Supply & demand (1) Flashcards

1
Q

What is a price taker?

A

A person or firm with no power to influence the market price.

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2
Q

What is the law of demand?

A

The quantity of a good demanded per period of time will fall as the price rises and rise as the price falls.

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3
Q

What is the income effect?

A

The effect of a change in price on quantity demanded arising from the consumer becoming better or worse off as a result of the price change.

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4
Q

What is the substitution effect?

A

The effect of a change in price on quantity demanded arising from the consumer switching to or from alternative products.

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5
Q

What does quantity demanded refer to?

A

The amount of a good that a consumer is willing and able to buy at a given price over a given period of time.

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6
Q

What are substitute goods?

A

A pair of goods which are considered by consumers to be alternatives to each other. As the price of one goes up, the demand for the other rises.

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7
Q

What are complementary goods?

A

A pair of goods consumed together. As the price of one goes up, the demand for both will fall.

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8
Q

What are normal goods?

A

A good whose demand rises as people’s income rises.

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9
Q

What are inferior goods?

A

A good whose demand falls as people’s income rises.

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10
Q

Why does the quantity demanded fall when the price rises?

A

This is due to the law of demand. People will feel poorer and not be able to afford as much of the good with their money, and the good will cost more than alternative or substitute goods, so consumers will move towards these.

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11
Q

How do you draw individual and market demand curves?

A

[Here you would insert diagrams or descriptions of how to draw the curves.]

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12
Q

What are six factors, other than price, that influence the demand for a good?

A

Tastes, number and price of substitute goods, number and price of complementary goods, income, distribution of income, and expectation of future price changes.

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13
Q

Distinguish between a change in demand and a change in the quantity demanded.

A

A change in demand will shift the demand curve, while a change in quantity demanded will be a movement along the curve.

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14
Q

What is a supply curve?

A

A graph showing the relationship between the price of a good and the quantity of the good supplied over a given period of time.

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15
Q

What are substitutes in supply?

A

These are goods where an increased production of one means diverting resources away from producing the other.

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16
Q

What are goods in joint supply?

A

These are two goods where the production of more of one leads to the production of more of the other.

17
Q

Give three reasons why quantity supplied increases with price.

A

Higher output means higher costs of production, higher prices make production more profitable, and sustained high prices attract new competitors into the market.

18
Q

Describe seven factors, other than price, that influence the supply of a good.

A

Cost of production, profitability of alternative products, profitability of goods in joint supply, nature and other unpredictable events, aims of producers, expectation of future prices, and the number of suppliers.

19
Q

Distinguish between a change in supply and a change in the quantity supplied.

A

A change in supply will shift the supply curve left or right, while a change in quantity supplied will be a movement along the curve.

20
Q

Give four reasons for changes in the costs of production.

A

Change in input prices, change in technology, organisational changes, and government policy.

21
Q

What is market clearing?

A

A market clears when supply matches demand.

22
Q

How do you calculate the equilibrium price and quantity?

A

By equating demand and supply functions, often using simultaneous equations.

23
Q

How do diagrams help determine market equilibrium and the effects of changes in demand or supply?

A

Diagrams show how an increase or decrease in demand or supply affects the equilibrium price and quantity.

24
Q

Give examples of financial, non-financial, and perverse incentives.

A

Financial incentives include price increases encouraging more production. Non-financial incentives can be gifting presents to family. Perverse incentives might involve banks lending less to small businesses when required to hold more capital.

25
Q

What is the identification problem in determining demand and supply curves?

A

It’s the difficulty of identifying the relationship between two variables when it’s unclear if other determinants have shifted the demand or supply curves.