Demand
Dec 29, 2015
Demand
What is Demand?Chapter 4, Section 1
What is Demand?O Demand-the desire, ability, and,
willingness to buy/own a product-can compete with others who have similar demands
O Microeconomics-area of economics that deals with behavior and decision making in small units, such as individuals and firms
These concepts help explain how prices are determined and how
individual economic decisions are made!
Individual Demand Schedule/Curve
O Demand Schedule-a listing that shows the various quantities demanded of a particular product at all prices that might prevail in the market at a given time
O Demand Curve-the graphic representation that shows the quantity of a good a person will buy at each different price
Law of DemandO Law of Demand-consumers buy
more of a good when its prices decreases and less when it increases
Price is an obstacle, which discourages consumers from
buying. The higher the obstacle, the less of a product they will buy
Market Demand Schedule/Curve
O Market Demand Schedule-a table that lists the quantity of a good all consumers in a market will buy at each different price
O Market Demand Curve-shows the quantities demanded by everyone who is interested in purchasing the product
Demand and Marginal Utility
O Marginal Utility-the extra usefulness or satisfaction a person gets from acquiring or using one more unit of a product
O Diminishing Marginal Utility-the extra satisfaction we get from using additional quantities of the product begins to diminish; because of diminishing satisfaction, we are not willing to pay as much for the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and so on, as we did the 1st-therefore you are not willing to pay as muchMarginal Utility <Price ->Stop buying
Factors Affecting Demand
Chapter 4, Section 2
Factors Affecting Demand
O Occasionally, something happens to change people’s willingness and ability to buy:O A change in quantity demanded O A change in demand
Quantity vs. DemandO Change in quantity demanded-whenever there is a
movement along the demand curve symbolizing a change in the price of the product; change from point-to-point; left to show and decrease and right to show and increase
O Reasoning behind this change??O Income Effect-the change in quantity demanded because
of a change in price that alters consumers’ real incomeO Normal good-A good that consumers demand more of
when their incomes increaseO Inferior good-A good that consumers demand less of
when their incomes increase
O Substitution Effect-the change in the quantity demanded because of the change in the relative price of the product
Change in DemandO Change in Demand-consumers demand different
amounts at every price, causing the demand curve to shift left to show an decrease or to the right to show an increase
O Reasoning behind this change??O Consumer IncomeO Consumer TastesO Substitutes-goods used in place of anotherO Complements-two goods that are bought and
used togetherO Change in ExpectationsO Number of Consumers
Elasticity of DemandChapter 4, Section 3
Review from Last ClassO What does the Law of Demand state?O What are the three justifications of
the Law of Demand?O What is the difference between a
change in Quantity Demand and a change in Demand?
O What are the 6 factors the book discusses which change demand?
ElasticityO Elasticity-a measure of responsiveness that tells
us how a dependent variable such as quantity responds to a change in an independent variable such as price
O We know that changes in price will effect the quantity that consumers demand…but the question that still exists is by how much? Large, small, or proportionate?
O Elasticity allows us to examine how sensitive the quantity consumers demand will be due to the change in price
Elasticity of DemandO Demand Elasticity-the extent to which a
change in price causes a change in quantity demandedO Elastic-When the response by consumers is
one that is relatively large; very sensitive to change
O Inelastic-When the response by consumers is one that is relatively small; not very sensitive to change
O Unit Elastic-When the response by consumers is one that is proportional; equal to 1
Determinants of Demand Elasticity
O What makes the demand for a specific good elastic or inelastic?1. Can the purchase be delayed?2. Are adequate substitutes available?3. Does the purchase use a large
portion of income?
Activity with ElasticityO I will split you up into groups of 3. Each
group will be responsible for creating a poster of the 3 basic types of elasticity: elastic, inelastic, and unit elastic.
O For each type, you will have a title, graph, and explanation of the graph.
O Under the three graphs you will provide me with the 3 determinants of elasticity: also, explaining each and giving examples for each.
Determinants of
elasticity
Fresh tomatoes, corn, or green
beans
Table
Salt
Gasoline from
a particu
lar station
Gasoline in
general
Services of
medical
doctors
Insulin Butter
Can purchase
be delayed?
Are adequate
substitutes available?
Does purchase
use a large portion of income?
Type of elasticity