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Chapter 4 The Law of Demand What is Demand?  Quantity demanded of a product or service is the number that would be bought by the public at a given price.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4 The Law of Demand What is Demand?  Quantity demanded of a product or service is the number that would be bought by the public at a given price."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Chapter 4 The Law of Demand

3 What is Demand?  Quantity demanded of a product or service is the number that would be bought by the public at a given price

4 The Law of Demand  When a good’s price is lower, consumers will buy more of it  When a good’s price is higher, consumers will buy less of it

5 The Law of Demand  The Law of Demand is affected by two behavior patterns  The Substitution Effect  The Income Effect

6 The Substitution Effect  As the price for one good rises compared to a similar good, consumers will substitute the similar good for their purchases.

7 The Income Effect  As prices go up, your money becomes worth less than it was worth before  People are less likely to buy the good now

8 The Income Effect  If the delicious Sweet Onion Chicken Teriyaki from Subway with only 6 grams of fat costs $3, and you have $9, you can afford 3 of them.

9 The Income Effect  If the delicious Sweet Onion Chicken Teriyaki from Subway with only 6 grams of fat costs $4.50, and you have $9, you can afford 2 of them.

10 The Income Effect  Therefore, your money is now worth fewer delicious Sweet Onion Chicken Teriyakis from Subway (located at Gilbert and Brown in Mesa)

11 Demand Schedule  A demand schedule shows the likely number of purchases based on a series of arbitrarily chosen prices

12 Demand Schedule

13 Demand Curve

14 A Shift in Demand  If one of 5 other factors changes, the entire demand curve will shift to the left or right  The curve does NOT shift if the price of the good is the only change

15 A Shift in Demand  Here’s how a shift in demand works:  Lots of people like to eat the delicious Whopper from Burger King

16 A Shift in Demand  Here’s how a shift in demand works:  Suddenly, PETA unveils a new ad campaign…

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18 A Shift in Demand  The price of the Whopper stayed the same, but demand for it decreased anyway!  Here are the 5 factors which move the demand curve

19 Income  When people’s income changes, demand shifts accordingly  Normal Goods –  Higher income = higher demand  Lower income = lower demand

20 Income  When people’s income changes, demand shifts accordingly  Inferior Goods –  Higher income = lower demand  Lower income = higher demand

21 Consumer Expectations  If consumers expect a price to rise in the future, current demand increases  If consumers expect a price to fall in the future, current demand decreases

22 Population  When one sector of the population grows, demand increases for products that sector uses  Fastest growing sector of the population today?

23 Consumer Tastes and Advertising  Increased advertising can increase consumer demand  Bad news about a product can decrease demand

24 Price of Related Goods  Complimentary Goods – goods that are bought and used together  Higher Complementary Price = decrease in demand  Lower Complementary Price = increase in demand

25 Price of Related Goods  Substitute Goods – goods that are used in place of one another  Higher Substitute Price = increase in demand  Lower Substitute Price = decrease in demand

26 Elasticity of Demand  Elasticity refers to how responsive the quantity demanded is to a change in prices

27 Elasticity of Demand  An inelastic good will still sell about the same quantity even if the price goes up or down

28 Elasticity of Demand  An elastic good will have a higher change in Qd when there is a price change

29 Featuring Ashlee Simpson

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31 Calculating Elasticity  Elasticity = % change in quantity demanded __________________________ % change in price

32 Calculating Elasticity  If Elasticity is < 1, the good is inelastic  If Elasticity is > 1, the good is elastic  If Elasticity = 1, the good has a unitary elastic demand

33 Factors Affecting Elasticity  Availability of Substitutes – if you have no other options, demand is inelastic. There is no substitute for the delicious Sweet Onion Chicken Teriyaki.

34 Factors Affecting Elasticity  Availability of Substitutes – if you have equally appealing options, demand is highly elastic Does anyone know the difference between these guys?

35 Factors Affecting Elasticity  Relative Importance – what percentage of your budget is spent on the good?  If it is low, price changes will not alter demand  If it is high, even small price changes can greatly affect demand

36 Factors Affecting Elasticity  Necessities vs. Luxuries – consumption of milk might stay the same with price changes, while consumption of lobster would greatly change with price changes

37 Factors Affecting Elasticity  Change over time – price changes may produce inelastic demand in the short term, but elastic demand long term  1970s fuel crisis – people still bought the same amount of gas at first, but eventually started buying smaller cars

38 Elasticity and Revenue  Total Revenue – the amount of money a company receives by selling its good or service  With elastic demand, revenue will decrease greatly with price increases

39 Elasticity and Revenue  With Inelastic demand, price increases will increase revenue


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