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Chapter 7





                            Demand





               2.1  Individual and market demand

               Individual demand represents the amount that a consumer is willing and able to
               purchase at a given price – i.e. effective demand. Market demand shows the total
               amount of effective demand from all the consumers in a market – it is an aggregate.


               2.2  Substitution effect and income effect

               For most goods, the lower the price, the higher will be its demand.  This is the result
               of two processes:

                    There is a substitution effect.  This is where a consumer buys more of one
                     good and less of another because of the relative price changes.  Thus is two
                     goods are substitutes, a fall in price of the first will lead consumers to switch
                     some demand to the lower-priced good.

                    There is an income effect. This is where a change in the price of a good affects
                     the purchasing power of the consumers’ income (a change in their real income).
                     If the price of a good falls, the consumer experiences a rise in their real income
                     and, as a result, tends to buy more of all normal goods and services.






































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