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The Nature of Demand 3.1 Demand—The amount of a good or service that that a consumer is willing and able to buy at various possible prices during a given.

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Presentation on theme: "The Nature of Demand 3.1 Demand—The amount of a good or service that that a consumer is willing and able to buy at various possible prices during a given."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Nature of Demand 3.1 Demand—The amount of a good or service that that a consumer is willing and able to buy at various possible prices during a given period of time. Quantity Demanded—Amount consumer is willing and able to buy at each particular price during given time period.

2 3.1 Demand Demand: 2 Important Conditions Consumer must be willing to buy Consumer must be able to buy *Not only be willing to buy a good or service but be able to pay for it. *Conditions change—Time can change the demand for a good or service.

3 The Law of Demand 3.1 An increase in a goods price causes a decrease in the quantity demanded and that a decrease in price causes an increase in the quantity demanded. Price – Up Demand –Down Price –Down Demand--Up Ex. $200 MP3 Player Price increases to $300 Price decreases to $100

4 Economic Concepts 3.1 Purchasing Power—The amount of money or income that is available to spend on goods and services. Income Effect—Any increase or decrease in consumers purchasing power caused by a change in price. We have $30 to spend on DVD’s: Ex. DVD’s prices increase from $15 to $18 Ex. DVD’s prices drop from $15 to $10 Consumers: Must be willing AND able

5 Income Effect 3.1 Substitution Effect—The tendency of consumers to substitute a similar, lower priced product for another product with a higher price. Hamburger rises to $5.00 per pound Substitute chicken @ $3.00 p/pound The demand for hamburger decreases as price increases. Ex. Milk—no substitute; demand about the same.

6 Diminishing Marginal Utility 3.1 Utility=Usefulness of a product or the amount of satisfaction an individual receives from a product. Diminishing Marginal Utility—The more of a product that is consumed, the satisfaction from each additional unit declines. Marginal: Means one additional unit Ex. At some point consumers cannot use any more of a product.

7 Demand Schedules 3.1 Demand Schedule—A way to show the relationship between the price of a good and the quantity that consumers demand. The schedule shows the quantity of goods that consumers are willing and able to buy at a series of possible prices. Inverse relationship Price $Quantity 5.00 4.00 3.00 123123 2.00 1.00 4545

8 Demand Curve Demand Curve—A graph that plots all the possible combinations of prices and quantities demanded. P Q 1 2 3 4 5 12345


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