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Microeconomics: Price determination in competitive markets

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Demand (types of demand, demand curve - factors that cause movements along and shifts of the demand curve) Supply (law of supply, supply curve - factors that cause movements along and shifts of the supply curve) Equilibrium (excess supply, excess demand, shifts in demand and supply) Price elasticity of demand (calculating PED, price elastic demand, perfectly elastic demand, unitary elastic demand, price inelastic demand, perfectly inelastic demand) Price elasticity of supply (calculating PES, price elastic supply, perfectly elastic supply, unitary elastic supply, price inelastic supply, perfectly inelastic supply) Income elasticity of demand (calculating income elasticity of demand, normal goods, inferior goods) Cross price elasticity of demand (calculating cross price elasticity of demand, substitute goods, complementary goods) Associated markets (joint demand, derived demand, composite demand, joint supply) Consumer and producer surplus

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Price determination in Competitive Markets: How Markets Work
Demand
Quantity of a good/service consumers are willing and able to buy at a given time period
Effective Demand: Willing/able to pay
Latent Demand: Willingness to buy, but lack purchasing power
Derived Demand: Demand for good X connected to demand for good Y
e.g. demand for steel linked to demand for new vehicles and other manufactured products
Steel is a cyclical industry – market demand for steel affected by changes in economic cycle
and fluctuations in exchange rate. In recession, demand for steel falls
Composite demand: Good demanded for multiple uses e.g. oil to make plastic or petrol
Joint Demand: Demand for two interdependent goods e.g. printer and printer ink
Giffen Good: price rise leads to increase in demand – poor can’t afford luxury alternatives
Ostentatious good: price rise increases demand as quality has increased
Demand Curve
 Relationship between price and quantity demanded over period
 Increasing the price increases opportunity cost
 If rational, only consume more if it increases welfare
 If demand rises – extension of demand
 If demand falls – contraction of demand
Income Effect:
 Fall in price increases real purchasing power of consumers
 Allows higher consumption – smaller % of income
 For normal goods, increase in demand caused by increase in real income
Substitution Effect:
 Fall in price of good X makes it relatively cheaper compared to substitutes
 Some consumers switch to good X, increasing demand
 Depends on how close of a substitute
Movement along demand curve:
A change in price causes movement along demand curve
Elastic demand: price increase cause significant fall in demand e.g. Tesco tea bags
Inelastic Demand: Price increase will cause small fall in demand e.g. petrol

Firms reduce price to increase demand
Consumers effective demand increases when:
1. Increase real purchasing power
2. Relatively cheaper compared to substitutes
3. Opportunity cost falls

Factors that shift demand curve

, 1. Incomes
 Disposable income rises (afford more goods) - consumption rises – demand increases
 Inferior goods: Incomes rise – afford better alternatives – consumption/demand falls
2. Advertising/Publicity
 More aware of product - increase brand loyalty - demand increases
 e.g. Higher spending on advertising by Coca Cola increased global sales
 Bad publicity – reduce demand
3. Price of Substitute goods
 If price of substitute good falls, demand falls (cheaper alternative)
 If price of substitute good increases, demand increases (cheaper alternative)
 e.g. If price of Samsung phones increase, demand for Apple iPhones increase
4. Price of complementary goods
 If price of complementary good falls, demand increases
 If price of complementary good increases, demand falls
 e.g. If price of game consoles fall, demand for video games increases
5.Fashion
6.Changes in quality
 Increase in quality e.g. better-quality phone cameras, encourages consumption –
reduces demand of substitute goods
7.Change in interest rates
 If interest rates fall, cheaper to borrow, increase consumer spending, demand increases
 If interest rates increase, more expensive to borrow, incentive to save, demand falls
8.Weather
 In cold weather, increased demand for fuel and warm clothes
9.Expectations over future prices
 A commodity e.g. gold, may be bought due to speculation it will increase in price




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