Lecture 3 The Law of Demand

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Lecture 3 The Law of Demand

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Title: Lecture 3 The Law of Demand


1
Lecture 3
The Law of Demand
  • Our objectives
  • ? Explain individual choices among unlimited
    wants in a world of limited resources
  • ? Develop a theory that helps us better
    understand and predict human actions
  • ?What do people (our customers) want?

2
A Very Difficult Issue
  • What we measure in demand is a reflection of
    individual desires.
  • Daniel Bernoulli, a mathematical genius who lived
    in Basel, noted, in 1738, that people seek
    goodness or pleasure (utility).
  • That is, we do not seek cellphones because they
    are cellphones but because they are useful and
    give us pleasure. Use and pleasure cannot be
    measured, only approximated.
  • This is behind the law of demand.

3
A Note on Value, Scarcity, and Price as Related
to Demand
  • Why do people want what they want?
  • The diamond-water paradox.
  • Scarcity need not mean highly valued think of
    snake meat.
  • Markets reflect what people value in relationship
    to current availability.
  • Demand is our best understanding of what people
    valuegiven current conditions.

4
The Law of Demand
  • Holding all other relevant factors constant,
    the lower (higher) the price of a good, the
    greater (lower) will be the quantity demanded.
  • ? Like all scientific propositions, it is a
    ceteris paribus (other things equal or other
    things constant) statement
  • ? Note the terminology
  • - Price means opportunity cost
  • - Good means anything people value

5
Why focus on the Law of Demand?
  • This is the most powerful proposition in
    economics.
  • ? Irrigation design in arid and wet climates
  • ? Building heights in cities compared to small
    towns
  • ? The seasonal pattern of vegetable prices
  • ? Why many stand in crowded trains to go visit
    family
  • ? The shape of waterfront properties
  • ? Electricity prices and automatic switches
  • ? Etc., etc., etc.

6
The Demand Function Some Definitions
  • The relationship between quantity consumed and
    the factors determining that D f (P, PS, PC,
    I, E, T, etc.)
  • Price of the good in questiondetermines the
    location along a demand curve
  • Other variables (relevant factors) determine
    the placement of a demand curve
  • ? Prices of related goods (substitutes and
    complements)
  • ? Income of buyers
  • ? Tastes (preferences) of buyers
  • ? Expectations held by buyers, regarding the
    future
  • ? Other matters particular to a certain good

7
The Role of Tastes
  • They are very hard to measure, so we generally
    ignore them, but we know they exist.
  • Look to marketing and psychology for guidance
    here, not economists!
  • For economists, tastes are often the
    unexplained portion of consumption

8
Expectations
  • Also difficult to measure but important
  • When measurable, include in the analysis. But
    experience showsmeasures are very poor
    predictors of actions.
  • Like tastes, these can be used to explain
    anything
  • ? Dont fall into this trap

9
This or that?
  • Substitutes
  • Essentially, goods used in place of each
    othersame geographic market similar performance
    characteristics. What is a substitute in one
    market may not be seen by consumers as such in
    another marketorange juice and orange soda.
  • ? Different brands of gasoline robots in Renault
    factory in France v. workers in Renault factory
    in Russia (former Lada) paid 200 a month movie
    theater v. movie rentals corn or sugar in
    ethanol.

10
Related Goods
  • Complements
  • Essentially, goods used together
  • ? Computer hardware and software
  • tennis balls and rackets airplane travel
    and hotel rooms Google maps and discount
    coupons growing corn for ethanol and Deere
    tractors

11
Changes in the Price of Related Goods
  • Goods X and Y are substitutes if
  • ? A change in price of X changes demand for Y in
    same direction
  • - Px up implies Dy up (Dy shifts to the right)
  • - Px down implies Dy down (Dy shifts to the
    left)
  • ? Effect of change in Py on Dx is also in same
    direction

12
More on the Prices of Related Goods
  • Goods V and W are complements if
  • ? A change in price of V changes demand for W in
    opposite direction
  • - Pv up implies Dw down (Dw shifts to left)
  • - Pv down implies Dw (Dw shifts to right)
  • ? Effect of a change in Pw on Dv is also in
    opposite direction

13
Changes in Income
  • Normal Goods
  • ? Change in income changes demand in same
    direction
  • - Higher income causes increase in demand
  • - Lower income causes decrease in demand
  • ? Superior good is a variant change in demand
    due to income change is quite large
  • Inferior goods
  • ? Change in income changes demand in opposite
    direction
  • - Higher income causes decrease in demand
  • - Lower income causes increase in demand

14
TerminologyUsed to avoid confusion
  • Changes in quantity demanded
  • ? Caused by changes in own price of good means
    movement along a given demand curve
  • Changes in demand
  • ? Caused by changes in other factors
  • - Prices of other goods
  • - Income
  • - Expectations, etc.
  • ? Means a shift of the entire demand curve

15
Change in Price
  • A change in the price of a good means a movement
    along a demand curve.

Price
Pa
Pb
Demand
Quantity/time
Qa Qb
16
Change in Demand
  • A change in a factor that determines demand,
    besides the price of the good itself, causes the
    Demand curve to shift.
  • Example Increase in price of substitute or
    increase in income causes an increase in demand.

Price
Da
Pa
Db
Quantity/time
Qa
Qb
17
Deriving a Real Demand Curve
  • Define your market
  • Boulder, Colorado, over time
  • consumption of water by people
  • served by city water price per
  • 1,000 gallons billions gallons/yr.
  • consumed by demanders.
  • Year Price Quantity
  • 1968 0.28 29
  • 1972 0.36 19
  • 1977 0.50 13
  • 1982 0.74 9

Price
.74
Demand
.50
.36
.28
0
9 13 19 29
Quantity
18
What else would you want to know?
  • The Demand curve plots the relationship between
    price and quantity demanded nothing else
    everything else is held constant
  • But in the real world, other things are not
    constant, so what else would you want to know if
    you wanted to understand that market better?
  • Name likely relevant factors

19
Hard Test Which Goods Are Complements, Which
Are Substitutes?
  • Wine and beer.
  • Domestic shirts and imported shirts.
  • Oil from Iran and coal from China.
  • Paper and pencils.
  • Plate glass and brick/concrete

20
Demand analysis
  • How would demand for hair replacement be likely
    to change if the following occurs?
  • A fall in the price of hairpieces.
  • A rise in income.
  • A rise in the divorce rate.

21
Clever sales pitch
  • A British cellphone company promised new
    subscribers in November and December that all
    calls on Christmas Day, December 25, would be
    free. What would you expect happened to the
    volume of calls that day?

22
Question on changing demand
  • Trying to predict future demand, GE research
    showed that the average size of the American
    family was declining and so was the average
    square footage of houses.
  • How would you think this impacted the demand for
    the design of, say, refrigerators?

23
Key Point from Peter Drucker
  • Most important question sellers must ask
  • What is value to the customer?
  • Sellers often think they know, but do not. The
    customers do not buy a product they buy value.
  • Demanders are buying a product to satisfy a want.
    Do not guess what customers wantalways carefully
    evaluate what they want.
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