Title: Markets and Competitive Equilibrium
1Markets and Competitive Equilibrium
2In This Lecture
- Market Equilibrium and the Forces Moving the
Market Toward Equilibrium - The Hypothesis of a Single Price
- Changes in Demand and Supply
- Case Study--Gasoline Prices
- Case Study--Scalping ND Football Tickets
3Demand and Supply Review
- Demand
- Given a price, how much will be demanded?
- Given a quantity, what is the maximum amount
would the demanders be willing to pay? - Supply
- Given a price, how much will be supplied?
- Given a quantity supplied, what is the minimum
price per unit would be acceptable to the
suppliers? - Is PH an Equilibrium Price?
PH
QD
QS
4Too High of a Price Results in Excess Supply
- At the price, PH, there is more of the good being
supplied than demanded - Consequently, these suppliers who cant sell at
PH will offer their output at a slightly lower
price -- have a sale. - The sale will take away purchases from
competitors who will be forced to lower their
prices to maintain sales - Price will fall!
5Too Low of a Price Results in Excess Demand
- At the price, PL, there is more of the good being
demanded than supplied - Consequently, supplies will sell out and still
have customers wanting to buy product at PL. - Price will rise!
PL
6Equilibrium Price
- At PE, the quantity demanded is equal to the
quantity supplied - At this price, everyones wishes are being met --
no one has incentive or desire to do something
different - If nothing else changed, we would expect the
price and amount of donuts produced and sold to
be constant over time
PE
QEQSQD
7Social Function of Prices
- Prices coordinate decisions between sellers and
buyers - Will everyone be on the same page?
8Single Price
- In a significant number of situations,
individuals are charged different amounts for the
same good (car purchases). Yet we would expect
there to be a single price in a competitive
market. Why? - IF everyone knew the rate (price) that others
were trading, why would they every pay more than
others were paying? Why would sellers accept
less? If they did then the multiple prices could
not be an equilibrium since they would want to do
something else. - We are assuming perfect information on the part
of buyers and sellers of the goods.
9Alternatives to Price Rationing
- Prices ration scarce goods to those who are
willing and able to pay. - What other rationing mechanisms are there?
- Can these alternatives produce outcomes equal in
efficiency?
10Increase in Demand
- Increase in Demand
- At existing price, Po, there is excess demand --
customers want more of the good - Both price and the quantity supplied rise, a
movement along the supply curve - New Equilibrium
- Higher equilibrium price
- Higher equilibrium quantity
P1
Q1
11Decrease in Demand
- Decrease in Demand
- At existing price, Po, there is excess supply --
there are goods on the shelf -- sale! - Both price and the quantity supplied fall, a
movement along the supply curve - New Equilibrium
- Lower equilibrium price
- Lower equilibrium quantity
P1
Q1
12Decrease in Supply
- Decrease in Supply
- At existing price, Po, there is excess demand --
customers want more - Price rises and quantity demanded falls, movement
along the demand curve - New Equilibrium
- Higher equilibrium price
- Lower equilibrium quantity
P1
Q1
13Increase in Supply
- Increase in Supply
- At existing price, Po, there is excess supply --
inventories rise -- sales - Price falls and quantity demanded increases,
movement along the demand curve - New Equilibrium
- Lower equilibrium price
- Higher equilibrium quantity
P1
Q1
14Nominal Gasoline Prices
15Real Gasoline Prices
16Why has the price of gas risen?
- Increase in the price of crude oil (supply
consideration) - Decrease in oil reserves?
- Instability in oil producing regions
- No increase in the refinery capacity (supply
considerations) - Increase in the demand for gasoline
- Economic Growth in China and other developing
nations - Our own growth
17Monthly Gas Prices (1992-1996)
18Explaining Monthly Changes
- Summer Vacations -- Drive More (Demand Shift)
- In May, refineries shut down for maintenance and
shift over to seasonal blends (Supply Shift)
19Seasonal Changes
DS
20Variation in Gas Prices over the Week
- Why does the price of gas rise during the
weekend? - a. Demand considerations
- Supply considerations
- Are the increases justified? That is, are they
fair to the consumer?
21ND Football Ticket Policy
- What is NDs pricing strategy?
- Tickets sales account for 90 of athletic budget
- Opposed to filling the stadium with season ticket
holders unfair to alums who live far away - 4,000 season ticket holders account for 15,000
seats - Uses a lottery to fill remaining seats
- Refundable Application fee per game
- 5 yrs
- 100 all other graduating classes
- Application fees are sent to Development Office
22ND Football Ticket Policy
- What are the determinants of NDs printed ticket
prices? - Explicit philosophy Do NOT let ticket prices
reach market price - Uniform price regardless of location
- What is NDs resale policy?
- Resale above the printed ticket price is illegal
and subject to penalty - Resale is unethical. The football game is our
product. Others should not profit.
23The Secondary Market for ND Football Tickets
- Why is ticket scalping inevitable?
- Hint Why are ticket available for resale? Who
are the sellers - Who are the buyers in the secondary market?
- Is the secondary market competitive?
- Does the secondary market improve the allocative
efficiency of the market for ND football tickets?
24Notre Dame Ticket Scalping
- What we learned from interviews with scalpers
- Scalpers are both buy and sell
- Their strategy is to buy low and sell high
- There are two categories of scalpers
- Corporate brokers (PJ Tickets, Victory Tickets)
- Amateurs (High school buddies)
- Corporate brokers buy from ticket holders hoping
to make a profit - Amateurs buy from ticket holders hoping to get
their money back.
25Notre Dame Ticket Scalping
- Amateurs
- Their profit margin goal is 15 per sale
- Take turns like car dealers. The lowest price is
quoted by the up guy. - The reduce risk, they hold no more than 10
tickets at a time - Each amateur sells 50 to 100 tickets a game and
pocket 750 TO 1,500 in profits. - Guesstimate of the number of tickets scalped per
game 3,000
26Assignment for Next Lecture
- Do Homework 4 on Homework Assignment by
Wednesday at 5 pm - Read Chapter 4
- Topics Next Time
- The Market Strikes Back (Its difficult to
control the market)