute goods, and complementary goods
23
If income changes – person’s ability to buy goods and services changes market demand curve affected as well income of consumers rise or fall – total demand in the market usually rise or fall market demand curve will shift to the left or the right normal goods – inferior goods –
24
Tyler and baseball cards – works at garden center In fall, works less hours – smaller paycheck – less money to spend – demands fewer bb cards at every price Promoted – raise of $2 an hour – more money to spend – demand for bb cards increases – demand curve shifts to the right Tyler bought clothes at a discount store before his raise – now he spends more discount clothing – inferior goods (used books, generic food products)
25
Number of consumers ↑or ↓, then market size changes Tourists come to Montclair (beach town) in summer, population ↑, demand for pizza will increase population shifts change the size of markets ex. – Northeast US – lost population in the last 30 years why shift – better climate, high-tech jobs, less congested area shift to the West and South – increase in those market sizes Has altered demand from essentials to nonessentials
26
Today’s hot trends become tomorrow’s castoffs good with high popularity – product loses popularity – Advertising has a strong influence on consumer tastes sellers advertise to create a demand for a product some will give up perfectly good clothes because they are convinced the style has changed
27
Your expectations for the future can affect your buying habits today if you think the price of a good or service will change – can affect if you buy now or later ex. – people usually wait until end of summer to buy a car – expect sales demand is higher in Aug., expect sales and people wait until then
28
Substitutes – Products are interchangeable – if price of a substitute drops, people will choose to buy it instead of the original demand for substitute ↑, demand for original ↓ People turn to substitutes if price for original becomes too high demand for substitute ↑, demand for original ↓ Substitutes can be used in place of each other ex. – car, bus, train – if price on one to high, use another
29
Complements – increase in demand of one will increase the demand for the other & vice versa products work in tandem with each other ex. – CD & CD players if price for one product changes, demand for both will change the exact same way if prices rises - demand will drop if price drops – demand will rise
31
Consumer demand is dependent on price – but price is seldom fixed If prices rise consumers buy less & if prices drop consumers buy more – not always the case Changes in consumer buying habits are tied to type of goods and services being produced and how important the good or service is to the consumer not all increases in price result in a decrease in demand Elasticity of demand –
32
Elastic – the more responsive to change – the more likely the demand is elastic elastic goods are price sensitive Inelastic – case of inelastic demand – changes in price have little impact on the quantity demanded A rubber band when quantity demanded increases – demand is elastic and rubber band stretches if quantity barely changes, demand is inelastic and rubber band stretches very little
33
PDA’s go on sale price down 20%, quantity demanded goes up 30% - demand is elastic % change in quantity demanded is greater than the % change in price goods that have a large # of subs fall into the elastic category, since if prices changes, consumers can get another product
34
Insulin – required by diabetics if price rose – they still need the same amount as before if price fell – result –
35
Elasticity of demand for certain products may change – can happen vice versa if there are more subs – demand may become more elastic ex. – ex. – vice versa –
36
Figures 4.13 & 4.14 Inelastic curve more steep – changes along the vertical axis are proportionally greater than the changes along the horizontal axis Unit elastic – demand is said to be this when % change in price and quantity are the same 10% increase in price= a 10% drop in quantity demanded
38
The factors that determine elasticity are: availability of substitute goods or services, the proportion of income that is spent on the good or service, and whether the good or service is a necessity or a luxury
39
Generally - if there are no substitutes for a good or service, demand for it tends to be inelastic ex. – if there are many substitutes available – demands tends to be elastic ex. –
40
The % you spend on a good or service affects elasticity hobby – photography – Demand for products that cost little of your income tend to be inelastic ex. –If level of income increases – you are likely to increase your demand for some goods or services
41
Necessity is something you need: food or water – demand tends to be inelastic even if prices rise – consumers may not buy the same quantity no matter what the price price of milk rises – sub with cheaper milk or powdered milk Quantity demand will change as the law of demand predicts – demand for luxuries tends to be elastic something you desire, but not essential the change in quantity demanded is much greater than the change in price
42
Businesses figure the elasticity of demand to help them decide whether to make price cuts if demand is elastic – if demand is inelastic – To determine elasticity look at whether the % change in quantity demanded is greater than the % change in price
43
Step 1: Calculate % change in quantity demanded. Step 2: Calculate % change in price. Step 3: Calculate elasticity Step 4: If final # is greater than 1, demand is elastic, if less than 1, is inelastic
44
Total revenue – can measure elasticity by comparing the total revenue a business would receive when offering its products at various prices if total revenue ↑after the price ↓, then demand is elastic why? Seller makes less, but still sells enough to make up for lower price if total revenue ↓after the price ↓, demand is inelastic a price decrease showed modest increase in quantity sold, but not enough to compensate for lower revenue Formula P= Q= Total Revenue=P x Q
45
Figure 4.17 – figure out whether demand is elastic or inelastic Answer: Price of Tickets Quantity Demanded per month Total Revenue($) 121,00012,000 102,00020,000 86,00048,000 612,00072,000 420,00080,000
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.