1 00:00:01,972 --> 00:00:04,389 ♪ [music] ♪ 2 00:00:12,467 --> 00:00:13,700 - [Tyler] In previous videos, 3 00:00:13,700 --> 00:00:16,300 we've covered the basics of the demand curve. 4 00:00:16,300 --> 00:00:19,700 Now let's discuss what happens when the demand curve shifts, 5 00:00:20,000 --> 00:00:23,187 due to increases or decreases in market demand. 6 00:00:23,187 --> 00:00:26,100 First, let's look at an increase in demand. 7 00:00:26,700 --> 00:00:28,057 An increase in demand 8 00:00:28,057 --> 00:00:31,600 means that the demand curve shifts up and to the right. 9 00:00:32,400 --> 00:00:34,671 Take the market for houseplants, for instance. 10 00:00:35,250 --> 00:00:38,100 On the old demand curve at $20, 11 00:00:38,400 --> 00:00:41,293 the quantity demanded was five plants, 12 00:00:41,572 --> 00:00:44,991 but on the new demand curve at, again, $20, 13 00:00:44,991 --> 00:00:47,413 the quantity demanded is eight plants. 14 00:00:48,416 --> 00:00:52,200 At $16, we go from six plants to nine plants. 15 00:00:53,500 --> 00:00:57,500 At $12, we go from seven to ten plants, and so on. 16 00:00:57,900 --> 00:00:59,221 An increase in demand 17 00:00:59,221 --> 00:01:02,400 is a greater quantity demanded at every price. 18 00:01:03,000 --> 00:01:05,303 We can also read an increase in demand 19 00:01:05,303 --> 00:01:07,800 using what is called the vertical method. 20 00:01:07,960 --> 00:01:10,100 What that means is that for every quantity, 21 00:01:10,300 --> 00:01:13,200 there's a greater willingness to pay for that quantity. 22 00:01:13,500 --> 00:01:15,628 For instance, for the fifth unit, 23 00:01:15,628 --> 00:01:19,100 people had been willing to pay $20 for that unit. 24 00:01:19,300 --> 00:01:20,992 Now with the new demand curve, 25 00:01:20,992 --> 00:01:24,393 people are willing to pay $32 for that unit. 26 00:01:25,100 --> 00:01:27,500 In summary, an increase in demand 27 00:01:27,500 --> 00:01:30,136 means an increase in the quantity demanded 28 00:01:30,136 --> 00:01:32,148 at every market price. 29 00:01:32,148 --> 00:01:34,757 Or equivalently, it means an increase 30 00:01:34,757 --> 00:01:38,273 in the maximum willingness to pay for a given quantity. 31 00:01:39,400 --> 00:01:40,670 A decrease in demand -- 32 00:01:40,670 --> 00:01:43,427 well, that's just the opposite of an increase in demand. 33 00:01:43,570 --> 00:01:46,000 It's a shift down and to the left. 34 00:01:46,600 --> 00:01:50,286 There's a decrease in quantity demanded at every price. 35 00:01:50,762 --> 00:01:55,200 Now at $20, people only want to buy two houseplants. 36 00:01:56,100 --> 00:02:00,300 At $16, we go from six to three houseplants and so on. 37 00:02:01,100 --> 00:02:03,624 Similarly, this means a decrease 38 00:02:03,624 --> 00:02:06,400 in the willingness to pay for the same quantity. 39 00:02:06,800 --> 00:02:08,018 For the fifth unit, 40 00:02:08,018 --> 00:02:11,373 people were willing to pay $20 for that unit, 41 00:02:11,373 --> 00:02:13,964 but now they're only going to fork over $8 42 00:02:13,964 --> 00:02:15,181 for that houseplant. 43 00:02:16,500 --> 00:02:19,400 So what can cause a shift in demand? 44 00:02:20,000 --> 00:02:22,935 What would make consumers buy more or less of a good 45 00:02:22,935 --> 00:02:24,100 at every price? 46 00:02:24,800 --> 00:02:26,904 Take a moment to jot down some guesses. 47 00:02:29,994 --> 00:02:32,144 We'll go through these with a few examples. 48 00:02:32,144 --> 00:02:34,900 But the real goal is not to memorize this list 49 00:02:35,200 --> 00:02:36,606 but rather to understand 50 00:02:36,606 --> 00:02:39,600 what an increase or decrease in demand means 51 00:02:39,900 --> 00:02:42,500 so that you can recreate this list on your own. 52 00:02:43,000 --> 00:02:45,115 Let's now go through five factors 53 00:02:45,115 --> 00:02:48,057 that can increase or decrease market demand, 54 00:02:48,057 --> 00:02:51,817 namely income, population, tastes, 55 00:02:51,817 --> 00:02:53,744 the price of related goods, 56 00:02:53,744 --> 00:02:55,600 and finally, expectations. 57 00:02:56,600 --> 00:02:58,900 Let's start with changes in income. 58 00:02:59,500 --> 00:03:02,356 The effect of a change in income on demand 59 00:03:02,356 --> 00:03:05,039 depends on the nature of the good in question. 60 00:03:05,595 --> 00:03:07,919 For most goods, as your income goes up, 61 00:03:07,919 --> 00:03:09,992 you demand more of the good. 62 00:03:09,992 --> 00:03:12,049 Think, for instance, fine dining. 63 00:03:12,049 --> 00:03:14,101 You need to be able to afford it, right? 64 00:03:14,800 --> 00:03:17,653 The demand curve then shifts up and to the right. 65 00:03:18,183 --> 00:03:20,400 These goods are called normal goods 66 00:03:20,800 --> 00:03:23,900 because the demand for them goes up when incomes go up, 67 00:03:23,900 --> 00:03:26,150 and indeed most goods are normal goods -- 68 00:03:26,150 --> 00:03:27,849 that's why we call them normal. 69 00:03:28,300 --> 00:03:30,029 And these same goods -- 70 00:03:30,029 --> 00:03:33,795 the demand for them goes down when incomes go down. 71 00:03:34,900 --> 00:03:36,400 There are also goods, however, 72 00:03:36,700 --> 00:03:38,822 for which, when your income goes up, 73 00:03:38,822 --> 00:03:41,200 your demand for them actually goes down. 74 00:03:41,700 --> 00:03:42,710 These are exceptions. 75 00:03:42,710 --> 00:03:44,800 We call them inferior goods. 76 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:47,791 So an example of such an inferior good 77 00:03:47,791 --> 00:03:49,779 might be instant ramen -- 78 00:03:49,779 --> 00:03:51,100 it's very cheap. 79 00:03:52,000 --> 00:03:54,600 As you make more money, you might buy, say, 80 00:03:54,600 --> 00:03:58,776 more caviar, more steak, and less instant ramen. 81 00:03:58,776 --> 00:03:59,780 - [voice] No, thanks! 82 00:03:59,780 --> 00:04:02,367 - [Tyler] Thus, the demand curve for instant ramen 83 00:04:02,367 --> 00:04:06,080 will shift down into the left as your income increases. 84 00:04:06,800 --> 00:04:10,357 Now let's move on to changes in population. 85 00:04:10,875 --> 00:04:13,400 If the population of an economy changes, 86 00:04:13,700 --> 00:04:17,757 the number of potential buyers of a good changes also. 87 00:04:18,559 --> 00:04:21,098 What would happen to the demand for hearing aids 88 00:04:21,098 --> 00:04:24,400 if the elderly population in your country increased? 89 00:04:24,600 --> 00:04:27,900 Well, very likely, demand for hearing aids would increase. 90 00:04:28,300 --> 00:04:30,426 At any price for those hearing aids, 91 00:04:30,426 --> 00:04:33,100 there would be a higher quantity demanded. 92 00:04:38,820 --> 00:04:41,700 Can you think of a good that would decrease in demand 93 00:04:41,700 --> 00:04:44,000 if the birth rates in your country decreased? 94 00:04:45,200 --> 00:04:48,000 Now, we'll move on to changes in tastes. 95 00:04:48,300 --> 00:04:51,100 Tastes are subjective, and they're changing all the time. 96 00:04:51,400 --> 00:04:55,595 New information, fashions, and fads all can impact tastes. 97 00:04:56,234 --> 00:04:57,300 To give an example, 98 00:04:57,700 --> 00:05:00,000 what happens to the demand for hamburgers 99 00:05:00,000 --> 00:05:01,769 if low-carb diets, 100 00:05:01,769 --> 00:05:04,411 like the keto diet or the caveman diet 101 00:05:04,411 --> 00:05:05,600 become more popular? 102 00:05:06,200 --> 00:05:10,200 Well, people would want to go out and buy and eat more hamburgers, 103 00:05:10,200 --> 00:05:13,400 and so the demand for hamburgers would increase. 104 00:05:14,342 --> 00:05:17,547 Alternatively, what if a controversy surfaced 105 00:05:17,547 --> 00:05:20,600 that questioned the ethics of hamburger production? 106 00:05:21,100 --> 00:05:23,900 People might then feel bad about buying hamburgers, 107 00:05:24,100 --> 00:05:26,250 and then they would buy fewer hamburgers 108 00:05:26,250 --> 00:05:28,400 or maybe stop buying them altogether. 109 00:05:28,900 --> 00:05:31,900 The demand for hamburgers then would go down. 110 00:05:33,220 --> 00:05:37,089 Next, let's consider how the price of a related good 111 00:05:37,089 --> 00:05:38,549 can affect demand, 112 00:05:38,549 --> 00:05:41,022 starting with substitute goods. 113 00:05:41,390 --> 00:05:45,126 Now substitutes are two goods that are roughly interchangeable. 114 00:05:45,126 --> 00:05:46,132 They're not the same, 115 00:05:46,132 --> 00:05:48,982 but they can serve broadly similar functions. 116 00:05:49,283 --> 00:05:51,500 Take, for instance, hot dogs and hamburgers -- 117 00:05:51,800 --> 00:05:54,000 they're both something you might have for dinner. 118 00:05:54,500 --> 00:05:55,614 Now in the setting, 119 00:05:55,614 --> 00:05:58,000 suppose the price of hot dogs goes up. 120 00:05:58,500 --> 00:06:00,609 What happens to the demand for hamburgers -- 121 00:06:00,609 --> 00:06:02,400 a substitute for hot dogs? 122 00:06:03,100 --> 00:06:04,552 People will opt to buy 123 00:06:04,552 --> 00:06:07,687 the relatively less expensive hamburgers, 124 00:06:07,687 --> 00:06:10,786 instead of the now more expensive hot dogs. 125 00:06:13,100 --> 00:06:15,900 That means the demand for hamburgers increases. 126 00:06:17,000 --> 00:06:19,200 Or consider the opposite occurrence. 127 00:06:19,700 --> 00:06:22,490 What if the price of hot dogs decreases, 128 00:06:22,490 --> 00:06:23,661 instead of going up? 129 00:06:23,661 --> 00:06:26,312 What happens then to the demand for hamburgers? 130 00:06:26,684 --> 00:06:29,300 Well, that's just the opposite of the first scenario. 131 00:06:29,500 --> 00:06:31,004 Hot dogs are now cheaper, 132 00:06:31,004 --> 00:06:33,988 and the demand for hamburgers decreases 133 00:06:33,988 --> 00:06:37,100 because it now costs less to buy hot dogs instead. 134 00:06:38,000 --> 00:06:40,643 Technically, two goods are substitutes 135 00:06:40,643 --> 00:06:42,861 if an increase in the price of one good 136 00:06:42,861 --> 00:06:47,000 leads to an increase in demand for the other good and vice versa. 137 00:06:48,300 --> 00:06:49,899 Another kind of related good 138 00:06:49,899 --> 00:06:52,200 is what economists call complements. 139 00:06:52,700 --> 00:06:55,826 Complements are two goods which are often used together 140 00:06:55,826 --> 00:06:57,826 and make each other more valuable. 141 00:06:58,300 --> 00:07:01,000 Suppose the price of hamburgers increases. 142 00:07:01,600 --> 00:07:04,600 What happens to the demand for hamburger buns -- 143 00:07:04,800 --> 00:07:07,100 a complement to hamburgers [proper]? 144 00:07:07,900 --> 00:07:10,600 Well, fewer people will buy hamburgers, 145 00:07:11,000 --> 00:07:14,000 and so fewer people will buy hamburger buns. 146 00:07:14,300 --> 00:07:17,700 The demand for hamburger buns decreases. 147 00:07:18,600 --> 00:07:21,200 And to consider the opposite situation, 148 00:07:21,500 --> 00:07:23,558 if the price of hamburger decreases, 149 00:07:23,952 --> 00:07:26,600 demand for hamburger buns will increase -- 150 00:07:27,000 --> 00:07:29,570 that is, more people buying hamburger 151 00:07:29,570 --> 00:07:32,314 means more people buying hamburger buns as well 152 00:07:32,314 --> 00:07:35,176 because again, you're putting the hamburger and the bun together. 153 00:07:35,800 --> 00:07:37,961 Technically, two goods are complements 154 00:07:38,300 --> 00:07:40,575 if an increase in the price of one good 155 00:07:40,575 --> 00:07:43,299 leads to a decrease in the demand for the other, 156 00:07:43,299 --> 00:07:44,600 and vice versa. 157 00:07:45,400 --> 00:07:47,485 So in sum, hamburger producers 158 00:07:47,485 --> 00:07:49,570 want the price of hot dogs to go up, 159 00:07:49,900 --> 00:07:52,250 the price of hamburger buns to go down, 160 00:07:52,250 --> 00:07:54,600 and low-carb diets to go viral. 161 00:07:54,900 --> 00:07:57,400 Finally, let's look at expectations. 162 00:07:57,800 --> 00:08:00,554 These can be expectations of market prices 163 00:08:00,554 --> 00:08:01,800 or of market events. 164 00:08:02,000 --> 00:08:04,000 Consider video game consoles. 165 00:08:04,500 --> 00:08:05,707 If it's November, 166 00:08:05,707 --> 00:08:09,171 and people expect the price of a gaming console to go down 167 00:08:09,171 --> 00:08:11,000 in a December holiday sale, 168 00:08:11,400 --> 00:08:14,300 they might wait a few weeks before buying the console. 169 00:08:15,000 --> 00:08:18,185 Demand for that console decreases today 170 00:08:18,185 --> 00:08:20,368 because it's going to increase later on. 171 00:08:21,200 --> 00:08:22,600 Or take batteries. 172 00:08:22,900 --> 00:08:26,100 Suppose you hear there's going to be a big hurricane in your area. 173 00:08:26,800 --> 00:08:28,000 If a hurricane hits, 174 00:08:28,200 --> 00:08:31,400 you might expect the price of batteries is going to go up, 175 00:08:31,600 --> 00:08:34,709 or maybe it will be really hard to get any batteries at all. 176 00:08:34,709 --> 00:08:35,714 - [voice] Oh no! 177 00:08:35,714 --> 00:08:38,656 - [Tyler] That means a higher demand for batteries today, 178 00:08:38,656 --> 00:08:39,821 and so the expectation 179 00:08:39,821 --> 00:08:42,020 of this future event of the hurricane 180 00:08:42,020 --> 00:08:44,869 can change the demand for batteries today. 181 00:08:45,600 --> 00:08:47,544 If people expect the price of a good 182 00:08:47,544 --> 00:08:49,100 to be higher in the future -- 183 00:08:49,600 --> 00:08:52,300 that typically increases demand today. 184 00:08:52,700 --> 00:08:54,863 Consumers adjust their current spending 185 00:08:54,863 --> 00:08:56,900 anticipating the future prices 186 00:08:57,100 --> 00:08:59,514 to obtain the lowest price possible. 187 00:08:59,758 --> 00:09:01,900 And that's it for our list of shifters. 188 00:09:02,700 --> 00:09:05,600 Now that you understand what a shift in demand means, 189 00:09:05,800 --> 00:09:09,100 practice recreating this list of shifters on your own. 190 00:09:09,900 --> 00:09:12,278 What would cause a higher quantity demanded 191 00:09:12,278 --> 00:09:13,300 at every price? 192 00:09:13,600 --> 00:09:15,200 More people? Wealthier people? 193 00:09:15,510 --> 00:09:17,800 It's the hotter in-item and so on. 194 00:09:18,400 --> 00:09:21,326 Conversely, what would cause less of a good 195 00:09:21,326 --> 00:09:23,500 to be demanded at every price? 196 00:09:24,100 --> 00:09:25,411 Once you can do that, 197 00:09:25,411 --> 00:09:28,000 you'll be able to identify demand shifters 198 00:09:28,200 --> 00:09:31,000 without the need to memorize any list. 199 00:09:33,282 --> 00:09:34,360 - [Narrator] If you're a teacher, 200 00:09:34,360 --> 00:09:36,722 you should check out our supply and demand unit plan 201 00:09:36,722 --> 00:09:38,100 that incorporates this video. 202 00:09:38,400 --> 00:09:39,400 If you're a learner, 203 00:09:39,400 --> 00:09:41,086 make sure this video sticks 204 00:09:41,086 --> 00:09:43,200 by answering a few quick practice questions. 205 00:09:43,600 --> 00:09:45,870 Or if you're ready for more microeconomics, 206 00:09:45,870 --> 00:09:47,447 click for the next video. 207 00:09:48,707 --> 00:09:50,923 ♪ [music] ♪