ECO-2013 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Shortage, Excess Supply, Demand Curve

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24 Jan 2017
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Consumer choice and the law of demand: the law of demand. The inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded; when price rises, quantity demanded falls; when price falls, quantity demanded rises. Qua(cid:374)tity de(cid:373)a(cid:374)ded is a (cid:374)u(cid:373)(cid:271)er; it"s how many units of a good you bought. Changes in demand versus changes in quantity demanded: other variables besides price determine what you buy. 1) when price changes, quantity demanded changes but demand does not change: this is movement along a demand curve. 2) when something else changes, demand changes: this is movement of the entire curve, typi(cid:272)al (cid:862)so(cid:373)ethi(cid:374)g else(cid:863) (cid:272)ha(cid:374)ges. Prices of related goods (substitutes and complements) Tastes and preferences: another way to think about the difference between demand and quantity demanded. If price is the reason, then quantity demanded changes; move along the demand curve. If any variable besides price is the reason, then demand changes; shift the demand curve. Producer choice and the law of supply: the law of supply.

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