📊 Deriving demand curves by analyzing the relationship between price and quantity demanded.
💰 Exploring the effect of changes in income on demand.
📈 Understanding the income and substitution effects on demand when prices change.
The demand curve shows the relationship between price and quantity.
A change in price affects the demand for goods due to income and substitution effects.
The elasticity of demand determines the shape of the demand curve.
📈 Demand curves can be perfectly inelastic or perfectly elastic, depending on the availability of substitutes.
💰 The elasticity of demand is determined by the substitutability of goods; more substitutable goods are more elastically demanded.
💵 Changes in income can affect demand curves, with higher income leading to more consumption and lower income leading to less consumption.
🔑 Demand curves can be represented by the income elasticity of demand and the constant elasticity versus linear curves.
💰 Upward-sloping demand curves indicate positive income elasticity, representing normal goods. Goods with negative income elasticity are considered inferior goods.
💲 Luxury goods have an income elasticity greater than one, while necessities have an income elasticity less than one.
Demand curves and income/substitution effects are theoretical concepts that help understand the response to price changes.
The substitution effect is the change in quantity of a good when the price changes, while holding utility constant.
The income effect is the change in quantity of a good as income changes, and it is multiplied by the initial level of income.
🍪 Having more cookies decreases the marginal utility of each cookie.
💲 The substitution effect causes a decrease in quantity demanded when prices increase.
💰 The income effect leads to a decrease in quantity demanded when prices increase and income stays constant.
The substitution effect and income effect influence the demand for goods based on price changes.
For normal goods, price increases lead to a decrease in demand, while price decreases lead to an increase in demand.
In the case of inferior goods, the effect of price changes on demand is uncertain, and there is a possibility of an upward sloping demand curve, known as a Giffen good.