Business Economics: Lecture - 2
Business Economics: Lecture - 2
Lecture -2
MBA
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Outline
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Markets and Competition
A market is an institutional arrangement under which buyers and sellers can
exchange some quantity of a good and service at a mutually agreeable price.
The buyers as a group determine the demand for the product, and the sellers
as a group determine the supply of the product
A competitive market is a market that has many buyers and many sellers so
no single buyer or seller can influence the price.
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Demand
Ability to buy it
Willingness to pay for it
At a given price
In a given time period
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Quantity of Demand and Law of Demand
Quantity of Demand
the amount of a good that consumer/buyers are willing and able to buy, at
each possible price over a given period of time.
Qd = F(P)
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Law of Demand cont.
Substitution effect
When the relative price of a good rises, people seek substitutes for it, so the
quantity demanded of the good decreases.
The substitution effect involves the substitution of good x1 for good x2 or
vice-versa due to a change in relative prices of the two goods.
Income effect
When the price of a good rises relative to income, people cannot afford all
the things they previously bought, so the quantity demanded of the good or
service decreases.
Example: 3.00 10
Asim's demand for Apples. 4.00 8
Notice: that Asim's preferences obey the 5.00 6
law of demand
6.00 4
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Demand Curve
Demand curve is a graphical representation of the demand schedule
Price of
Apples Quantity
Price
of Apples
$6.00 of Apple
demanded
$0.00 16
$5.00
1.00 14
$4.00 2.00 12
3.00 10
$3.00
4.00 8
$2.00 5.00 6
$1.00 6.00 4
$0.00 Quantity of
Apples
0 5 10 15
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Demand Curve (cont..)
A demand curve is graph that shows the relationship between the quantity
demanded of a good and its price when all other things equal.
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Market Demand versus Individual Demand
Market demand refers to the sum of all individual demands for a particular
good
Market demand is the sum of the quantities demanded by all buyers at each price.
Suppose Asim and Imran are the only two buyers in the apple market. (Qd = quantity
demanded)
Graphically, individual demand curves are summed horizontally to obtain the market
demand curve.
P Qd
P
$6.00
(Market)
$0.00 24
$5.00
1.00 21
$4.00 2.00 18
$3.00 3.00 15
$2.00 4.00 12
5.00 9
$1.00
6.00 6
$0.00
0 5 10 15 20 25 Q
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Change in Quantity Demanded versus Change in Demand
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Changes in Quantity Demanded
Price of
Cigarettes per
Pack
A tax that raises the
price of cigarettes
C results in a movement
$4.00
along the demand
curve.
2.00 A
D1
0 12 20 Number of Cigarettes Smoked per Day
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Change in Demand
A shift in the demand curve, either to the left or right.
When some influence on buying plans other than the price of the good changes,
there is a change in demand for that good.
The quantity of the good that people plan to buy changes at each and every
price, so there is a new demand curve.
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Change in Demand
A Shift of the Demand Curve
If the price remains the same but one
of the other influences on buyers’
plans changes, demand changes
and the demand curve shifts.
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Determinants of Demand/ Shift in the demand
curve
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Consumer income
A good for which quantity demanded rises with income is called normal good.
A good for which quantity demanded falls as income increases is called inferior
good.
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Consumer Income
Normal Good
Price of Ice-
Cream Cone
$3.00 An increase
2.50 in income...
Increase
2.00 in demand
1.50
1.00
0.50
D2
D1
Quantity of Ice-
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Cream Cones
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Consumer Income
Inferior Good
Price of Ice-
Cream Cone
$3.00
2.50 An increase
2.00
in income...
Decrease
1.50 in demand
1.00
0.50
D2 D1 Quantity of Ice-Cream
Cones
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
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Prices of related goods
When a fall in the price of one good reduces the demand for another good, Or an
increase in the price of one good causes an increase in demand for the other, the
two goods are called substitutes.
When a fall in the price of one good increases the demand for another good,
or an increase in the price of one causes a fall in demand for the other, the two
goods are called complements.
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Expectation
Example:
Example
If people expect their incomes to rise, their demand for meals at expensive
restaurants may increase now.
If the economy turns bad and people worry about their future job security,
demand for new autos may fall now.
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Population and Number of buyers
Population
The larger the population, the greater is the demand for all goods.
P
$6.00
Suppose the number of buyers
$5.00 increases.
$4.00 Then, at each price, quantity
demanded will increase.
$3.00
$2.00
$1.00
$0.00
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Q
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Tastes and Preferences
Tastes
Anything that causes a shift in tastes toward a good will increase demand for
that good and shift its D curve to the right.
Preferences
People with the same income have different demands if they have different
preferences.
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Own-Price changes
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Summary: Variables That Affect Demand
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Practice Question: Demand curve
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A. Price of iPods falls
Music
Music downloads
downloads and and
Price of music iPods
iPods are are complements.
complements.
down-loads
AAfall
fall in
in price
price of
of iPods
iPods shifts
shifts
the
the demand
demand curve curve for
for
music
music downloads
downloads
to
to the
the right.
right.
P1
D1 D2
Q1 Q2 Quantity of
music downloads
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B. Price of music downloads falls
Price of
music
down-
The
The DD curve
curve
loads
does
does not
not shift.
shift.
Move
Move down
down along
along curve
curve to
to aa
P1 point
point with
with lower
lower P,
P, higher Q..
higher Q
P2
D1
Q1 Q2 Quantity of
music downloads
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C. Price of CDs falls
Price of
music down-
loads CDs
CDs and and
music
music downloads
downloads areare
substitutes.
substitutes.
AAfall
fall in
in price
price of
of CDs
CDs shifts
shifts
demand
demand for for music
music downloads
downloads
to
to the
the left.
left.
P1
D2 D1
Q2 Q1 Quantity of
music downloads
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Supply
• Quantity of Supplied
the amount of goods that producers willing and able to produce and sell during a
given time period at a particular price.
Example:
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Law of Supply
Other things remaining the same as the price of any commodity rises,
its supply also rises and as price falls, its supply also falls.
The law of supply results from the general tendency for the marginal
cost of producing a good or service to increase as the quantity
produced increases.
Producers are willing to supply a good only if they can at least cover
their marginal cost of production.
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Supply Curve and Supply Schedule
Quantity
Supply schedule: Price
of Apples
of lattes
A table that shows the relationship between supplied
the price of a good and the quantity $0.00 0
supplied.
1.00 3
Example: 2.00 6
Starbucks’ supply of apples.
3.00 9
Notice that Starbucks’ supply schedule
4.00 12
obeys the Law of Supply.
5.00 15
6.00 18
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Supply Curve
The supply curve is the graph that shows the relationship between the quantity
supplied of a good and its price when all other things are equal.
P
$6.00
$5.00
$4.00
$3.00
$2.00
$1.00
$0.00
Q
0 5 10 15
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Market Supply versus Individual Supply
Market supply refers to the sum of all individual supplies for all sellers of a
particular good or services
The quantity supplied in the market is the sum of the quantities supplied by all
sellers at each price.
Graphically, individual supply curves are summed horizontally to obtain the market
supply curve.
Suppose A and B are the only two sellers in this market. (Qs = quantity supplied)
Price A B Market Qs
$0.00 0 + 0 = 0
1.00 3 + 2 = 5
2.00 6 + 4 = 10
3.00 9 + 6 = 15
4.00 12 + 8 = 20
5.00 15 + 10 = 25
6.00 18 + 12 = 30
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The Market Supply Curve
QS
P
P (Market)
$6.00 $0.00 0
$5.00 1.00 5
$4.00
2.00 10
3.00 15
$3.00
4.00 20
$2.00 5.00 25
$1.00 6.00 30
$0.00 Q
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
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Change in Quantity Supplied
Quantity supplied is the amount of a good that sellers are willing and
able to sell.
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Change in Quantity Supplied
Price of Ice-
Cream Cone
S
C
$3.00 A rise in the price of ice cream
cones results in a movement
along the supply curve.
A
1.00
Quantity of Ice-
Cream Cones
0 1 5
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Change in Supply
When some influence on selling plans other than the price of the good
changes, there is a change in supply of that good.
The quantity of the good that producers plan to sell changes at each and
every price, so there is a new supply curve.
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Change in Supply
Price of Ice-
Cream Cone
S3
S1 S2
Decrease in
Supply
Increase in
Supply
Quantity of Ice-
Cream Cones
0
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Determinants of Supply and Shift in Supply Curve
Market price
Input prices
Technology
Expectations
Number of producers
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Changes in input prices
Examples of input prices:
wages, prices of raw materials.
Consider the supply of ice cream, and suppose the price of sugar, an
input into producing ice cream, falls. Ice creams sellers now find that
selling ice cream more profitable than it was before, and they respond
to this by increasing the supply of ice cream. At any given price,
sellers are now willing to produce a larger quantity. The supply curve
for ice cream shifts to the right.
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Changes in input prices
This is a change in supply. Ice cream sellers want to sell more ice
cream at each price of ice cream cone.
Price of
Ice-cream cone supply @ sugar price of
$10/Kg
Quantity of
Ice-cream cones
Ice-Cream Market
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Change in technology
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Change in technology
Price of
Ice-cream cone Supply @ old
technology
Supply @ improved
technology
Quantity of
Ice-cream cones
Ice-Cream Market
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Change in Expectation and Number of sellers
Expected Future Prices
If the price of a good is expected to rise in the future, the firm may
reduce supply now, to save some of its inventory to sell later at the
higher price.
This would decrease supply of the good today and shift the supply
curve leftward.
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Summary: Variables That Affect Supply
Variables that
Affect Quantity Supplied A Change in This Variable . . .
Price Represents a movement along
the supply curve
Input prices Shifts the supply curve
Technology Shifts the supply curve
Expectations Shifts the supply curve
Number of sellers Shifts the supply curve
The point at which the supply and demand curves intersect. This point
is called the market’s equilibrium
2.50 Equilibrium
2.00
1.50
1.00
0.50 Demand
Quantity of Ice-
Cream Cones
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
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Excess Supply
when quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded
Price of
Ice-Cream Cone
Supply
Surplus
$3.00 If the price is $2.5, the quantity
supplied exceeds the quantity
2.50 demanded. There is a surplus of
6 ice-cream cones.
At prices above the equilibrium
2.00 price, a surplus forces the price
down. So facing a surplus,
sellers try to increase sales by
1.50 cutting the price
Prices continue to fall until
1.00 market reaches equilibrium
0.50 Demand
Quantity of Ice-
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Cream Cones
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Excess Demand
When quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied
Price of
Ice-Cream If the price is $1.5, the quantity
Cone demanded exceeds the
quantity supplied. There is a
Supply shortage of 6 ice-cream cones
At prices below the equilibrium
price, a shortage forces the
price up so “facing a shortage”
$2.00 sellers raise the price
Prices continue to rise until
$1.50
market reaches equilibrium.
Shortage Demand
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Quantity of
Ice-Cream Cones
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Effects of a shift in demand and supply curve on Equilibrium
Three Steps to Analyzing Changes in Equilibrium
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How an Increase in Demand Affects the Equilibrium
Supply
D1
0 3. ...and a higher 7 10 Quantity of
Ice-Cream Cones
quantity sold.
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How an Increase in Demand Affects the Equilibrium
At the original price, there is now a shortage and this shortage induces firms
to raise the price
The price rises, and the quantity supplied increases along the supply curve.
Results
• When demand increases, equilibrium price rises and the equilibrium
quantity increases.
• When demand decreases, the equilibrium price falls and the equilibrium
quantity decreases.
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How a Decrease in Supply Affects the Equilibrium
New
$2.50 equilibrium
2. ...resulting
in a higher
price... Demand
0 1 2 3 4 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Quantity of
Ice-Cream Cones
3. ...and a lower quantity sold.
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How a Decrease in Supply Affects the Equilibrium
At the original price, there is now an excess demand for ice cream and
this shortage causes firms to raise the price.
As Figure shows, the shift in the supply curve raises the equilibrium price from
$2.00 to $2.50 and lowers the equilibrium quantity from 7 to 4 cones.
As a result of the sugar price increase, the price of ice cream rises, and the
quantity of ice cream sold falls
Results
• When supply decreases, the equilibrium price rises and the equilibrium
quantity decreases
• When supply increases, the equilibrium price falls and the equilibrium quantity
increases.
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A Change in Both Supply and Demand
P
S1
S2
P1
P2
D2
D1
Q
Q1 Q2
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A Change in Both Supply and Demand
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A Change in Both Supply and Demand
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Summary
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Summary
• Supply is a function of own price, input prices, technology, future
expectation and number of sellers.
• The curve relating price and quantity supplied is called the supply curve.
• The upward-sloping supply curve reflects the Law of Supply, which
states that the quantity supplied depends positively on the good’s
price.
• Changes in a good’s own price show up as movements along a supply
curve.
• Changes in other determinants of supply include input prices,
technology, expectations, shift the S curve.
• The intersection of S and D curves determine the market equilibrium.
At the equilibrium price, quantity supplied equals quantity demanded.
• If the market price is above equilibrium, a surplus results, which causes
the price to fall. If the market price is below equilibrium, a shortage
results, causing the price to rise.
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