ECON 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Demand Curve, Perfect Competition, Dependent And Independent Variables

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14 Nov 2016
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Economics is often characterized as being about supply and demand. Strictly speaking, this is only true under the assumption of perfectly competitive markets: there are many buyers and sellers. There are no barriers to entry into the market: all goods in the market are identical. Everyone is a price-taker: no one has any power to manipulate prices. A demand schedule is a table that specifies the quantity demanded of a good at different prices. Quantity demanded is how much people will buy at that price. A demand curve is a graph of the demand schedule. The law of demand says that the quantity demanded of a good will decrease as the price increases. Price and quantity demanded move in opposite directions: demand curves will be downward sloping, does not apply to goods that consumers also sell. This is the o(cid:374)ly k(cid:374)ow(cid:374) (cid:862)law(cid:863) of eco(cid:374)o(cid:373)ics. Goods with upward sloping demand curves are called giffen goods: no clear-cut example has been found.

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