Economic Development Unit 1B
Economic Development Unit 1B
Economic Development Unit 1B
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Derick’s Demand
Demand Schedule Price
Quantity
of lattes
of lattes
•Demand schedule: demanded
• Quantity demanded
A table, shows the relationship $0.00 16
• Amount of a good that buyers are
willing and able to purchase between the price of a good and 1.00 14
the quantity demanded 2.00 12
• Law of demand 3.00 10
• Other things equal
Example: Derick’s demand for 4.00 8
• When the price of a good rises, the
latte 5.00 6
quantity demanded of the good Price Quantity Notice that Derick’s preferences
6.00 4
falls obey the law of demand.
• When the price falls, the quantity
demanded rises
Price Quantity
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Market Demand versus Individual Demand The Market Demand Curve for
•Suppose Derick and Dean are the only two buyers in the Lattes
market for lattes. (Qd = quantity demanded) P P Qd (Market)
$6.00
$0.00 24
Price Derick’s Qd Dean’s Qd Market Qd $5.00
1.00 21
$0.00 16 + 8 = 24 $4.00 2.00 18
1.00 14 + 7 = 21
$3.00 3.00 15
2.00 12 + 6 = 18
4.00 12
3.00 10 + 5 = 15 $2.00
5.00 9
4.00 8 + 4 = 12 $1.00 6.00 6
5.00 6 + 3 = 9 $0.00
6.00 4 + 2 = 6
Q
0 5 10 15 20 25
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• the law of diminishing marginal utility, which states • These “other things” are non-price D D1
that for a given time period, the marginal (or determinants of demand Q
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Demand Curve Shifters Demand Curve Shifters
Income of Consumers
Tastes & Preferences of Consumers
• As people’s tastes change in
Example: When Michael Jordan began • As income increases, Example: When Billy got laid off from his job,
endorsing the products, demand for Nike
favor of a good, or an & Gatorade increased.
consumer demand for goods his demand for gourmet steak dinners
decreased.
effective advertising and services increases (shifts
campaign has been waged,
demand increases (shifts to to the right).
the right). • As income decreases,
• As people’s tastes change consumer demand for goods
against a good, or a good
loses popularity, demand and services decreases
decreases (shifts to the left). (shifts to the left).
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Demand Curve Shifters Demand Curve Shifters
Expectations of Future Price Changes Size of Population/Market
• If consumers expect the • As the number of consumers
price of a good to rise in in a given market increases, Example: Demand for BTS concert
the future, immediate Example: Demand for gas changes
throughout the week demand increases (shifts to tickets items increases when more K
demand increases (shifts the right). pop fans would watch their concerts.
to the right).
• If consumers expect the • As the number of consumers
price of a good to in a given market decreases,
decrease in the future, demand decreases (shifts to
immediate demand the left).
decreases (shifts to the
left).
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Summary: Supply
Variables That Influence Buyers
• Quantity supplied
• Amount of a good
• Sellers are willing and able to sell
• Law of supply
• Other things equal
• When the price of a good rises, the
quantity supplied of the good rises Price Quantity
• When the price falls, the quantity
supplied falls
Price Quantity
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Starbucks’ Supply Schedule Starbucks’ Supply Schedule and Supply
Curve
Price Quantity
•Supply schedule: Price Quantity P of of lattes
A table, shows the relationship of of lattes $6.00 lattes supplied
between the price of a good and lattes supplied $0.00 0
the quantity supplied. $5.00
$0.00 0 1.00 3
1.00 3 $4.00 2.00 6
Example: Starbucks’ supply of 2.00 6 3.00 9
$3.00
lattes 3.00 9 4.00 12
Notice that Starbucks’ supply 4.00 12
$2.00
5.00 15
schedule obeys the law of supply $1.00
5.00 15 6.00 18
6.00 18 $0.00
Q
0 5 10 15
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The Market Supply Curve
P Supply Curve Shifters
QS
$6.00 P
(Market)
• The supply curve
$5.00 $0.00 0
• Shows how price affects quantity supplied, other things
$4.00 1.00 5 being equal
2.00 10
$3.00
3.00 15 • These “other things”
$2.00 4.00 20 • Are non-price determinants of supply
$1.00 5.00 25
6.00 30 • Changes in them shift the S curve…
$0.00
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Q
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Supply Curve Shifters
Government Intervention
Example:
If the import tax on Toyota Corollas P
(Taxes, Fees, Regulations, Subsidies)) increases, the profit per unit decreases,
and American manufacturers will not be
• When a tax, fee, or regulation is P
able to afford to offer as many for sale.
S1 S
Q
imposed on the production of a
good or service, supply decreases S1 S
(shifts to the left). Q
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Supply Curve Shifters
Example:
If Farmer Joe hears that the price of corn is going to
increase next month, he’s going to wait to sell his corn Resource Costs P
(therefore decreasing the immediate supply of corn). • As the factors of production (land,
labor, and capital) become more S1 S
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Summary:
Example: Variables That Influence Sellers
If the Never City Council passed a law banning pizza
from being sold within city limits, pizza producers
would have to close/move, decreasing the supply of
pizza in Never.
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Market Demand and Supply Equilibrium
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If Demand Increases…
What happens
when demand or
P2
supply shifts?
D2
Q2
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If Demand Decreases… If Supply Increases…
S2
P2 P2
D2
Q2 Q2
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P2
• Does the event shift the supply or demand curve?
• Will the curve shift rightward ( ) or leftward ( ) ?
• Draw & label the new curve on your graph
• Locate the new equilibrium (price and qty)
Q2
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Del Monte largest country’s spaghetti
producer cuts pasta prices
Spaghetti Sauce
P2
D2
Q2
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Typhoon Yolanda destroy much of Farmer invents new picking machine – Harvests
Ormoc pineapple crop mangoes in half the time
Pineapple Juice Sweet Delicious Mangoes
S2
S2
P2
P2
Q2 Q2
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Markets Not in Equilibrium: Surplus
Disequilibrium
•Surplus (excess supply):
P D S •quantity supplied is greater
Disequilibrium $6.00 Surplus
than quantity demanded
A state of either surplus or shortage in the $5.00
market $4.00
•Example: if P = $5,
• then QD = 9 lattes
Disequilibrium Price
$3.00 • and QS = 25 lattes
A price other than equilibrium price. A price at •
$2.00
which the quantity demanded does not equal the •resulting in a surplus of 16
quantity supplied. $1.00 lattes
$0.00
Q
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
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Markets Not in Equilibrium: Shortage Markets Not in Equilibrium: Shortage
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$2.00 shortage.
•Prices continue to rise until • These equilibrium prices
$1.00 market reaches equilibrium. • Are the signals that guide economic decisions and thereby
Shortage
$0.00 • allocate scarce resources
Q
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
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Summary Summary
• Economists use the model of supply and demand to • The supply curve shows how the quantity of a good
analyze competitive markets. supplied depends on the price.
• Many buyers and sellers, all are price takers • Law of supply: as the price of a good rises, the quantity
• The demand curve shows how the quantity of a good supplied rises; the S curve slopes upward.
demanded depends on the price. • Other determinants of supply: input prices,
• Law of demand: as the price of a good falls, the technology, expectations, and number of sellers.
quantity demanded rises; the D curve slopes downward • If one of these factors changes, supply curve shifts.
• Other determinants of demand: income, prices of • The intersection of the supply and demand curves
substitutes and complements, tastes, expectations, and determines the market equilibrium.
number of buyers.
• At the equilibrium price, quantity demanded =
• If one of these factors changes, the D curve shifts quantity supplied
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Summary Summary
• The behavior of buyers and sellers naturally drives • To analyze how any event influences a market, we use
markets toward their equilibrium. the supply-and-demand diagram to examine how the
• When the market price is above the equilibrium event affects the equilibrium price and quantity.
price, there is a surplus of the good, which causes 1. Decide whether the event shifts the supply curve or
the market price to fall. the demand curve (or both).
• When the market price is below the equilibrium 2. Decide in which direction the curve shifts.
price, there is a shortage, which causes the market 3. Compare the new equilibrium with the initial one.
price to rise. • In market economies, prices are the signals that guide
economic decisions and thereby allocate scarce
resources.
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