ch 3. micro
if a surplus exists in a market, we know that the actual price is
above the equilibrium price, and the quantity supplied is greater than the quantity demanded
in general the term ceteris paribus means
all else equal
market price is determined by
both supply and demand
the necessity of holding all variables other than price constant in constructing a demand curve
ceteris paribus condition
difference in change in supply and quantity supplied
change in supply is a shift change in quantity supplied is movement
goods and services that are consumed together, consumers buy 1, consumers buy the other too
complements
when there is a shortage of a good
consumers compete against one another by bidding the price upward.
a change in demand refers to a shift of the
demand curve
surplus place what kind of pressure on price
downward
shifts in the demand curve
income price of related goods tastes and preferences population and demographics expected future costs
according to the law of supply
increase in price causes increase in quantity supplied, decrease in price causes decrease in quantity supplied
supply schedule
a table that shows the relationship between the price of a product and the quantity of the product supplied
supply curve
a curve that shows the relationship between the price of a product and and the quantity of the product supplied
law of supply
a increase in price causes a increase in quantity supplied, decrease in price causes a decrease in the quantity supplied
what do econmists mean by market equlibrium?
a market outcome where quantity supplied is equal to quantity demanded
a perfectly competitive market is a market that meets the conditions of
many buyers and sellers all firms selling identical products no barriers to new firms entering the market
a change in quantity demanded refers to a
movement along the demand curve as a result of a change in the products price
law of supply
positive relationship between price and quantity supplied
causes of supply shifts
prices of imputs technological change prices of substitutes in production
to calculate surplus subtract
quantity demanded from quantity supplied
to calculate shortage subtract
quantity supplied from quantity demanded
goods and services that can be used for the same purpose, the more consumers buy of 1, the less they will buy of another
substitutes
distinction between substitutes and complements
substitutes are used for the same purposes, complements are used together
when economists speak of a surplus, they mean a situation in which
the market price is above equilibrium price firms have unsold goods piling up the quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded
the law of demand is the assertion that
the quantity demanded of a product is inversely related to its price
an increase in the price of a product causes a decrease in quantity demanded because of the income and substitution effects. more specifically,
the substitution effect is the decrease in quantity demanded because the product is more expensive relative to other goods and the income effect is the decrease in quantity demanded owing to the decline in consumers' purchasing power
according to the law of demand
there is an inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded
law of demand
when the price of a good falls, quantity demanded increases when the prices rises, the quantity demanded decreases