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Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1:Section 1:What is Demand? Section 2:Section 2:Factors Affecting Demand Section 3:Section 3:Elasticity.

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Presentation on theme: "Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1:Section 1:What is Demand? Section 2:Section 2:Factors Affecting Demand Section 3:Section 3:Elasticity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Splash Screen

2 Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1:Section 1:What is Demand? Section 2:Section 2:Factors Affecting Demand Section 3:Section 3:Elasticity of Demand Visual Summary

3 Chapter Intro 1 Think about the items you bought during the past two months. What influenced your purchases? Did you need the items, or did you buy them because you wanted them? Make a list of the items, and next to each one write why you bought it. Then add for each item whether you would have bought more if the price had been lower, or fewer had the price been higher. Read Chapter 4 to learn how economists interpret your actions.

4 Chapter Intro 2 Markets exist when buyers and sellers interact, and market prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply.

5 Chapter Intro-End

6 Section 1-Preview Section Preview In this section, you will learn that you express demand for a product when you are willing and able to purchase it.

7 Section 1-Key Terms Content Vocabulary demand microeconomics market economy demand schedule demand curve Law of Demand market demand curve Academic Vocabulary marginal utility diminishing marginal utility

8 Section 1 What is Demand? Demand for a product is more than having the desire to own an item. Demand includes the ability and willingness to pay for it.Demand Microeconomics is the part of economic theory that deals with behavior and decision making by individuals and firms.Microeconomics

9 Section 1 An Introduction to Demand Demand is a concept specifying the different quantities of an item that will be bought at different prices.

10 Section 1 An Introduction to Demand (cont.) Demand is central to a market economy.market economy Demand involves two variables: The Demand for Compact Digital Discs –Price –Quantity of a specific product at a given point in time

11 Section 1 An Introduction to Demand (cont.) A demand schedule shows the various quantities demanded of a good at all prices that might prevail in the market at a given time.demand schedule A demand schedule shown graphically is a demand curve.demand curve The Demand for Compact Digital Discs

12 Section 1 The Law of Demand There is an inverse relationship between the price of an item and the quantity demanded.

13 Section 1 Higher prices are associated with smaller amounts demanded on most goods or services we buy. This is the Law of Demand.Law of Demand –Quantity demanded varies inversely with its price. The Law of Demand (cont.) The market demand curve shows quantities demanded by everyone in the market who is interested in the product/service. Individual and Market Demand Curves

14 Section 1 Demand and Marginal Utility As we buy more of an item, we get less satisfaction from each additional purchase.

15 Section 1 Utility is the amount of product satisfaction or usefulness one receives from its use. Marginal utility explains much about demand.Marginal utility As we use more of a product, we encounter diminishing marginal utility.diminishing marginal utility Demand and Marginal Utility (cont.)

16 Section 1-End

17 Section 2-Preview Section Preview In this section, you will learn about the factors that cause changes in demand.

18 Section 2-Key Terms Content Vocabulary change in quantity demandedchange in quantity demanded income effect substitution effect change in demand substitutes complements Academic Vocabulary principle illustrated

19 Section 2 Change in the Quantity Demanded Only a change in price can cause a change in quantity demanded.

20 Section 2 Change in the Quantity Demanded (cont.) When only the price changes and all else remains constant, there is a change in the quantity demanded.change in the quantity demanded –Income effectIncome effect –Substitution effectSubstitution effect A change in quantity demanded is a movement along the original demand curve. Change in the Quantity Demanded

21 Section 2 Change in Demand Several factors can cause the demand curve to shift.

22 Section 2 Factors other than price can cause a change in demand. A change in demand results in an entirely new demand curve. Change in Demand (cont.) Change in Demand

23 Section 2 Factors for demand changes –Consumer income –Consumer tastes –Price of related goods Change in Demand (cont.) Substitutes Complements Change in Demand

24 Section 2 –Expectations –Number of consumers Change in Demand (cont.) Change in Demand

25 Section 2-End

26 Section 3-Preview Section Preview In this section you will learn about the factors that influence the size of a change in quantity demanded.

27 Section 3-Key Terms Content Vocabulary elasticity demand elasticity elastic inelastic unit elastic Academic Vocabulary technical adequate

28 Section 3 Elasticity of Demand An important cause-and-effect relationship in economics is elasticity.elasticity Profiles in Economics: Oprah Winfrey

29 Section 3 Demand Elasticity When the price of an item changes, the change in quantity demanded can vary a little or a lot.

30 Section 3 Demand Elasticity (cont.) Consumers react to changes in price by changing the quantity demanded. The size of the reaction is demand elasticity.demand elasticity Demand can be –Elastic—fresh produceElastic –Inelastic—table saltInelastic –Unit elasticUnit elastic Demand Elasticity and the Total Expenditures Test

31 Section 3 The Total Expenditures Test The total expenditures test is used to estimate the demand elasticity of a product.

32 Section 3 Total expenditures—the price of a product multiplied by the quantity demanded for any point along the demand curve. Can test for elasticity by observing the change in total expenditures when the price changes. Three results occur: The Total Expenditures Test (cont.) –Elastic demand—an “inverse” relationship between price and expenditures

33 Section 3 The Total Expenditures Test (cont.) –Inelastic demand—movement occurs in the same direction Elasticity and revenues –Raising the price of an inelastic product may help increase revenue. –Raising the price of an elastic product will likely decrease revenue. –Unit elastic—no change in expenditure

34 Section 3 Determinants of Demand Elasticity The answers to three questions help determine a product’s demand elasticity.

35 Section 3 Must answer three questions to determine if a demand for a good is elastic or inelastic. –Can the purchase be delayed? –Are adequate substitutes available? –Does the purchase use a large portion of income? Determinants of Demand Elasticity (cont.) Determinants of Demand Elasticity

36 Section 3-End

37 Law of Demand The Law of Demand states that when the price goes up, quantity demanded goes down. When the price goes down, quantity demanded goes up. VS 1

38 VS 2 Change in Demand When a change in demand occurs, people want to buy different amounts of a product at the same price. A change in demand can happen for several reasons.

39 VS 3 Demand and Elasticity Changes in price and total expenditures help determine the demand elasticity of a product.

40 VS-End

41 Figure 1

42 Figure 2

43 Figure 3

44 Figure 4

45 Figure 5

46 Figure 6

47 Profile Oprah Winfrey (1954– ) first woman in history to produce and own her own talk show first African American woman—and third woman in history— ​ to own a major television and film studio

48 DFS Trans 1

49 DFS Trans 2

50 DFS Trans 3

51 Vocab1 demand combination of desire, ability, and willingness to buy a product

52 Vocab2 microeconomics part of economics that studies small units, such as individuals and firms

53 Vocab3 market economy economic system in which people and firms make all economic decisions

54 Vocab4 demand schedule a table that lists how much of a product consumers will buy at all possible prices

55 Vocab5 demand curve a curve that shows the quantities demanded at all possible prices

56 Vocab6 Law of Demand rule stating that consumers will buy more of a product at lower prices and less at higher prices

57 Vocab7 market demand curve a curve that shows how much of a product all consumers will buy at all possible prices

58 Vocab8 marginal utility additional satisfaction or usefulness a consumer gets from having one more unit of the same product

59 Vocab9 diminishing marginal utility decrease in satisfaction or usefulness from having one more unit of the same product

60 Vocab10 prevail to predominate

61 Vocab11 inversely in the opposite way

62 Vocab12 change in quantity demanded movement along the demand curve showing that the amount someone is willing to purchase changes when the price changes

63 Vocab13 income effect that part of a change in quantity demanded due to a change in the buyer’s real income when a price changes

64 Vocab14 substitution effect that part of a change in quantity demanded due to a price change that makes other products more or less costly

65 Vocab15 change in demand shift of the demand curve when people by different amounts at every price

66 Vocab16 substitutes competing products that can be used in place of one another

67 Vocab17 complements products that increase the use of other products

68 Vocab18 principle a fundamental law or idea

69 Vocab19 illustrated shown with an image

70 Vocab20 elasticity a measure of responsiveness that shows how one variable responds to a change in another variable

71 Vocab21 demand elasticity a measure that shows how a change in quantity demanded responds to a change in price

72 Vocab22 elastic type of elasticity where a change in price causes a relatively larger change in quantity demanded

73 Vocab23 inelastic type of elasticity where a change in price causes a relatively smaller change in quantity demanded

74 Vocab24 unit elastic type of elasticity where a change in price causes a proportional change in quantity demanded

75 Vocab25 technical related to a particular subject such as art, science, or trade

76 Vocab26 adequate just enough to satisfy a requirement

77 Help Click the Forward button to go to the next slide. Click the Previous button to return to the previous slide. Click the Home button to return to the Chapter Menu. Click the Transparency button from the Chapter Menu, Chapter Introduction, or Visual Summary slides to access the Economic Concepts transparencies that are relevant to this chapter. From within a section, click on this button to access the relevant Daily Focus Skills Transparency. Click the Return button in a feature to return to the main presentation. Click the Economics Online button to access online textbook features. Click the Reference Atlas button to access the Interactive Reference Atlas. Click the Exit button or press the Escape key [Esc] to end the chapter slide show. Click the Help button to access this screen. Links to Presentation Plus! features such as Graphs in Motion, Charts in Motion, and figures from your textbook are located at the bottom of relevant screens. To use this Presentation Plus! product:

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