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Law of demand

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In economics, the law of demand is an economic law that states that consumers buy more of a good when its price decreases and less when its price increases. Ceteris Paribus.
The greater the amount to be sold, the smaller the price at which it is offered must be in order for it to find purchasers.
Law of demand states that the amount demanded of a commodity and its price are inversely related, other things remaining constant. That is, if the income of the consumer, prices of the related goods, and tastes and preferences of the consumer remain unchanged, the consumer’s demand for the good will move opposite to the movement in the price of the good.
"If the price of the good increases, the quantity demanded decreases, while if price of the good decreases, its quantity demanded increases."

Mathematical expression

The negative relation (i.e., higher price attracts lower demand & lower prices encourages high quantity to be bought by the consumers) is based on logic and experience. Mathematically, the inverse relation may be stated with causal relation as.

               Qx = f (Px)

Where, Q is the quantity demanded of x goods
f is the function, and
Px is the price of x goods.
Hence, in the above model, the function (f) is a varying one i.e., the law of demand postulates Px as the casual factor and Qx is the dependent variable.
The two variables move in the opposite direction. When Px falls Qx rises and the reverse. However, the inverse relation merely indicates and not a quantitative assertion. To put it in other words, when Px decreases, demand rises. How much demand will rise? The law is silent. For e.g., when Px falls from Rs.8/- to Rs.6/- Qx may rise from 10 to 11 or etc. thus the law of demand merely states the direction in which quantity demanded changes for a given change in price. Moreover, what the law states is hypothetical and not actual. At a particular time, instantly and continuously, if price goes on falling, demand will go on expanding.

Assumptions

Every law will have limitation or exceptions. While expressing the law of demand, the assumptions that other conditions of demand were unchanged. If remain constant, the inverse relation may not hold well. In other words, it is assume that the income and tastes of consumers and the prices of other commodities are constant. This law operates when the commodity’s price changes and all other prices and conditions do not change. The main assumptions are

  • Habits, tastes and fashions remain constant
  • Money, income of the consumer does not change.
  • Prices of other goods remain constant
  • The commodity in question has no substitute
  • The commodity is a normal good and has no prestige or status value.
  • People do not expect changes in the prices.

Limitation


• change in taste or fashion.
• Change in income
• Change in other prices.
• Discovery of substitution.
• Anticipatary change in prices.
• Rare or distinction goods.


   [1]

There are certain goods which do not follow this law. These include Veblen and Giffen goods

See also

law of demand states that other factors remaining constant more of goods will be purchased only at lesser price. these other factors may include taste and preference of consumers,price of substitute and related goods,income,etc.

References

  1. ^ Sullivan, Arthur (2003). Economics: Principles in action. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. p. 552. ISBN 0-13-063085-3. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)