Chapter 3: Demand and Supply - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 3: Demand and Supply

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Title: Chapter 3: Demand and Supply


1
Chapter 3 Demand and Supply
2
Barter vs. monetary economy
  • Barter goods are traded directly for other goods

3
Barter vs. monetary economy
  • Barter goods are traded directly for other
    goods
  • Problems
  • requires double coincidence of wants
  • large number of trading ratios N(N-1)/2 (high
    information costs)

4
Barter vs. monetary economy
  • Barter goods are traded directly for other
    goods
  • Problems
  • requires double coincidence of wants
  • large number of trading ratios N(N-1)/2 (high
    information costs)
  • Monetary economy has lower transaction and
    information costs

5
Relative and nominal prices
  • Relative price price of a good in terms of
    another good

6
Relative and nominal prices
  • Relative price price of a good in terms of
    another good
  • Nominal price price expressed in terms of the
    monetary unit

7
Relative and nominal prices
  • Relative price price of a good in terms of
    another good
  • Nominal price price expressed in terms of the
    monetary unit
  • Relative price is a more direct measure of
    opportunity cost

8
Markets
  • In a market economy, the price of a good is
    determined by the interaction of demand and supply

9
Demand
  • A relationship between price and quantity
    demanded in a given time period, ceteris paribus.

10
Demand schedule
11
Demand curve
12
Law of demand
  • An inverse relationship exists between the price
    of a good and the quantity demanded in a given
    time period, ceteris paribus.

13
Law of demand
  • An inverse relationship exists between the price
    of a good and the quantity demanded in a given
    time period, ceteris paribus.
  • Reasons
  • substitution effect
  • income effect

14
Change in quantity demanded vs. change in demand
Change in quantity demanded Change in
demand
15
Market demand curve
  • Market demand is the horizontal summation of
    individual consumer demand curves

16
Determinants of demand
  • tastes and preferences

17
Determinants of demand
  • tastes and preferences
  • prices of related goods and services

18
Determinants of demand
  • tastes and preferences
  • prices of related goods and services
  • income

19
Determinants of demand
  • tastes and preferences
  • prices of related goods and services
  • income
  • number of consumers

20
Determinants of demand
  • tastes and preferences
  • prices of related goods and services
  • income
  • number of consumers
  • expectations of future prices and income

21
Tastes and preferences
  • Effect of fads

22
Prices of related goods
  • substitute goods an increase in the price of
    one results in an increase in the demand for the
    other.

23
Prices of related goods
  • substitute goods an increase in the price of
    one results in an increase in the demand for the
    other.
  • complementary goods an increase in the price of
    one results in a decrease in the demand for the
    other.

24
Change in the price of a substitute good
  • Price of coffee rises

25
Change in the price of a complementary good
  • Price of DVDs rises

26
Income and demand normal goods
  • A good is a normal good if an increase in income
    results in an increase in the demand for the good.

27
Income and demand inferior goods
  • A good is an inferior good if an increase in
    income results in a reduction in the demand for
    the good.

28
Demand and the of buyers
  • An increase in the number of buyers results in an
    increase in demand.

29
Expectations
  • A higher expected future price will increase
    current demand.

30
Expectations
  • A higher expected future price will increase
    current demand.
  • A lower expected future price will decrease
    current demand.

31
Expectations
  • A higher expected future price will increase
    current demand.
  • A lower expected future price will decrease
    current demand.
  • A higher expected future income will increase the
    demand for all normal goods.

32
Expectations
  • A higher expected future price will increase
    current demand.
  • A lower expected future price will decrease
    current demand.
  • A higher expected future income will increase the
    demand for all normal goods.
  • A lower expected future income will reduce the
    demand for all normal goods.

33
International effects
  • exchange rate the rate at which one currency is
    exchanged for another.

34
International effects
  • exchange rate the rate at which one currency is
    exchanged for another.
  • currency appreciation an increase in the value
    of a currency relative to other currencies.

35
International effects
  • exchange rate the rate at which one currency is
    exchanged for another.
  • currency appreciation an increase in the value
    of a currency relative to other currencies.
  • currency depreciation a decrease in the value
    of a currency relative to other currencies.

36
International effects (continued)
  • Domestic currency appreciation causes
    domestically produced goods and services to
    become more expensive in foreign countries.

37
International effects (continued)
  • Domestic currency appreciation causes
    domestically produced goods and services to
    become more expensive in foreign countries.
  • An increase in the exchange value of the U.S.
    dollar results in a reduction in the demand for
    U.S. goods and services.

38
International effects (continued)
  • Domestic currency appreciation causes
    domestically produced goods and services to
    become more expensive in foreign countries.
  • An increase in the exchange value of the U.S.
    dollar results in a reduction in the demand for
    U.S. goods and services.
  • The demand for U.S. goods and services will rise
    if the U.S. dollar depreciates.

39
Supply
  • the relationship that exists between the price of
    a good and the quantity supplied in a given time
    period, ceteris paribus.

40
Supply schedule
41
Law of supply
  • A direct relationship exists between the price of
    a good and the quantity supplied in a given time
    period, ceteris paribus.

42
Reason for law of supply
  • The law of supply is the result of the law of
    increasing cost.
  • As the quantity of a good produced rises, the
    marginal opportunity cost rises.
  • Sellers will only produce and sell an additional
    unit of a good if the price rises above the
    marginal opportunity cost of producing the
    additional unit.

43
Change in supply vs. change in quantity supplied
Change in supply Change in quantity
supplied
44
Individual firm and market supply curves
  • The market supply curve is the horizontal
    summation of the supply curves of individual
    firms. (This is equivalent to the relationship
    between individual and market demand curves.)

45
Determinants of supply
  • the price of resources,

46
Determinants of supply
  • the price of resources,
  • technology and productivity,

47
Determinants of supply
  • the price of resources,
  • technology and productivity,
  • the expectations of producers,

48
Determinants of supply
  • the price of resources,
  • technology and productivity,
  • the expectations of producers,
  • the number of producers, and

49
Determinants of supply
  • the price of resources,
  • technology and productivity,
  • the expectations of producers,
  • the number of producers, and
  • the prices of related goods and services
  • note that this involves a relationship in
    production, not in consumption

50
Price of resources
  • As the price of a resource rises, profitability
    declines, leading to a reduction in the quantity
    supplied at any price.

51
Technological improvements
  • Technological improvements (and any changes that
    raise the productivity of labor) lower production
    costs and increase profitability.

52
Expectations and supply
  • An increase in the expected future price of a
    good or service results in a reduction in current
    supply.

53
Increase in of sellers
54
Prices of other goods
  • Firms produce and sell more than one commodity.

55
Prices of other goods
  • Firms produce and sell more than one commodity.
  • Firms respond to the relative profitability of
    the different items that they sell.

56
Prices of other goods
  • Firms produce and sell more than one commodity.
  • Firms respond to the relative profitability of
    the different items that they sell.
  • The supply decision for a particular good is
    affected not only by the goods own price but
    also by the prices of other goods and services
    the firm may produce.

57
International effects
  • Firms import raw materials (and often the final
    product) from foreign countries. The cost of
    these imports varies with the exchange rate.

58
International effects
  • Firms import raw materials (and often the final
    product) from foreign countries. The cost of
    these imports varies with the exchange rate.
  • When the exchange value of a dollar rises, the
    domestic price of imported inputs will fall and
    the domestic supply of the final commodity will
    increase.

59
International effects
  • Firms import raw materials (and often the final
    product) from foreign countries. The cost of
    these imports varies with the exchange rate.
  • When the exchange value of a dollar rises, the
    domestic price of imported inputs will fall and
    the domestic supply of the final commodity will
    increase.
  • A decline in the exchange value of the dollar
    raises the price of imported inputs and reduce
    the supply of domestic products that rely on
    these inputs.

60
Market equilibrium
61
Price above equilibrium
  • If the price exceeds the equilibrium price, a
    surplus occurs

62
Price below equilibrium
  • If the price is below the equilibrium a shortage
    occurs

63
Demand rises
64
Demand falls
65
Supply rises
66
Supply falls
67
Price ceiling
  • Price ceiling - legally mandated maximum price

68
Price ceiling
  • Price ceiling - legally mandated maximum price
  • Purpose keep price below the market equilibrium
    price

69
Price ceiling
  • Price ceiling - legally mandated maximum price
  • Purpose keep price below the market equilibrium
    price
  • Examples
  • rent controls
  • price controls during wartime
  • gas price rationing in 1970s

70
Price ceiling (continued)
71
Price floor
  • price floor - legally mandated minimum price

72
Price floor
  • price floor - legally mandated minimum price
  • designed to maintain a price above the
    equilibrium level

73
Price floor
  • price floor - legally mandated minimum price
  • designed to maintain a price above the
    equilibrium level
  • examples
  • agricultural price supports
  • minimum wage laws

74
Price floor (continued)
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