1 / 35

EC 1008 Introduction to Microeconomics Lecture 2: Analyzing markets: supply and demand

Sotiris Georganas City University London. EC 1008 Introduction to Microeconomics Lecture 2: Analyzing markets: supply and demand. Learning outcomes. To understand the demand and supply function To outline the laws of demand and supply To analyse what causes movements and shifts

fonda
Download Presentation

EC 1008 Introduction to Microeconomics Lecture 2: Analyzing markets: supply and demand

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sotiris Georganas City University London EC 1008Introduction to MicroeconomicsLecture 2: Analyzing markets: supply and demand

  2. Learning outcomes • To understand the demand and supply function • To outline the laws of demand and supply • To analyse what causes movements and shifts • To understand the concepts of equilibrium and comparative statics

  3. Background • Understanding how markets work is a key part of a course in economics • In particular you need to understand the key role played by prices

  4. Markets • Differ in a number of important ways • Number of buyers and sellers • Level of information • Knowledge about the product and different prices • How easy it is to set up in business • Barriers to entry • Can service/product be easily copied?

  5. Perfect competition • One type of market structure • A market is perfectly competitive if no participant has market power • Market power: the power to set the price of the good • Key Assumptions • Numerous (many!) buyers and sellers • Perfect information • Free entry and exit

  6. Demand, supply and (goods) markets

  7. Demand • Demand: the amount of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at each price • Can be different from the amount purchased • Reflects the degree of value/pleasure/utility consumers place on the good/service • Different people will value the same good/service differently

  8. Determinants of demand by consumers for goods and services What?

  9. Determinants of demand by consumers for goods and services

  10. Demand • Market demand function: relationship between quantity demanded of a particular product and all factors that influence demand Qdx= f(Px, Py, I,....) • Quantity demanded is the ‘dependent’ (endogenous) variable • Price, income etc are the independent variables

  11. Demand curves • Isolate the impact of price • Qdx = f(Px) ceteris paribus • (demand depends on price, holding all else equal) • Complication – demand curves are drawn with price (independent variable) on the vertical axis • Why ? • Walras(1834 – 1910) developed the theory, with quantity the dependent variable • Marshall (1842 – 1924) developed graphical representation (probably following Cournot’s work 30 years earlier), with price as the dependent variable • Today we use Walrasian theory, but the Marshallian representation

  12. Since price is the vertical axis we use the inverse demand for graphs • Inverse demand : Px= g(Qdx) • “Price as a function of quantity” • Direct demand : Qdx = f(Px) • Where g=f-1

  13. Example: demand for potatoes

  14. Monthly market demand for potatoes

  15. Law of demand • Isolate the impact of price • ↑ Px ⇒ ↓ Qdx (Ceteris paribus) • ↓ Px ⇒ ↑ Qdx (Ceteris paribus) • Why? • Substitution effect - as price rises consumers have an incentive to switch to cheaper alternatives • Income effect - a rise in price reduces consumers’ `real’ income so they purchase less of a `normal’ good

  16. Movements along and shifts in the demand curve • We can use this model of demand to analyse the effect on demand of changes in price and other variables, such as income. • We distinguish between these by use of special terms: • – Movement along the demand curve, for price changes • – Shift in the demand curve, for changes in other variables

  17. Movement along the demand curve

  18. An increase in demand

  19. Types of goods • Substitutes: If price of X increases and demand for Y goes up, X and Y are substitutes. • Complements: If price of X increases and demand for Y goes down, X and Y are complements. • Normal Goods: If increase in income leads to increase in demand • Inferior goods: If increase in income leads to decrease in demand. • Examples?

  20. Examples substitutes “inferior” “normal”

  21. Supply • Supply – the amount of a good or service producers are willing to offer for sale at each and every price • Market supply function – relationship between quantity supplied and all the factors that influence that supply • Supply curve isolates the impact of price • Qsx = f(Px) ceteris paribus • Inverse supply curve: Px=g(Qsx) • As before, g=f-1

  22. Determinants of supply

  23. Supply • simple supply functionsQs=a+bP • more complex supply functionsQs=a+bP+dPi–ePj • asimple demand function Qd=a-bP

  24. Example: supply of potatoes

  25. Monthly market supply of potatoes

  26. Law of supply • ↑ Px ⇒ ↑ Qsx (ceteris paribus) • Why? • Higher price, ceteris paribus, the more profitable the good. Acts as an incentive • In the short run, existing suppliers switch more resources into producing good X • The existing producers increase supply because it is profitable to produce more – has to do with the cost function.

  27. Shifts in the supply curve

  28. Market equilibrium

  29. Market equilibrium: undersupply

  30. Market equilibrium: oversupply

  31. Market equilibrium: all clear

  32. Effect of a shift in the demand curve on equilibrium

  33. Effect of a shift in the supply curve on equilibrium

  34. Example • Demand and supply curves are: Qd= a-bP (1) Qs= c+dP (2) • We need to solve for equilibrium price and quantity (P* , Q*) • Set quantity demanded and supplied equal, and solve for P . (1)=(2) => a-bP*=c+dP* => a-c= bP*+dP* => a-c= (b+d)P* => P*=(a-c)/(b+d) (3) Insert result (3) into (1) => Q*=a-b((a-c)/(b+d)) • So if, for example, a=30, b=1, c=0, d=2,we have P*=30/3 = 10 and Q*= 30-(10)=20 units

  35. Learning outcomes • To understand the demand and supply function • To outline the laws of demand and supply • To analyse what causes movements and shifts • To understand the concepts of equilibrium and comparative statics

More Related