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Demand: The Benefit Side of the Market

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Title: Demand: The Benefit Side of the Market


1
Chapter 5
  • Demand The Benefit Side of the Market

2
Outline
  • State the Law of Demand (LoD) and relate the LoD
    to the Benefit-Cost Principle
  • Apply the Benefit-Cost Principle to important
    decisions facing consumers
  • Measuring responsiveness by elasticity
  • Examine how price elasticity of demand determines
    the relationship between the amount spent on a
    good and its price

3
Law of Demand (Lod)
  • In markets, price rations goods and services
    among competing users
  • The demand curve is a relationship between the
    quantity demanded and all costs, monetary and
    non-monetary
  • Law of Demand
  • People do less of what they want to do as the
    cost of doing it rises

4
Law of Demand and the Benefit-Cost Principle
  • Reservation Price is the highest price that we
    would be willing to pay for the marginal unit.
  • Demand curve gives ones reservation price for
    the marginal unit at each quantity. That is also
    the the marginal benefit of that unit
  • Pursue an action if and only if its added
    benefits are at least as great as its added costs

5
Major Decisions for Individuals
  • Allocation of time between work and leisure
  • Allocation of income between consumption now and
    future consumption (saving)
  • Allocation of current expenditure between
    different goods.

6
Needs vs. Wants
  • Once we have achieved bare subsistence levels of
    consumption, economists speak only in terms of
    wants
  • Helps us focus on the correct solutions to
    problems

7
Utility
  • People purchase goods for the satisfaction that
    they derive from their consumption
  • Utility represents the satisfaction people derive
    from consumption activities
  • Utility Maximization refers to people trying and
    allocate their incomes to maximize their
    satisfaction
  • Normally, the more we consume, the more utility
    we have

8
Lamars Total Utility from Ice Cream Consumption
9
Marginal Utility
  • The additional utility gained from consuming an
    additional unit of the good
  • The Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
  • As consumption of a good increases beyond some
    point, the additional utility gained from an
    additional unit of the good tends to decline

10
Allocating Expenditure between Two Goods
  • Consumer has a fixed amount of funds to spend on
    two goods. How should the funds be allocated
    between the two goods so as to maximize utility?
  • The Benefit-Cost Principle says to equate the
    marginal benefits for the two goods or
    activities. (Remember, if they are not equal you
    can increase utility by shifting spending away
    from the one with the lower marginal benefit to
    the one with the higher marginal benefit.)

11
Optimal Combination
  • The marginal benefit for a good is the marginal
    utility per dollar of expenditure on that good
    which is the marginal utility of the good divided
    by the price.
  • Allocate the funds so that the added utility from
    spending an additional dollar on one good is the
    same as that from spending the dollar on the
    other good. Gives the rational spending rule.

12
Rational Spending Rule
  • Spending should be allocated across goods so that
    the marginal utility per dollar is the same for
    each good
  • the marginal utility per dollar
  • The ratio of marginal utility to price must be
    the same for each good the consumer buys

13
The Demand Curve
  • Suppose the consumer has chosen the best
    combination. How would the combination change if
    the price of one good in ( say, cones)
    increased?
  • Then, the marginal benefit from sundaes would be
    greater than the marginal benefit from cones.
    Balance is restored by reducing the consumption
    of cones and increasing the consumption of
    sundaes. We get a negative relationship between
    quantity demanded of cones and price or the LoD!

14
Role of Substitution
  • When the price of a good or service goes up
  • Rational consumers seek out less expensive
    substitutes
  • When prices return to their original levels
  • People often return to the original good

15
Real vs. Nominal
  • Nominal Price
  • The absolute price in dollar terms
  • Real Price
  • The dollar price relative to the average dollar
    price of all other goods and services

16
Equation for a Straight Line Demand Curve
  • P is for the price of the good
  • Q is for the quantity demanded
  • b is the vertical intercept
  • m represents the slope

17
The Market Demand Curve for Canned Tuna
18
Total Expenditure
  • Total Expenditure equals
  • The number of units sold multiplied by the price
    of the good
  • Total Expenditure Total Revenue
  • The dollar amount that consumers spend on a
    product is equal to the dollar amount that
    sellers receive

19
How does the Amount Spent on a Good change when
its Price Increases?
  • From LoD we know that quantity demanded
    decreases. But expenditure is quantity times
    price and it can increase, decrease, or stay the
    same!
  • You pay more for the units that you buy, which
    increases expenditure, but you buy fewer units,
    which decreases expenditure.
  • What can be said?

20
Key Relationship
  • Change in expenditure change in price
    change in quantity
  • We need to know the percentage in quantity that
    results from the percent change in price, ceteris
    paribus?

21
Price Elasticity of Demand
  • In order to predict what will happen to total
    expenditures,
  • We must know how much quantity will change when
    the price changes
  • Price elasticity of demand is
  • the percentage change in the quantity demanded
    that results from a one-percent change in its
    price

22
Calculating Price Elasticity
  • We need the ratio of the change in quantity to
    the change in price or
  • Eta (change in Q)/( change in p)
  • 100(DQ/Q)/100(DP/P)
  • (DQ/DP)x(P/Q)
  • (1/slope)x(P/Q)

D stands for change in
23
Elasticity and the Demand Curve
24
Calculating Price Elasticity of Demand
25
A Easy Way to Calculate Elasticity
  • Slope - 20/5 or - (20-8)/3
  • Price 8
  • Quantity 3
  • Elasticity (P/Q)(-1/slope)(8/3)(-3/(20-8))
  • - 8/(20-8) - 2/3
  • Note elasticity P/(max P P)
  • Can be read from graph!

26
What Happens to the Amount Spent on a Good when
its Price Increases?
  • It all depends on the direct price elasticity of
    demand !
  • Key relationship
  • Change in expenditure change in price
    change in quantity

27
Terminology
  • If the change in quantity exceeds the percentage
    change in price we say that demand is elastic.
  • If the change in quantity is less than the
    percentage change in price, we say that demand is
    inelastic.
  • If they are equal, we say demand is of unitary
    elasticity.

28
Price Elasticity
  • Elastic
  • price elasticity is numerically greater than one
  • Inelastic
  • price elasticity is numerically less than one
  • Unit elastic
  • price elasticity equals one
  • When calculating price elasticity of demand, you
    will always get a negative
  • For convenience we will take the absolute value

29
Price Elasticity and Expenditures
  • For an elastic product
  • Quantity demanded is highly responsive
  • Percentage change in quantity dominates
  • An increase in price will reduce total
    expenditure
  • A decrease in price will increase total
    expenditure
  • For an inelastic product
  • Quantity demanded is not responsive
  • Percentage change in price dominates
  • An increase in price will increase total
    expenditure
  • A decrease in price will decrease total
    expenditure

30
Determinants of Price Elasticity
  • Substitution possibilities
  • Price elasticity of demand will be relatively
    high if it is easy to substitute between products
  • Budget share
  • The larger the share of the budget tend to have
    higher price elasticities of demand
  • Time
  • Because substitution takes time, price elasticity
    will be higher in the long run than in the short
    run

31
Other Elasticities of Demand
  • Income Elasticity of Demand
  • The amount by which the quantity demanded changes
    in response to a one-percent change in income
  • Cross Price Elasticity of Demand
  • The amount by which the quantity demanded of one
    good changes in response to a one-percent change
    in the price of another good

32
Perfect Elasticity
  • Perfectly Elastic demand
  • Price elasticity of demand is infinite
  • Even the slightest change in price leads
    consumers to find substitutes
  • Perfectly Inelastic demand
  • Price elasticity of demand is zero
  • Consumers do not switch to substitutes even when
    price increases dramatically

33
Perfectly Elastic and Perfectly Inelastic Demand
Curves
34
The Effect of Extra Border Patrols on the Market
for Illicit Drugs
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