ECON101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Relative Price, Demand Curve, Marginal Utility

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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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Market: any arrangement that enables buyers and sellers to get information and to do business with each other. Competitive market: a market that has many buyers and many sellers, so no singly buyer or seller can influence the price. Money price: the price of an object that must be given up in exchange for it. Relative price: the ratio of one price to another. If you demand something, then you: want it, can afford it, plan to buy it. The quantity demanded of a good/service is the amount that consumers plan to buy during a given time period at a particular price. It does not always match the quantity actually bought. Measured as an amount per unit of time. The law of demand states: (cid:862)othe(cid:396) thi(cid:374)gs (cid:396)e(cid:373)ai(cid:374)i(cid:374)g the sa(cid:373)e, the highe(cid:396) the p(cid:396)ice of a good, the smaller is the quantity demanded; and the lower the price of a good, the greater is the (cid:395)ua(cid:374)tity de(cid:373)a(cid:374)ded(cid:863)

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