Section 1 The Marketplace In a market economy, buyers and sellers set prices.

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The Marketplace In a market economy, buyers and sellers set prices.

Transcript of Section 1 The Marketplace In a market economy, buyers and sellers set prices.

Page 1: Section 1 The Marketplace In a market economy, buyers and sellers set prices.

Section 1

The Marketplace

In a market economy, buyers and sellers set prices.

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Concept Trans 1

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Section 1

The Marketplace (cont.)

• In a market economy, consumers collectively have a great deal of influence on prices of all goods and services.

• The demand of a good or service creates supply.

• A market represents the freely chosen actions between buyers and sellers.

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Vocab1

demand: the amount of a good or service that consumers are able and willing to buy at various possible prices during a specified time period

supply: the amount of a good or service that producers are able and willing to sell at various prices during a specified time period

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Section 1

The Marketplace (cont.)

• In a market economy, individuals decide for themselves the answers to:

– What?

– How?

– For Whom?

What are these questions called? HINT, you learned it in chapter 1.

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Section 1

The Marketplace (cont.)

• A market economy is based on the principle of voluntary exchange - a transaction in which a buyer and a seller exercise their economic freedom by working out their own terms of exchange.

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• Activity

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Section 1

The Law of Demand

The law of demand states that as price goes up, quantity demanded goes down, and vice versa.

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VS 1

The law of demand states that as price goes up, quantity demanded goes down. As price goes down, quantity demanded goes up.

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Section 1

The Law of Demand (cont.)

• Several factors explain the inverse relation between price and quantity demanded, or how much people will buy of any item at a particular price.

– Real income effect

– Substitution effect

• Factors include:

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Vocab7

real income effect: economic rule stating that individuals cannot keep buying the same quantity of a product if its price rises while their income stays the same

substitution effect: economic rule stating that if two items satisfy the same need and the price of one rises, people will buy more of the other

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Section 1

The Law of Demand (cont.)

• Diminishing marginal utility:

– Utility - the ability of any good or service to satisfy consumer wants

– Marginal utility - an additional amount of satisfaction

– Law of diminishing marginal utility - the additional satisfaction a consumer gets from purchasing one more unit of a product will lessen with each additional unit purchased

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A. A

B. B

C. C

Section 1

Do you feel that the law of demand benefits you as a shopper?

A. Always

B. Sometimes

C. Never

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Page 176 -Doodles

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Section 2

Graphing the Demand Curve

A demand curve is a graph that shows the relationship between the price of an item and the quantity demanded.

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Section 2

Graphing the Demand Curve (cont.)

• Economist can show the relationship between a change in quantity demanded and a change in demand using a demand curve.

View: Graphing the Demand Curve

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Section 2

Graphing the Demand Curve (cont.)

• A demand schedule is a table reflecting quantities demanded at different possibleprices.

• A demand curve shows the quantitydemanded of a good or service at each possible price. Demand curves slope downward, clearly showing the inverse relationship.

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Figure 2

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Section 2

Determinates of Demand

A change in the demand for a particular item shifts the entire demand curve to the left or right.

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Section 2

Determinates of Demand (cont.)

• Factors that can affect demand for a specific product or service:

– Changes in population

– Changes in income

– Changes in people’s tastes and preferences

View: If Population Increases

View: If Income Decreases

View: If Preferences Change

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Section 2

Determinates of Demand (cont.)

– The availability and price of substitutes

– The price of complementary goods

• The decrease in the price of one good will increase the demand for its complementary.

View: If Price of Substitute Decreases

View: If Price of Complement Decreases

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Figure 3

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A. AB. BC. CD. D

Section 2

A change in the demand of a product shifts the demand curve which way?

A. Up and down

B. Horizontally

C. Left and Right

D. Vertically

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Section 2

The Price Elasticity of Demand

Elasticity of demand measures how much the quantity demanded changes when price goes up or down.

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Section 2

The Price Elasticity of Demand (cont.)

• For some goods, a rise or fall in price greatly affects the amount people are willing to buy. This economic concept is referred to as elasticity.

• The measure of how much consumers respond to a given change in price is referred to as price elasticity of demand.

View: Demand vs. Quantity Demanded

View: Goods with…

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Section 2

The Price Elasticity of Demand (cont.)

elastic demand: situation in which a given rise or fall in a product’s price greatly affects the amount that people are willing to buy

inelastic demand: situation in which a product’s price change has little impact on the quantity demanded by consumers

View: Demand vs. Quantity Demanded

View: Goods with…

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Figure 11

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A. A

B. B

Section 2

A vacation to Australia is an example of which type of demand?

A. Elastic

B. Inelastic

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Section 3

Profits and the Law of Supply

The law of supply states that as price goes up, quantity supplied goes up, and vice versa.

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Section 3

Profits and the Law of Supply (cont.)

• To understand pricing, you must look at both demand and supply.

– The higher the price of a good, the greater the incentive is for a producer to produce more.

• The law of supply states that as the price of a good rises, the quantity supplied also rises. As the price falls, the quantity supplied also falls.

View: The Law of Supply

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Vocab20

quantity supplied: the amount of a good or service that a producer is willing and able to supply at a specific price

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Section 3

The Supply Curve

A supply curve is a graph that shows the relationship between price and quantity supplied.

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VS 2

The law of supply states that as price goes up, quantity supplied also goes up. As price goes down, quantity supplied goes down.

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Section 3

The Supply Curve (cont.)

• A supply schedule is a table showing quantities supplied at different possible prices.

• The supply curve is an upward-sloping line that shows in graph form the quantities producers are willing to supply at each possible price.

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A. A

B. B

Section 3

According to the supply curve, what is the relationship between price and quantity supplied?

A. Direct

B. Inverse

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Section 3

The Determinants of Supply

A change in the supply of a particular item shifts the entire supply curve to the left or right.

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Section 3

The Determinants of Supply (cont.)

• Many factors affect the supply of a specific product. Four of the major determinants are:

– The price of inputs

– The number of firms in the industry

– Taxes imposed or not imposed

View: If Inputs Become Cheaper

View: If Number of Firms Increases

View: If Taxes Increase

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Section 3

The Determinants of Supply (cont.)

– Technology

• Any improvement in technology will increase supply.

View: If Technology Improves Production

technology: the use of science to develop new products and new methods for producing and distributing goods and services

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 3

Which way will the supply curve shift if there is an increase in supply?

A. Right

B. Left

C. Up

D. Down

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Section 3

The Law of Diminishing Returns

When a business wants to expand, it has to consider how much expansion will really help the business.

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Section 3

The Law of Diminishing Returns (cont.)

• Will product output continue to increase proportionally as more workers are hired?

• The law of diminishing returns shows that as more units of a factor of production are added to the other factors of production, after a certain point, the extra output for each additional unit hired will begin to decrease.

View: Supply vs. Quantity Supplied

View: Diminishing Returns

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Section 4

Equilibrium Price

In free markets, prices are determined by the interaction of supply and demand.

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Section 4

Equilibrium Price (cont.)

• Demand and supply operate together. As the price of a good goes down, the quantity demanded rises and the quantity supplied falls (and vice versa).

• The point at which the quantity demanded and quantity supplied meet is called the equilibrium price.

View: Equilibrium Price

View: Change in Equilibrium Price

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VS 3

The point at which the quantity demanded and the quantity supplied meet is called the equilibrium price.

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Section 4

Prices as Signals

Under a free-enterprise system, prices function as signals that communicate information and coordinate the activities of producers and consumers.

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Section 4

Prices as Signals (cont.)

• Rising prices signal producers to produce more and consumers to purchase less.

• Falling prices signal producers to produce less and consumers to purchase more.

• A shortage occurs when at the current price, the quantity demanded is greater than the quantity supplied.

• Prices above the equilibrium price reflect a surplus to suppliers. (quantity supplied > quantity demanded at current price.

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Section 4

Prices as Signals (cont.)

• When a market economy operates without restriction, it eliminates shortages and surpluses.

– When a shortage occurs, the price goes up to eliminate the shortage.

– When surpluses occur, the price falls to eliminate the surplus.

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A. A

B. B

C. C

Section 4

If a company didn’t make enough of a certain shoe, and the demand for it was high, what would happen to the price?

A. It would increase.

B. It would decrease.

C. It would stay the same.

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Section 4

Price Controls

Under certain circumstances, the government sometimes sets a limit on how high or low a price of a good or service can go.

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Section 4

Price Controls (cont.)

– Effective price ceilings, and resulting shortages, often lead to non-market ways of distributing goods and services such as rationing and leading to the black market.

• A price ceiling is a government-set maximum price that may be charged for a particular good or service.

View: Price Ceilings and Price Floors

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Vocab29

rationing: the distribution of goods and services based on something other than price

black market: “underground” or illegal market in which goods are traded at prices above their legal maximum prices or in which illegal goods are sold

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Section 4

Price Controls (cont.)

• Conversely, a price floor, is a government-set minimum price that can be charged for goods and services.

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A. A

B. B

C. C

Section 4

Do you feel that the government should be able to intervene in the market?

A. Always

B. Sometimes

C. Never