demand curve
Economics
Business
(noun)
An economic model showing the quantity demanded at various price levels.
Examples of demand curve in the following topics:
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Demand Schedules and Demand Curves
- A demand curve depicts the price and quantity combinations listed in a demand schedule.
- The curve can be derived from a demand schedule, which is essentially a table view of the price and quantity pairings that comprise the demand curve.
- The demand curve of an individual agent can be combined with that of other economic agents to depict a market or aggregate demand curve.
- In this manner, the demand curve for all consumers together follows from the demand curve of every individual consumer.
- The demand curve in combination with the supply curve provides the market clearing or equilibrium price and quantity relationship.
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Shifts in the Money Demand Curve
- A shift in the money demand curve occurs when there is a change in any non-price determinant of demand, resulting in a new demand curve.
- A demand curve is used to graph and analyze the demand for money.
- The shift of the money demand curve occurs when there is a change in any non-price determinant of demand, resulting in a new demand curve.
- A decrease in demand would shift the curve to the left.
- Explain factors that cause shifts in the money demand curve, Explain the implications of shifts in the money demand curve
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The Demand Curve in Perfect Competition
- The demand curve for an individual firm is thus equal to the equilibrium price of the market .
- The demand curve for a firm in a perfectly competitive market varies significantly from that of the entire market.The market demand curve slopes downward, while the perfectly competitive firm's demand curve is a horizontal line equal to the equilibrium price of the entire market.
- The horizontal demand curve indicates that the elasticity of demand for the good is perfectly elastic.
- The demand curve for an individual firm is equal to the equilibrium price of the market.
- The market demand curve is downward-sloping.
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Changes in Demand and Shifts in the Demand Curve
- Demand curves in combination with supply curves, which depict the price to quantity relationship of producers, are a representation of the goods and services market.
- Movements in demand are specific to either movements along a given demand curve or shifts of the entire demand curve.
- The demand curve for a good will shift in parallel with a shift in the demand for a complement.
- A demand curve provides an economic agent's price to quantity relationship related to a specific good or service.
- Distinguish between shifts in the demand curve and movement along the demand curve
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Market Demand
- The demand schedule is depicted graphically as the demand curve.
- The demand curve is shaped by the law of demand.
- The graphical representation of a market demand schedule is called the market demand curve.
- As noted, both individual demand curves and market demand are typically expressed as downward shaping curves.
- The demand curve is the graphical depiction of the demand schedule.
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The Demand Curve
- This is referred to as the demand curve.
- The demand curve for all consumers together follows from the demand curve of every individual consumer: the individual demands at each price are added together.
- The constant "b" is the slope of the demand curve and shows how the price of the good affects the quantity demanded.
- The graph of the demand curve uses the inverse demand function in which price is expressed as a function of quantity.
- The shift of a demand curve takes place when there is a change in any non-price determinant of demand, resulting in a new demand curve.
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Demand for Public Goods
- The aggregate demand curve for a public good is the vertical summation of individual demand curves.
- The economy's marginal benefit curve (demand curve) for a public good is thus the vertical sum all individual's marginal benefit curves.
- This is in contrast to the aggregate demand curve for a private good, which is the horizontal sum of the individual demand curves at each price.
- The sum of the individual marginal benefit curves (MB) represent the aggregate willingness to pay or aggregate demand (∑MB).
- The intersection of the aggregate demand and the marginal cost curve (MC) determines the amount of the good provided.
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Optimal Quantity of a Public Good
- Unlike the market demand curve for private goods, where individual demand curves are summed horizontally, individual demand curves for public goods are summed vertically to get the market demand curve.
- As a result, the market demand curve for public goods gives the price society is willing to pay for a given quantity.
- Due to the law of diminishing marginal utility, the demand curve is downward sloping.
- The supply curve for a public good is equal to its marginal cost curve.
- As already noted, the demand curve is equal to the marginal benefit curve, while the supply curve is equal to the marginal cost curve.
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Impact of Changing Price on Producer Surplus
- Shifts in the demand curve are directly related to the amount of producer surplus.
- If demand decreases, and the demand curve shifts to the left, producer surplus decreases.
- Conversely, if demand increases, and the demand curve shifts to the right, producer surplus increases.
- At an initial demand represented by the "Demand (1)" curve, producer surplus is the blue triangle made of $P_1$, $A$, and $B$.
- When demand increases, represented by the "Demand (2)" curve, producer surplus is the larger gray triangle made of $P_2$, $A$, and $C$.
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The Relationship Between the Phillips Curve and AD-AD
- Changes in aggregate demand cause movements along the Phillips curve, all other variables held constant.
- The Phillips curve and aggregate demand share similar components.
- Let's assume that aggregate supply, AS, is stationary, and that aggregate demand starts with the curve, AD1.
- Now, imagine there are increases in aggregate demand, causing the curve to shift right to curves AD2 through AD4.
- This illustrates an important point: changes in aggregate demand cause movements along the Phillips curve.