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Lecture 3. Demand and Supply

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Lecture 3. Demand and Supply

Uploaded by

programmsoftuz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Lecture 3.

Demand and
Supply
Introduction to Economics
By Bakhtier Tukhtaev
After studying this lecture, you will be able to:
• Describe a competitive market and think about a price as an
opportunity cost
• Explain the influences on demand
• Explain the influences on supply
• Explain how demand and supply determine prices and quantities
bought and sold
• Use the demand and supply model to make predictions about
changes in prices and quantities
Markets and Prices

• A market is any arrangement that enables buyers and sellers to get


information and do business with each other.
• A competitive market is a market that has many buyers and many
sellers so no single buyer or seller can influence the price.
• The money price of a good is the amount of money needed to buy
it.
• The relative price of a good—the ratio of its money price to the
money price of the next best alternative good—is its opportunity
cost.
Demand
• If you demand something, then you
1. Want it,
2. Can afford it, and
3. Have made a definite plan to buy it.
• Wants are the unlimited desires or wishes people have for goods
and services. Demand reflects a decision about which wants to
satisfy.
• The quantity demanded of a good or service is the amount that
consumers plan to buy during a particular time period, and at a
particular price.
Demand
• The Law of Demand
• The law of demand states:
• Other things remaining the same, the higher the price of a good, the
smaller is the quantity demanded; and …
• the lower the price of a good, the larger is the quantity demanded.
• Why does a change in the price change the quantity demanded? Two
reasons:
■ Substitution effect
■ Income effect
Demand
• Substitution Effect
• When the relative price (opportunity cost) of a good or
service rises, people seek substitutes for it, so the quantity
demanded of the good or service decreases.
• Income Effect
• When the price of a good or service rises relative to
income, people cannot afford all the things they previously
bought, so the quantity demanded of the good or service
decreases.
Demand
• Demand Curve and Demand Schedule
• The term demand refers to the entire relationship
between the price of the good and quantity demanded of
the good.
• A demand curve shows the relationship between the
quantity demanded of a good and its price when all other
influences on consumers’ planned purchases remain the
same.
Demand
• Figure 3.1 shows a demand curve for energy bars.
Demand

• A rise in the price, other things


remaining the same, decreases the
quantity demanded and brings a
movement up along the demand
curve.
• A fall in the price, other things
remaining the same, increases the
quantity demanded and brings a
movement down along the
demand curve.
Demand

• A Change in Demand
• When some influence on buying plans other than the price of the
good changes, there is a change in demand for that good.
• The quantity of the good that people plan to buy changes at each
and every price, so there is a new demand curve.
• When demand increases, the demand curve shifts rightward.
• When demand decreases, the demand curve shifts leftward.
Demand

Six main factors that change demand are:


■ The prices of related goods
■ Expected future prices
■ Income
■ Expected future income and credit
■ Population
■ Preferences
Demand

• Prices of Related Goods


• A substitute is a good that can be used in place of another good.
• A complement is a good that is used in conjunction with another
good.
• When the price of a substitute for an energy bar rises or when the
price of a complement of an energy bar falls, the demand for
energy bars increases.
Demand
• Expected Future Prices
• If the price of a good is expected to rise in the future, current
demand for the good increases and the demand curve shifts
rightward.
• Income
• When income increases, consumers buy more of most goods and the
demand curve shifts rightward.
• A normal good is one for which demand increases as income
increases.
• An inferior good is a good for which demand decreases as income
increases.
Demand
• Expected Future Income and Credit
• When income is expected to increase in the future or when credit is
easy to obtain, the demand might increase now.
• Population
• The larger the population, the greater is the demand for all goods.
• Preferences
• People with the same income have different demands if they have
different preferences.
Demand
• Figure 3.2 shows an increase in demand.
• An increase in income increases the demand for energy bars
and shifts the demand curve rightward.
Demand

• A Change in the Quantity


Demanded Versus a Change in
Demand
• Figure 3.3 illustrates the distinction
between a change in demand and a
change in the quantity demanded.
Demand

• Movement Along the Demand


Curve
• When the price of the good
changes and other things
remain the same, the quantity
demanded changes and there
is a movement along the
demand curve.
Demand

• A Shift of the Demand


Curve
• If the price remains the
same but one of the other
influences on buyers’ plans
changes, demand changes
and the demand curve
shifts.
Supply

If a firm supplies a good or service, then the firm


1. Has the resources and the technology to produce it,
2. Can profit from producing it, and
3. Has made a definite plan to produce and sell it.
• Resources and technology determine what it is possible to
produce. Supply reflects a decision about which technologically
feasible items to produce.
• The quantity supplied of a good or service is the amount that
producers plan to sell during a given time period at a particular
price.
Supply
• The Law of Supply
• The law of supply states:
• Other things remaining the same, the higher the price of a good,
the greater is the quantity supplied; and
• the lower the price of a good, the smaller is the quantity supplied.
• The law of supply results from the general tendency for the
marginal cost of producing a good or service to increase as the
quantity produced increases
• Producers are willing to supply a good only if they can at least cover
their marginal cost of production.
Supply

• Supply Curve
• The term supply refers to the entire relationship between the
quantity supplied and the price of a good.
• The supply curve shows the relationship between the quantity
supplied of a good and its price when all other influences on
producers’ planned sales remain the same.
Supply
• Figure 3.4 shows a supply curve of energy bars.

A rise in the price, other


things remaining the
same, brings an increase
in the quantity supplied.
Supply
• A Change in Supply
• When some influence on selling plans other than the price of the
good changes, there is a change in supply of that good.
• The quantity of the good that producers plan to sell changes at each
and every price, so there is a new supply curve.
• When supply increases, the supply curve shifts rightward.
• When supply decreases, the supply curve shifts leftward.
Supply
The six main factors that change supply of a good are
§ The prices of factors of production
§ The prices of related goods produced
§ Expected future prices
§ The number of suppliers
§ Technology
§ State of nature
Supply

• Prices of Factors of Production


• If the price of a factor of production used to produce a
good rises, the minimum price that a supplier is willing to
accept for producing each quantity of that good rises.
• So a rise in the price of a factor of production decreases
supply and shifts the supply curve leftward.
Supply
• Prices of Related Goods Produced
• A substitute in production for a good is another good that can be
produced using the same resources.
• The supply of a good increases if the price of a substitute in
production falls.
• Goods are complements in production if they must be produced
together.
• The supply of a good increases if the price of a complement in
production rises.
Supply

• Expected Future Prices


• If the price of a good is expected to rise in the future,
supply of the good today decreases and the supply curve
shifts leftward.
• The Number of Suppliers
• The larger the number of suppliers of a good, the greater is
the supply of the good. An increase in the number of
suppliers shifts the supply curve rightward.
Supply
• Technology
• Advances in technology create new products and lower the cost of
producing existing products.
• So advances in technology increase supply and shift the supply
curve rightward.
• The State of Nature
• The state of nature includes all the natural forces that influence
production—for example, the weather.
• A natural disaster decreases supply and shifts the supply curve
leftward.
Supply
• Figure 3.5 shows an increase in supply.
• An advance in the technology increases the supply of energy
bars and shifts the supply curve rightward.
Supply

• A Change in the Quantity


Supplied Versus a Change in
Supply
• Figure 3.6 illustrates the
distinction between a change in
supply and a change in the
quantity supplied.
Supply

• Movement Along the Supply


Curve
• When the price of the good
changes and other influences on
sellers’ plans remain the same,
the quantity supplied changes
and there is a movement along
the supply curve.
Supply

• A Shift of the Supply Curve


• If the price remains the same
but some other influence on
sellers’ plans changes, supply
changes and the supply curve
shifts.
Market Equilibrium

• Equilibrium is a situation in which opposing forces balance each


other.
• A market equilibrium occurs when the price balances the plans of
buyers and sellers.
• The equilibrium price is the price at which the quantity demanded
equals the quantity supplied.
• The equilibrium quantity is the quantity bought and sold at the
equilibrium price.
■ Price regulates buying and selling plans.
■ Price adjusts when plans don’t match.
Market Equilibrium

Figure 3.7 illustrates the


market equilibrium—the
price at which quantity
demanded equals quantity
supplied.
Market Equilibrium

• Price as a Regulator

If the price is $1.00 a bar, the


quantity demanded exceeds
the quantity supplied.
There’s a shortage of 9 million
energy bars.
Market Equilibrium

• Price as a Regulator

If the price is $2.00 a bar, the


quantity supplied exceeds the
quantity demanded.
There’s a surplus of 6 million
energy bars.
Market Equilibrium

• Price as a Regulator

If the price is $1.50 a bar, the


quantity supplied equals the
quantity demanded.
No shortage or surplus of bars.
Market Equilibrium

• Price Adjustments
• At prices below the equilibrium
price, a shortage forces the price up.
• At prices above the equilibrium
price, a surplus forces the price
down.
• At the equilibrium price, buyers’
plans and sellers’ plans agree and
the price doesn’t change until an
event changes demand or supply.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

• An Increase in Demand
• Figure 3.8 shows that when demand
increases the demand curve shifts
rightward.
• At the original price, there is now a
shortage.
• The price rises, and the quantity
supplied increases along the supply
curve.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

• A Decrease in Demand
• The figure shows that when
demand decreases the
demand curve shifts leftward.
• At the original price, there is
now a surplus.
• The price falls, and the
quantity supplied decreases
along the supply curve.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

• An Increase in Supply
• Figure 3.9 shows that when supply
increases the supply curve shifts
rightward.
• At the original price, there is now a
surplus.
• The price falls, and the quantity
demanded increases along the
demand curve.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

• A Decrease in Supply
• The figure shows that when
supply decreases the supply
curve shifts leftward.
• At the original price, there is now
a shortage.
• The price rises, and the quantity
demanded decreases along the
demand curve.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

• Changes in Both Demand and Supply


• A change in both demand and supply changes the equilibrium
price and the equilibrium quantity.
• Figure 3.10 illustrates changes in the same direction.
• Figure 3.11 illustrates changes in opposite directions.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

• Demand and Supply Change in the


Same Direction
An increase in demand and
an increase in supply increase the
equilibrium quantity.
The change in equilibrium price is
uncertain because the increase in
demand raises the price and the increase
in supply lowers it.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

A decrease in both demand and


supply decreases the equilibrium
quantity.
The change in equilibrium price is
uncertain because the decrease in
demand lowers the price and the
decrease in supply raises the price.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

• Demand and Supply Change in


Opposite Directions
An increase in supply and
a decrease in demand lowers
the equilibrium price.
The change in equilibrium quantity is
uncertain because the decrease in
demand decreases the quantity and
the increase in supply increases it.
Predicting Changes in Price and Quantity

A decrease in supply and an


increase in demand and raises the
equilibrium price.
The change in equilibrium quantity
is uncertain because the decrease
in supply decreases the quantity
and the increase in demand
increases it.
Questions?

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