Chapter 6 Prices. 1. Combining Supply and Demand 2. Changes in the Market Equilibrium 3. The Role of Prices

Similar documents
Demand and Supply Examples

Economic Efficiency, Government Price Setting, and Taxes

6. In general, over longer periods, demand tends to become (A) More elastic (B) Perfectly elastic (C) Perfectly inelastic (D) Less elastic

Chapter 6 Supply, Demand, and Government Policies

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Supplement Unit 1. Demand, Supply, and Adjustments to Dynamic Change

PAGE 1. Econ Test 2 Fall 2003 Dr. Rupp. Multiple Choice. 1. The price elasticity of demand measures

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

SUPPLY AND DEMAND : HOW MARKETS WORK

Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller

Chapter 8 Application: The Costs of Taxation

14 : Elasticity of Supply

Gov t Intervention: Price Floors & Price Ceilings / Taxes & Subsidies

Principle of Microeconomics Econ chapter 6

Demand. See the Practical #4A Help Sheet for instructions and examples on graphing a demand schedule.

Econ 201 Exam 1 F2002 Professor Phil Miller Name: Student Number:

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Prices: The Marketplace s Communication System. April Classroom Edition

chapter >> Consumer and Producer Surplus Section 3: Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and the Gains from Trade

A. a change in demand. B. a change in quantity demanded. C. a change in quantity supplied. D. unit elasticity. E. a change in average variable cost.

1. Supply and demand are the most important concepts in economics.

Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium

Recitation #4 Week 02/02/2009 to 02/08/2009 Chapter 5: The Market Strikes Back

Selected Homework Answers from Chapter 3

MICROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES SPRING 2001 MIDTERM ONE -- Answers. February 16, Table One Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pounds Produced in 20 Hours

LECTURE NOTES ON MACROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES

Unit 2 T E A C H E R S G U I D E

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Pre Test Chapter DVD players and DVDs are: A. complementary goods. B. substitute goods. C. independent goods. D. inferior goods.

ECON 1100 Global Economics (Fall 2013) Surplus, Efficiency, and Deadweight Loss

4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND

Review 3. Table The following table presents cost and revenue information for Soper s Port Vineyard.

Economics 100 Exam 2

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question on the accompanying scantron.

Midterm Exam #2. ECON 101, Section 2 summer 2004 Ying Gao. 1. Print your name and student ID number at the top of this cover sheet.

Monopoly and Monopsony

Econ 202 Section 2 Midterm 1

4. Answer c. The index of nominal wages for 1996 is the nominal wage in 1996 expressed as a percentage of the nominal wage in the base year.

Microeconomics Topic 3: Understand how various factors shift supply or demand and understand the consequences for equilibrium price and quantity.

Demand, Supply and Elasticity

Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply and Elasticity

Lab 17: Consumer and Producer Surplus

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

CHAPTER 5 WORKING WITH SUPPLY AND DEMAND Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

17. Suppose demand is given by Q d = P + I, where Q d is quantity demanded, P is. I = 100, equilibrium quantity is A) 15 B) 20 C) 25 D) 30

Supply and Demand CHAPTER 4. Thomas Carlyle. Teach a parrot the terms supply and demand and you ve got an economist. Supply and Demand 4

ACTIVITY 14.1 STOMPING GROUNDS: BUYERS

Business and Economics Applications

Chapter 14 Monopoly Monopoly and How It Arises

BPE_MIC1 Microeconomics 1 Fall Semester 2011

Chapter 5 Efficiency and Equity Test Bank MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

1. According to Figure 1.1, what is the opportunity cost of increasing consumer output from OF to OD?

The Demand Curve. Supply and Demand. Shifts in Demand. The Law of Demand. Lecture 3 outline (note, this is Chapter 4 in the text).

How to Study for Class 4: The Determinants of Demand and Supply

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Chapter 14 Monopoly Monopoly and How It Arises

Workers Total Output Average Marginal

CHAPTER 3: DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND MARKET EQUILIBRIUM

Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply, and Elasticity

ECN 221 Chapter 5 practice problems This is not due for a grade

Long Run Supply and the Analysis of Competitive Markets. 1 Long Run Competitive Equilibrium

Agenda. Productivity, Output, and Employment, Part 1. The Production Function. The Production Function. The Production Function. The Demand for Labor

LABOR UNIONS. Appendix. Key Concepts

Total Hours Revenue Open (dollars) 1 $

ECON 103, ANSWERS TO HOME WORK ASSIGNMENTS

Chapter 27: Taxation. 27.1: Introduction. 27.2: The Two Prices with a Tax. 27.2: The Pre-Tax Position

Practice Questions Week 3 Day 1

1. If the price elasticity of demand for a good is.75, the demand for the good can be described as: A) normal. B) elastic. C) inferior. D) inelastic.

What is the Basic Economic Problem?

PPA 723, Fall 2006 Professor John McPeak

Econ 202 Exam 2 Practice Problems

CHAPTER 13 MARKETS FOR LABOR Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

Accounting Notes. Purchasing Merchandise under the Perpetual Inventory system:

Douglas, Spring 2008 February 21, 2008 PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

Chapter 4 Supply and Demand Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

THE MARKET OF FACTORS OF PRODUCTION

Choose the single best answer for each question. Do all of your scratch work in the margins or in the blank space on the last page.

Q D = (5)(5) = 75 Q S = 50 + (5)(5) = 75.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 24. What will you learn in this chapter? Valuing an economy. Measuring the Wealth of Nations

Supply and Demand. A market is a group of buyers and sellers of a particular good or service.

ECONOMICS PAPER 2/2 GRADE 12 JUNE EXAMINATION 2014 MEMORANDUM

D) Marginal revenue is the rate at which total revenue changes with respect to changes in output.

Economics 201 Fall 2010 Introduction to Economic Analysis Problem Set #6 Due: Wednesday, November 3

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Quantity Tax Incidence Subsidy Welfare Effects Case Study. Equilibrium Chapter 16

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Learning Objectives. Chapter 6. Market Structures. Market Structures (cont.) The Two Extremes: Perfect Competition and Pure Monopoly

Final Exam 15 December 2006

Practice Exam Economics is the study of choice under conditions of a. demand b. supply c. scarcity d. opportunity e.

LAW OF MARKET EQUILIBRIUM A free market, if out of equilibrium, tends toward equilibrium.

CONSUMER SURPLUS. Consumers, Producers and the Efficiency of Markets

Economics. Worksheet Circular Flow Simulation

FBLA: ECONOMICS. Competency: Basic Economic Concepts and Principles

Finance, Saving, and Investment

Web Supplement to Chapter 2

Demand and Supply. Demand and supply determine the quantities and prices of goods and services.

The Free Market Approach. The Health Care Market. Sellers of Health Care. The Free Market Approach. Real Income

DEMAND AND SUPPLY. Chapter. Markets and Prices. Demand. C) the price of a hot dog minus the price of a hamburger.

Transcription:

Chapter 6 rices 1. Combining Supply and Demand 2. Changes in the Market quilibrium 3. The Role of rices What is the right price customers will pay? Answer... What ever Bob Barker tells them! Drew Carry! Are you kidding me!

1. Combining Supply and Demand Reaching quilibrium -quantity demand is equal to quantity supplied Market benefits -both buyers and sellers benefit Disequilibrium -Any price or quantity not at equilibrium rice of Slice of izza Quantity Demanded Quantity Supplied Result $1.00 300 100 SHORTAG $2.00 250 150 SHORTAG $3.00 200 200 QUILIBRIUM $4.00 150 250 SURLUS $5.00 100 300 SURLUS $6.00 50 350 SURLUS

Graphing quilibrium When supply reaches demand, the market reaches equilibrium, or balance. At the point of equilibrium, how many slices will the pizzeria supply at what price? R I C R 6.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 Demand quilibrium S L I C 2.00 1.00 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Slice of izza per Day Supply

Shortage v. Surplus Shortage -excess demand -quantity demanded is more than quantity supplied Suppliers will raise prices and demand will lessen Surplus -quantity supplied is more than quantity demanded Suppliers will lower prices and demand will increase

Shortage How much is the shortage when pizza is sold at $2.00 per slice? R I C R S L I C Quantity Supplied 6.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 1.00 Demand Supply quilibrium xcess Demand 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Slice of izza per Day Quantity Demanded

Surplus What might the pizzeria solve the problem of excess supply? R I C 6.00 5.00 4.00 Demand xcess Supply R 3.00 quilibrium S L I C 2.00 1.00 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Slice of izza per Day Supply

rice Ceiling A Maximum price that can legally be charged for a good or service Rent control -a a price ceiling placed on apartment rent

rice Floors A minimum price for a good or a service Minimum Wage -minimum price an employer can pay a worker for one hour of labor ffects of Minimum Wage At what wage is the labor and market at equilibrium? What happens to the labor supply when the minimum wage is set at $7.25 per hour? What about demand for workers r i c e $7.25 o f $6. 60 L a b o r 0 2 4 6 8 Labor Supply of Laborers Demand for Workers

2. Changes in the Market quilibrium Moving toward quilibrium Shortage - firms raise prices - demand falls Surplus -firms lower prices - demand rises

Two Factors A shift in the supply curve A shift in the demand curve

An increase In Supply r i c e 15 5 Increase in Supply Supply Curve 0 5 15 Output New Supply Curve A Changing Market -factors that shift supply curve- technology, government, and prices Find the quilibrium -take inventory-quantity of goods that a firm has on hand increase in supply = surplus = lower prices and more demand shift to the right Changing quilibrium - quilibrium is always in motion in the real life market

A Decrease In Supply Decrease in Supply Changes in rice of Raw Materials Natural Disasters or problems at the factory Decrease in supply = shortage = higher prices and less demand = shift to the left r i c e 15 New Supply Curve Supply Curve 5 0 5 15 Output

$500 $400 r $300 i c e$200 $100 Falling rices Year Digital Cameras 2000 2002 2004 2006 $1000 $800 $600 $400 $200 Shifting Supply Curve 2000 2002 2004 0 5 1 0 2006 1 2 5 0 Quantity In 1998, a digital camera sold for over $650.00. What accounts for the trend in digital camera prices? What do you suppose will continue to happen to the digital camera 2 5 3 0 r i c e

An Increase in Demand Fad -a a product that does very well for a short period of time The Shortage problem - throws market off balance creating a decrease in supply Return to quilibrium - firms react by increasing prices and supply increase in demand = shortage = increase prices and less supplied - shift to right R I C Increase in Demand Original Demand Quantity New Demand

A Decrease in Demand $3 Decrease in Demand New Demand Original Demand R I C When a fad ends, demand falls and shortage turns to surplus decrease in demand = surplus = lower prices and higher supply - shift to left $2 3 4 Quantity

3. The Role of rices rices in the Free Market Key element of equilibrium can solve problems of shortage or surplus prices are a tool for distributing goods and resources throughout the economy

The Advantages of rices rovides a common language for buyers and sellers rices as an incentive-buy one get one rices as Signals -gives buyers and sellers signs Flexibility -prices are flexible

Choice and fficiency in Free Market Diversity of goods and services that a consumer can buy Based on income, consumers can purchase whatever item suits their needs

Choice and fficiency in One organization or centralized government controls what goods are produced and how much stores will charge led to Rationing- system of allocating resources using criteria other than price Supply Shock - shortage of a good and a long time to wait for a good both led to Black Market - goods sold illegally Command Market

The rofit Incentive What people buy gives sellers clues to make more Sellers give buyers rewards buy offering special prices or deals