Chapter 3: Problem 1
What is a demand schedule? What is a demand curve?
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These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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Chapter 3: Problem 1
What is a demand schedule? What is a demand curve?
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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If a market is in equilibrium, is it necessarily true that all buyers and sellers are satisfied with the market price? Brieflv explain.
[Related to Solved Problem 3.3 on page 88\(]\) In The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith discussed what has come to be known as the "diamond and water paradox": Nothing is more useful than water: but it will purchase scarce anything; scarce anything can be had in exchange for it. A diamond, on the contrary, has scarce any value in use; but a very great quantity of other goods may frequently be had in exchange for it. Graph the market for diamonds and the market for water. Show how it is possible for the price of water to be much lower than the price of diamonds, even though the demand for water is much greater than the demand for diamonds.
Related to the Apply the Concept on page 81\(]\) An article on marketwatch.com stated, "While the fizzy soda drinks companies have experienced an annual volume sales decline since \(2003,\) bottled water grew every year over the last two decades, except 2009 during the depths of the Great Recession." a. What factors have caused a decline in sales of carbonated ("fizzy") beverages? Is it likely that those factors will lead to further declines in demand in the future? Briefly explain. b. Why might sales of bottled water be likely to decline during a recession, when employment and household incomes fall? Would sales of premium bottled water be likely to decline by more or by less during a recession than sales of regular bottled water? Briefly explain.
In early 2017, an article in the Financial Times about the oil market quoted the chief economist of oil company \(\mathrm{BP}\) as saying, "Pricing pressure is likely to come from the supply side, because of strong growth in US shale oil (crude oil found within shale formations), and the demand side as the rise of renewable energy, including electric vehicles, gradually slows growth in oil consumption." After reading this article, a student argues: "From this information, we would expect that the price of oil will fall, but we don't know whether the equilibrium quantity of oil will increase or decrease." Is the student's analysis correct? Illustrate your answer with a demand and supply graph.
Draw a demand and supply graph to show the effect on the equilibrium price in a market in the following situations. a. The demand curve shifts to the right. b. The supply curve shifts to the left.
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