Date post: | 12-Jan-2016 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | catherine-wright |
View: | 235 times |
Download: | 0 times |
Chapter 4 - Demand
What is Demand? Law of Demand Determinants of Demand Demand v. Quantity Demanded Elasticity of Demand
DEFINITION:
Demand:
Displayed as a schedule or curve The curve or schedule shows the relationship
between price and quantity: the quantity consumers are willing and able to buy at each of a series of prices
The Market System Market consists of:
Consumers - create a demand for a product Demand
the amount consumers desire to purchase at various prices
Not what they will buy, but what they would like to buy!
Effective demand – must be willing AND able to pay
Individual and Market Demand Market demand – consists of the sum of all
individual demand schedules in the market Represented by a demand curve At higher prices, consumers generally willing to
purchase less than at lower prices Demand curve – negative slope, downward
sloping from left to right
Law of Demand:
As price increases, quantity demanded decreases.
Assumption: everything else remains equal Inverse relationship between price & quantity Results in a downward sloping curve
Demand Curve:
Case Study: Black Logo HatsRed hats with a unique black logo are currently fashionable on
campuses across North America. Following is the demand schedule for these hats:
Price Quantity Demanded per Week
$10 10 thousand$ 9 12 thousand $ 8 13 thousand$ 7 14 thousand
QUESTION:
1. Draw the demand curve for Black Logo hats.
Case Study: Answer #1
Determinants of Demand:Demand Shifters:
1. Buyers’ Incomes Increased incomes = increased demand More buyers = increased demand
2. Buyers’ Preferences Stronger preference = increased demand
3. Buyers’ Expectations If price increase expected, buy sooner (increased
demand) If price decrease expected, buying delayed (decreased
demand)
Determinants of Demand (cont’d):Demand Shifters:
4. Price of Substitutes Price of coffee increases, demand for coffee decreases
BUT demand for tea increases Coffee and tea are substitute goods
5. Price of Complementary Goods Price of coffee increases, demand for coffee decreases
AND demand for donuts decreases Coffee and donuts are complementary goods
Change in Demand:
Change in Demand:
Demand v. Quantity Demanded:
Change in Demand: Caused by change in one or more determinants of
demand Shifts entire demand curve
Change in Quantity Demanded: Caused by change in price Movement from one point to another along an existing
demand curve
Case Study: Black Logo Hats
Price Quantity Demanded per Week $10 10 thousand$ 9 12 thousand $ 8 13 thousand$ 7 14 thousand
2. (a) If the price were to increase from $8 to $10, the quantity demanded would ______________ from ______ thousand to ______ thousand.
(b) What two factors would explain why the amount purchased has changed in response to the price increase in (a)?
(c) What are consumers' two basic alternatives to paying the higher price?
Case Study: Black Logo Hats
3. Indicate whether each of the following situations would cause the demand curve for Black Logo hats to shift to the right, shift to the left, or remain unchanged.
_____ (a) An increase in the income of the buyers of such products. _____ (b) The rising popularity of blue hats worn by members of a new
rock group. _____ (c) Reports that some stores are sold out of Black Logo hats,
due to a shortage of black material. _____ (d) An increase in the price of Black Logo hats.
Case Study: Answers2. (a) If the price were to increase from $8 to $10, the quantity
demanded would decrease from 13 thousand to 10 thousand.(b) Some people are unable to pay the higher price, and some are unwilling to pay it.(c) Consumers can buy a substitute or "do without" it (buy less of it, or even none).
3. (a) shift to the right -- an increase in demand.(b) shift to the left -- a decrease in demand.(c) shift to the right -- an increase in demand.(d) no shift in the curve; rather, a movement along the curve to a point at which the price is higher and the quantity demanded is lower.
DEFINITION:
Elasticity of Demand:
• A measure of how much quantity demanded changes in response to a change in price.
Demand is ELASTIC if:A change in Price causes buyers to make
large changes in the Quantity they purchase.• Buyers can easily switch to a substitute, OR• Buyers can easily do without the product
A price increase causes a reduction in total sales revenue.
• Large drop in quantity causes total sales to drop.
PRICE QUANTITY TOTAL REVENUE
$1.00 10,000 $10,000$2.00 4,000 $ 8,000
Demand is INELASTIC if:A change in Price causes buyers to make
small changes in Quantity purchased.• No close substitutes are available, AND• Buyers unable or unwilling to do without the product
A price increase causes anincrease in total sales revenue.
• Small drop in quantity causes total sales to increase.
PRICE QUANTITY TOTAL REVENUE
$1.00 10,000 $10,000$2.00 6,000 $12,000
Unitary (Unit) Elasticity:A price increase causes
no change in total sales revenue.• Increase in price is exactly offset by decrease in
quantity.
PRICE QUANTITY TOTAL REVENUE
$1.00 10,000 $10,000$2.00 5,000 $10,000
DEFINITION:
Elastic Demand:
Where a price increases causes a reduction in total sales revenue.
Inelastic Demand:
Where a price increases causes an increase in total sales revenue.
Case Study: Black Logo Hats
Price Quantity Demanded per Week $10 10 thousand$ 9 12 thousand $ 8 13 thousand$ 7 14 thousand
4. (a) Is the demand for Black Logo hats elastic or inelastic over the price ranges shown?$7 to $8: _____________________________$8 to $9: _____________________________$9 to $10: _____________________________
(b) What could explain any change in the elasticity of demand as the price increases?
Case Study: Answers
4. (a) From $7 to $8 – inelastic: total revenue increases from $98 000 to $104 000.
From $8 to $9 – inelastic: total revenue increases from $104 000 to $108 000.
From $9 to $10 – elastic: total revenue decreases from $108 000 to $100 000.
(b) The most likely explanation is that as the price gets higher and higher, buyer resistance increases, making demand more elastic. At higher prices, there may be more substitutes available. Also, some buyers may be unable to afford the higher prices.
Coefficient of Elasticity:
A measure of the responsiveness of buyers to a change in price.
If Ed is greater than 1, demand is elastic
If Ed is less than 1, demand is inelastic
If Ed is = 1, demand is unitary
Price Elasticity of Demand:
CALCULATING COEFFICIENT OF ELASTICITY:
Ed = % change in Q
% change in P
% change in Q = Q2–Q1 (Q2+Q1)/2
% change in P = P2–P1 (P2+P1)/2