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THEORY OF “DEMAND”

THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

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Page 1: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

THEORY OF “DEMAND”

Page 2: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

INTRODUCTION

• How much to produce and what price to charge?

• Factors determining demand for a product.

• Explores the relationship between price and demand for a product.

• Examines likely impact of the potential factors that influence its demand.

Page 3: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

WHAT IS DEMAND?The quantity of a product consumers are willing and able to buy at different prices in a specified time period.

Types of Demand-Direct and derived demands

-Individual and market demand

-Recurring and replacement

-Complementary and competing

-New and replacement demands

Page 4: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

DETERMINANTS OF DEMAND

• Price of Product• Income of Consumer• Price of Related Good• Tastes and Preferences• Advertising• Consumer’s expectation of future Income and Price• Growth of Economy• Seasonal conditions• Population

Page 5: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

DEMAND SCHEDULE• It shows the price and output relationship.• Tabular representation of price and demand.

Page 6: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

DEMAND CURVE

• The geometrical representation of demand schedule is called the demand curve.

Page 7: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

LAW OF DEMAND

• As the price of a good rises, quantity demanded of that good falls.

• As the price of a good falls, quantity demanded of that good rises.

• Ceteris paribus.

Page 8: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

DEMAND FUNCTION• When we express the relationship between demand

and its determinant mathematically, the relationship is known as demand function.

• The demand for product X can be written in functional form as-

Dx= f (Px, Y, Po, T, A, Ef, N )

Page 9: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

EXCEPTIONS TO THE LAW OF DEMAND

• Inferior Goods• Snob Appeal• Demonstration Effect• Future Expectation of Prices• Insignificant proportion of income spent• Goods with no Substitutes

Page 10: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

CHANGE IN DEMAND VS. CHANGE IN QUANTITY DEMANDED

• A shift of the entire demand curve to a new position is called change in demand.

• Changes in non-price determinants of demand.

Page 11: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

QUANTITY DEMANDED• Fluctuations in price, another determinant of demand,

cause movement along the demand curve.

Page 12: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

Why the demand curve slope downwards?

• Law of diminishing marginal utility.• Income effect.• Substitution effect.• New consumers.• Multiple use of commodity.

Page 13: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

ELASTICITY OF DEMAND• Elasticity of demand is defined as the responsiveness of the

quantity of a good to changes in one of the variables on which demand depends-

Price of the commodity Income of the Consumer Various other factor

DEFINATION-’’The elasticity of demand measures the response of the demand for the commodity to change in price”.

Page 14: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND• The price elasticity of demand is the percentage change in

quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price.

P rice e las tic ity o f d em an d =P ercen tag e ch an g e in q u an tity d em an d ed

P ercen tag e ch an g e in p rice

Page 15: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND

/

/P

Q Q Q PE

P P P Q

Point Definition

Arc Definition 2 1 2 1

2 1 2 1P

Q Q P PE

P P Q Q

Page 16: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

Perfectly Inelastic Demand: Elasticity Equals 0 city of Demand

Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

$5

4

Quantity

Demand

1000

1. Anincreasein price . . .

2. . . . leaves the quantity demanded unchanged.

Price

Page 17: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

Inelastic Demand: Elasticity Is Less Than 1

Quantity0

$5

90

Demand1. A 22%increasein price . . .

Price

2. . . . leads to an 11% decrease in quantity demanded.

4

100

Page 18: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

Unit Elastic Demand: Elasticity Equals 1

Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning

2. . . . leads to a 22% decrease in quantity demanded.

Quantity

4

1000

Price

$5

80

1. A 22%increasein price . . .

Demand

Page 19: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

Elastic Demand: Elasticity Is Greater Than 1

Demand

Quantity

4

1000

Price

$5

50

1. A 22%increasein price . . .

2. . . . leads to a 67% decrease in quantity demanded.

Page 20: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between

Perfectly Elastic Demand: Elasticity Equals Infinity

Quantity0

Price

$4 Demand

2. At exactly $4,consumers willbuy any quantity.

1. At any priceabove $4, quantitydemanded is zero.

3. At a price below $4,quantity demanded is infinite.

Page 21: THEORY OF DEMAND. INTRODUCTION How much to produce and what price to charge? Factors determining demand for a product. Explores the relationship between