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MARKET CLEARING PRICE

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This is the only price at which sellers want to sell as much as buyers want to buy ... market prices provide incentives for people to produce goods and services. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MARKET CLEARING PRICE


1
MARKET CLEARING PRICE
  • UNIT FOUR

2
DEMAND AND SUPPLY
  • Question
  • Since consumers want to buy when prices are
    low and producers want to sell when prices are
    high, how is a price for a good or service
    derived?

3
MAKING A MARKET CLEAR
  • The price at which the supply and demand curves
    intersect, where supply equals demand, is the
    market clearing price or market equilibrium
  • This is the only price at which sellers want to
    sell as much as buyers want to buy

4
What if the price is below the market clearing
level?
  • A shortage occurs
  • Shortage is how much more of a product buyers
    want to buy then sellers want to sell at a given
    price

5
Example of Shortage
  • At 0.50 buyers want to buy 29 million gallons
    of gasoline, but producers want to sell only 4
    million gallons.
  • The difference between these two amounts, 25
    million gallons, is a shortage

6
What happens if the price is above its market
clearing level?
  • A surplus occurs
  • Surplus is how much more of a product sellers
    want to sell than buyers want to buy at a given
    price

7
Example of Surplus
  • At 2.50 per gallon producers want to sell 27
    million gallons per week, but buyers want to buy
    only 11 million gallons. The difference between
    these amounts, 16 million gallons, is a surplus

8
What pushes price toward its market clearing
level in both situations?
  • COMPETITION!
  • Competition among buyers pushes prices up toward
    their market clearing levels
  • Competition among sellers pushes prices down
    toward their market clearing levels

9
PRICES THAT RATION
  • Ration- The distribution or allocation of
  • a product
  • Rationing needs to be done when a product or
    service is scarce because there is not enough to
    satisfy all of everyones wants

10
Ways in which we ration
  • Auction (the one who is willing and able to buy
    the product at the market clearing price wins the
    auction)
  • The Regular Marketplace (prices are set in a
    manner that only those willing and able to buy
    scarce goods have that opportunity) Example
    Diamonds

11
PRICES THAT MOTIVATE
  • Besides rationing, market prices provide
    incentives for people to produce goods and
    services.
  • Market prices guide decisions about what (and
    how much) to produce and how to produce these
    goods and services.

12
CHANGES IN PRICES AND PRODUCTION
  • Demands and supplies are continually changing,
    causing some market-clearing prices to rise and
    some to fall.
  • These higher and lower prices cause some
    businesses in our economy to expand and others to
    contract.

13
A comparison of the Fortune 500 businesses
illustrates some of these changes
14
Top Ten Companies in the Fortune 500
  • 1954
  • 1. General Motors
  • 2. Standard Oil (Exxon)
  • 3. U.S. Steel
  • 4. General Electric
  • 5. Swift (Meat)
  • 6. Chrysler
  • 7. Armour (Meat)
  • 8. Gulf Oil
  • 9. Socony-Vacuum Oil
  • 10. Du Pont (Plastics)
  • 2004
  • 1. Wal-Mart
  • 2. Exxon Mobil
  • 3. General Motors
  • 4. Ford Motor Company
  • 5. General Electric
  • 6. Chevron Texaco
  • 7. Conoco Phillips
  • 8. Citigroup
  • 9. International Business Machines
  • 10. American International
  • Group

15
INFORMATION AND INCENTIVES
  • INFORMATION
  • Market clearing prices summarize the
    preferences of consumers, telling producers what
    consumers want most.
  • They also tell consumers about the producers
    costs of satisfying those wants.

16
INFORMATION AND INCENTIVES
  • Businesses have an incentive to conserve and
    efficiently use their scarce and costly
    resources. If a business can keep its production
    costs low, then it can earn a profit by selling
    its product at the market-clearing price
  • Consumers have an incentive to reduce their
    consumption of particular products to fit the
    supplies available
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