ECN 101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Economic Equilibrium, Ceteris Paribus, Demand Curve

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28 May 2018
Department
Course
Professor
ECN 101
Chapter 3
Sept 20th and Sept 28th
Would you include that breaking things is good for the economy? Is war good for an economy?
-Human beings arrive at conclusions from the things they see: in this case the broken window
and the person who repairs it.
“Distraction is not profit”
SUPPLY AND DEMAND MARKET
Markets - Interactions between buyers and sellers. They may be: local, national,
international. Price is discovers in the interaction between buyers and sellers.
Markets may be:
-Local
-National
-International
Demand - is a schedule or a curve that shows various amounts of a product that consumers are
willing and able to purchase at each of a series of possible prices during a specified period of
time. We assume “other things equal” - ceteris paribus - other things held constant.
Law off demand:
Other things equal, as price falls the quantity demanded rises; and as price rises the quantity
demanded falls.
An inverse relationship between price and quantity:
1. The Law diminished marginal utility - each next unit of good satisfies the consumers less
than the previous one; the consumer will buy more only if the price of those units is
progressively reduced.
2. The demand curve - the inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded for any
product. Quantity demanded on the horizontal axis and price on the vertical axis.
Market Demand - when there are more individuals buying products.
Determinants of Demand(shift of curve):
1. Consumers’ tastes (preferences) - positive change shifts the Demand Curve to the right
2. The number of consumers in the market - more buyers - shift the DC to the right
3. Consumers income:
a. Normal good - a product for which demand varies directly with money income.
b. Inferior good - a good for which you have a wealthy income - no more need for
potatoes and instant noodles.
4. The prices of related goods may change depending on:
a. Substitute good (can be replaced) - price of one and demand for the other move in the
same direction. - if the price of Crest rises, the price of Colgate rises.
b. Complementary good (the one that is used together with another good) - price of one
and demand for the other move in opposite directions - if the price of let's goes up, the salad
dressing price falls.
c. Unrelated good - no effected - peanut batter unrelated to the cars
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Document Summary

Human beings arrive at conclusions from the things they see: in this case the broken window and the person who repairs it. Price is discovers in the interaction between buyers and sellers. Demand - is a schedule or a curve that shows various amounts of a product that consumers are willing and able to purchase at each of a series of possible prices during a speci ed period of time. We assume other things equal - ceteris paribus - other things held constant. Other things equal, as price falls the quantity demanded rises; and as price rises the quantity demanded falls: the law diminished marginal utility - each next unit of good satis es the consumers less. Quantity demanded on the horizontal axis and price on the vertical axis. Market demand - when there are more individuals buying products. Sept 20th and sept 28th: consumer"s expectations: future prices:f price is going to rise in the future, the demand grows now.

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