Market Demand

Intermediate Microeconomics (Econ 100A)

Kristian López Vargas

UCSC

Market demand

  • Two goods, $ x_1 $ , $ x_2 $

  • $ n $ consumers, indexed by $ i $

  • Individual demands: $ x_{1,i}(p_1, p_2, m_i) $ and $ x_{2,i}(p_1, p_2, m_i) $


$ X_{1}(p_1, p_2, m_1, ..., m_n) = \sum_{i=1}^{n} x_{1,i}(p_1, p_2, m_i) $


$ X_{2}(p_1, p_2, m_1, ..., m_n) = \sum_{i=1}^{n} x_{2,i}(p_1, p_2, m_i) $

Market demand - graphically

  • Market demand is the horizontal addition of individual demands.

  • Make sure you properly account for "zero demand" above highest "reservation price".

Market demand - graphically

Market demand - Example - Cobb Douglass

  • $ u = x_1^a x_2^b $

  • $ 100 $ consumers, indexed by $ i $

  • All individual have the same preferences, so same demand functions: $ x_{1,i}^* = \frac{ a }{ (a+b) } \frac{ m_i}{ p_1} $

$ \begin{aligned} X_1(p_1, p_2, m_1, ..., m_{100}) &= \sum_{i=1}^{100} \frac{ a }{ (a+b) } \frac{ m_i }{ p_1 } \\ ~ &= \frac{ a }{ (a+b) } \frac{ \sum_{i=1}^{100} m_i }{ p_1 } \\ ~ &= \frac{ a }{ (a+b) } \frac{ M }{ p_1 } \\ \end{aligned} $

  • What if there are different types of consumers?

Market demand - Example - Linear Demands

  • Suppose that the market consists of two individuals with demand functions given by:

$ x_{adam}(p, m_a) = max(20-p,0) $

$ x_{bob}(p, m_b) = max(30-3p,0) $

  • The aggregate demand function is thereby given by:

$ Q^d(p,m_a,m_b) = x_a(p,m_a)+x_b(p,m_b) $

$ Q^d(p,m_a,m_b) =\begin{cases} 50 - 4p & if ~ p < 10 \\ 20 - p & if ~ 10 \leq p \leq 20 \\ 0 & if ~ p > 20 \\ \end{cases} $

Reservation price

  • Some goods come in large discrete units

  • Reservation price is price that just makes a person indifferent

  • $ u (0 , m) = u(1, m − p^{*}_{a}) $

  • Add up demand curves to get aggregate demand curve

Market demand - discrete goods

Elasticity

Measures responsiveness of demand to price


$$ \epsilon = \frac{p}{x} \frac{dx}{dp} $$

  • What does elasticity depend on? In general, how many and how close substitutes a good has.

  • What does it mean? Why is not just the derivative?

  • We care about the magnitude so we often use: $ | \epsilon | $ instead of $ \epsilon $

Elasticity - Example for linear demand curve:

  • We will use q instead of $ x_1 $ or $ x_2 $

  • Let demand curve be: $ q = a − bp $

  • Price elasticity of demand: $ ε = −b \frac{p}{q} = \frac{−bp}{a−bp} $

Elasticity - Example for linear demand curve:

Elasticity - Iso-elastic demand curve:

Let demand curve be: $ Q = A p^{-b} $

Lets calculate the elasticity:


$$ \begin{aligned} \epsilon &= \frac{p}{Q} \frac{dQ}{dp} \\\\ &= \frac{p}{ A p^{-b} } ~ A (-b p^{-b-1} ) \\\\ &= \frac{A}{A} (-b) \frac{p ~ p^{-b-1} }{ p^{-b} } \\\\ &= -b \\\\ \end{aligned} $$

Elasticity classification

  • Elastic demand: absolute value of elasticity greater than $ 1 $

  • Inelastic demand: absolute value of elasticity less than $ 1 $

Revenue

Revenue, price increase and elasticity

Demand curve: $ Q^d = Q(p) $

Revenue: $ R = p \times Q $

When does an increase in price turn into an increase in revenue?

That is, when $ \frac{dR}{dp} > 0 $ ?

Revenue, price increase and elasticity


$$ \begin{aligned} \frac{dR}{dp} &= \frac{d(p Q(p))}{dp} \\\\ ~ &= p \frac{dQ}{dp} + Q(p) \\\\ ~ &= Q \big( \frac{p ~ dQ}{Q ~ dp} + 1 \big) \\\\ ~ &= Q ( \epsilon + 1 ) \\\\ \end{aligned} $$

So as long as $ \epsilon > -1 $, we will have that $ \frac{dR}{dp} > 0 $.

Revenue, price increase and elasticity

You can use the same math, to see that if $ \epsilon < -1 $, then $ \frac{dR}{dp} < 0 $.

Why does this matter? Consider the case of the linear demand where elasticity changes from 0 to -infinity as we increase price. Now we know that:

  • At a price level where demand is price-inelastic (which happens at low prices), an increase in price will increase revenue. And,

  • At a price level where demand is price-elastic (which happens at high prices), a decrease in price will increase revenue.

In conclusion, the price level that maximises revenue must be when the price-elasticity equals 1. The point we call unit-elasticity price level.