ECON 2005 Chapter Notes - Chapter 4: Demand Curve, Normal Good, Competitive Equilibrium

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Demand: the quantity consumers are wiling and able to buy at each possible price during a given time period, other things constant. Law of demand: quantity demanded varies inversely with price, other things constant ex. Higher price = lower quantity demanded math: q = f(p, other variables), and q/ p<0. Supply/demand graph: quantity (q) is on the horizontal axis and is the dependent variable, price (p) is the vertical axis and is the. A point on the graph is the quantity demanded at a specific price. Income changes can shift the demand curve (actually move the line as opposed to changing the position on the curve) Shifting to the right is a result of a normal good when income increases. Substitution effect of a price change: when the price of a good falls, that good becomes cheaper compared to other goods so consumers tend to substitute that good for other goods.

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