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THEORY OF DEMAND

THEORY OF DEMAND. DEFINITIONS OF DEMAND Demand refers to the quantities of a commodity that the consumers are able and willing to buy at each possible price during a given period of time, other things being constant. Constituents of demand Desire Money to satisfy desire Willingness to spend

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THEORY OF DEMAND

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  1. THEORY OF DEMAND • DEFINITIONS OF DEMAND • Demand refers to the quantities of a commodity that the consumers are able and willing to buy at each possible price during a given period of time, other things being constant. • Constituents of demand • Desire • Money to satisfy desire • Willingness to spend • Relationship of price and quantity demanded • Relationship of time and quantity of commodity demanded

  2. Assumptions to law of demand • Law of demand holds good when ‘other things remain the same.’ • All determinants of demand other than the price remain unchanged. • no change in the price of related goods. • No change in the income of the consumer • No change in taste and preferences

  3. Explanation to the law • There is an inverse relationship between price and demand for a commodity. It indicates the direction of change in demand as a result of change in price. • DEMAND CURVE SLOPE DOWNWARD • Law of diminishing marginal utility: a consumer demands a commodity because it has utility. As he consumes more and more units of a commodity, in a given time, the utility derived from each successive units goes on diminishing. • Marginal utility of any good diminishes as more and more of that good is purchased. • Marginal utility is the addition made to the total utility by consuming one more unit of a commodity.

  4. utility schedule

  5. Causes of downward sloping of demand curve • ALGEBRIC EXPLANATION • Mu(1)/p(1) = Mu(2)/p(2) = ……. Mu(n)/p(n) • INCOME EFFECT: it is the effect that change in person’s real income caused by change in the price of a commodity has on the quantity of that commodity. • Fall in the price causes increase in the real income and so extension in demand. On the contrary, rise in price causes decrease in real income and so contraction in demand. • SUBSTITUTION EFFECT: it is a effect that a change in relative prices of substitute goods has on the quantity demanded. Substitutes are goods that can be used in place of each other. For example tea and coffee. • To get maximum satisfaction, a consumer will buy more units of that commodity whose price, in relation to its substitute, has gone down. The consumer substitutes cheaper good for the good whose price has not altered.

  6. DIFFERENTUSES • Some goods have more than one use. Milk, may be used for drinking and for making curd and cheese. At its high price an individual consumer may buy milk for drinking only, but at the reduced price milk may be bought for making curd and cheese as well. • SIZE OF CONSUMER GROUP • When the price of a commodity falls, then many consumers, who are unable to buy the commodity at its previous price, come forward to buy it. As a result total demands go up.

  7. EXCEPTIONS TO THE LAW • Positive slope of the demand curve. price quantity • Articles of distinction • Veblen goods are articles of distinction or luxury goods like jewelry, original works of art by great artists. • These goods command more demand when their prices are high.

  8. ignorance Consumers out of ignorance or poor judgment consider a commodity to be of a low quality if its price is low and of high quality if its price is high. GIFFEN GOODS These are those inferior goods whose demands falls even when their price falls, so that the law of demand does not hold good EXCEPTION OF RISE OR FALL IN PRICE IN FUTURE If prices are likely to rise more in the future then even at the existing higher price people may demand more units in the present. If prices are likely to fall further in future then even at the existing lower price people may demand less in the present.

  9. Determinants of demand • Price of the commodity Other determinants remaining constant, change in the price of a good causes an inverse change in its demand. Rise in prices causes contraction in demand and fall in prices causes extension of demand. This relationship is called LAW OF DEMAND. 2. Price of related goods Related goods are classified as substitute goods and complementary goods. SUBSTITUTE GOODS: In case of substitute the quantity demanded of one good is positively related to the price of other good. If price of one good increases the demand for substitute increases. COMPLEMENTARY GOODS: These are those goods which complete the demand for each other. There is negative relationship between t e demand for first good and price of the second good

  10. Diagrammatic representation Substitute goods complementary goods • Y y p1demand for p1 demand for substitute complementary p p goods o q q1 x o q q1 x 3.INCOME OF THE CONSUMER There is a positive relation between income of the consumer and his demand for a good. The relationship between income of the consumer and demand for a commodity is discussed with reference to: normal goods, necessaries, inferior goods.

  11. Taste and preferences • It includes fashion, habit custom etc. tastes and preferences are influenced by advertisement, change in fashion, new inventions etc. other things being equal, demand for those goods increases in which consumer develop taste and preferences. EXPECTATIONS change in consumers expectations about such things as product prices, product availability and future income is another determinant of demand. DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME if there is uneven distribution of income, there will be more demand for luxury goods, on the other hand if income is evenly distributed, there will be less demand for luxury goods and more demand for necessaries and comforts.

  12. Increase and decrease in demand : shift in the demand curve • INCREASE IN DEMAND • Rise in demand in response to change in determinants of demand other than the price of the product • Demand increases in two ways: same price more demand and more price same demand. • It causes rightward shift in demand curve. • DECREASE IN DEMAND • Fall in demand in response to change in determinants of demand other than the price of product. • Demand decrease in two ways: same price less purchase and less price same purchase. • It causes leftward shift in demand curve.

  13. Distinction between extension in demand and increase in demand • Extension in demand • Rise in demand in response to fall in prices of a commodity, other things being equal. • It is expressed by a movement from a higher point to a lower point along the same demand curve. • Increase in demand • It refers to the rise in demand in response to change in the determinants of demand. • It is expressed by the upward shift of the entire demand curve.

  14. Distinction between contraction and decrease in demand • Contraction of demand • Fall in the demand in response to a rise in the price of a commodity, other things being equal. • It is expressed by a movement from a lower point to a higher point along the same demand curve. • Decrease in demand • Fall in demand in response to change in determinants of demand, other than the price. • It is expressed by the downward shift of the entire demand curve.

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