In a competitive market, demand for and supply of a good or service determine the equilibrium price.
The law of demand
Markets have two agents: buyers and sellers. Demand represents the buyers in a market. Demand is a description of all quantities of a good or service that a buyer would be willing to purchase at all prices.
According to the law of demand, this relationship is always negative: the response to an increase in price is a decrease in the quantity demanded.
For example, if the price of scented erasers decreases, buyers will respond to the price decrease by increasing the number of scented erasers demanded. A market for a good requires demand and supply.
The determinants of demand
What influences demand besides price? Factors like changes in consumer income also cause the market demand to increase or decrease. For example, if the number of buyers in a market decreases, there will be less quantity demanded at every price, which means demand has decreased.
For instance, if scented erasers are normal goods, then when buyers have more income they will buy more scented erasers at every possible price; this would also shift the demand curve to the right.
Key Terms
Determinants of Demand Mean
Consumer preferences: personality characteristics, occupation, age, advertising, and product quality, all are key factors affecting consumer behaviour and, therefore, demand.
Prices of related products: an increase in the price of one product will cause a decrease in the quantity demanded of a complementary product. In contrast, an increase in the price of one product will cause an increase in the demand for a substitute product.
Consumer income: the higher the consumer income, the higher the demand and vice versa.
Consumer expectations: expectations for a higher income or higher prices increase the quantity demanded. Expectations for a lower income or lower prices decrease the quantity demanded.
The number of buyers: the higher the number of buyers, the higher the quantity demanded, and vice versa.
Other factors: the weather and governmental policies that may expand or contract the economy affect the demand for particular products or services.
Let’s look at an example.
Example
Chris wants to fuel his car. At the gas station, he realizes that the gas prices have skyrocketed to $5 a gallon. Chris faces some income problems lately because he lost his job. Therefore, he cannot afford to pay a high gas price. What is Chris going to do?
Because Chris’ car runs on gas and he cannot replace it with a substitute good which would be a car running on electricity, Chris decides to spend less on a complementary good such as tires. So, the next time Chris changes tires, he will buy cheaper tires to trade-off for the increase in gas.
What if Chris thinks that the price of gas will increase further?
If Chris expects that the price of gas will rise, he is more likely to put gas in his car more often. Instead of filling the car every week, he will start filling it every other day to take advantage of the price of gas today.
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