ECON 105 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Ceteris Paribus, Demand Curve

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ECON 105 Full Course Notes
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Quantity demanded: the amount of a good or service that consumers want to purchase during some time period. Desired quantity: quantity bought or quantity exchanged refer to actual purchases. May be different from what consumers actually buy. Refers to a flow of purchases, expressed as so much per period of time. Influencing factors: product"s own price, consumer"s income, prices of other products, tastes, population, expectations about the future. Hard to compare multiple items at the same time (cid:498)other things being equal(cid:499) or ceteris paribus. A basic economic hypothesis is that the price of a product and the quantity demanded are related negatively, other things being equal. That is, the lower the price, the high the quantity demanded; the high the price, the lower the quantity demanded: law of demand. For any desire or need, there are many different products that can satisfy it.

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