Price determination in a competitive market (micro) Flashcards
Determinants of Demand
There is an inverse relationship between P and Qd. Demand is the quantity of a good/service consumers are willing and able to buy at a given price in a given time period.
Downward sloping due to substitution and income effects.
Determinants:
P - population
A - advertising
S - substitute’s price
I - income
F - fashion taste
C - complements price
Determinants of Supply
- costs of production
- price of complement
- price of substitute
- technology
- expected future price.
Normal good
A normal good is a good that experiences an increase in demand due to an increase in a consumer’s income. Normal goods have a positive correlation between income and demand. Examples of normal goods include food, clothing, and household appliances.
Inferior good
An inferior good is an economic term that describes a good whose demand drops when people’s incomes rise. These goods fall out of favour as incomes and the economy improve as consumers begin buying more costly substitutes instead.
Income effect
The income effect is the resultant change in demand for a good or service caused by an increase or decrease in a consumer’s purchasing power or real income. As one’s income grows, the income effect predicts that people will begin to demand more (and vice-versa).
Substitution effect
The substitution effect is the decrease in sales for a product that can be attributed to consumers switching to cheaper alternatives when its price rises. When the price of a product or service increases but the buyer’s income stays the same, the substitution effect generally kicks in.
PED
Elastic - a change in price causes consumer expenditure to fall. PED > 1
Inelastic - A price rise causes total consumer expenditure to rise. PED < 1
Unit elastic = 1
Perfectly elastic = Infinity
Perfectly inelastic = 0
Calculation: PED = (% change Qd)/(% change price)
Always negative
Determinants of PED
S - substitutes
P - percentage of income
L - luxury
T - time
YED
Measures the responsiveness of demand to a change in income.
YED = (% change demand)/(% change income).
Income elastic demand– when demand is highly & positively responsive to a change in income
Income inelastic demand– when demand only responds a little to a change in income
Inferior good- a product with a negative income elasticity of demand
Normal good– any product with a positive income elasticity of demand
Luxury good– a product with a highly positive income elasticity of demand (YED > +1)
XED
measures the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of one good to a change in the price of another good. It tells us how much the demand for one good is affected by a change in the price of another good.
XED = (% change Qd A)/(% change P B).
positive = substitutes
negative = complements
close to zero = unrelated
zero = independent goods
PES
Measures the responsiveness of supply to a change in price.
PES = (% change Quantity supplied)/(% change in price).
Determinants:
- Time taken to make goods.
- Extent of spare capacity in the production process.
- Level of stock held.
- How easy it is to switch production.
Spare capacity
Spare capacity occurs when a business is not making full use of its available capacity – there are spare factors of production including land, labour and capital. When an economy has plenty of spare capacity, short run aggregate supply (SRAS) is elastic, and the output gap is negative.
Total Revenue
Total revenue (TR) = price per unit multiplied by quantity sold. Total revenue is the total amount of money that a company brings in from the sale of its products or services. It’s calculated by multiplying the price of a product or service by the number of units sold.
If demand is elastic, cutting price = more total revenue
If demand in inelastic, raising price = more total revenue
if demand is unitary then any moderate price change won’t lead to any change in revenue.
Market equilibrium
A market is said to be in equilibrium when where is a balance between demand and supply. If something happens to disrupt that equilibrium (e.g. an increase in demand or a decrease in supply) then the forces of demand and supply respond (and price changes) until a new equilibrium is established.
Price mechanism
The price mechanism is the way in which prices are determined in a market economy. It is a central feature of the market system, which relies on the forces of supply and demand to allocate resources and distribute goods and services.