Студопедия

КАТЕГОРИИ:


Архитектура-(3434)Астрономия-(809)Биология-(7483)Биотехнологии-(1457)Военное дело-(14632)Высокие технологии-(1363)География-(913)Геология-(1438)Государство-(451)Демография-(1065)Дом-(47672)Журналистика и СМИ-(912)Изобретательство-(14524)Иностранные языки-(4268)Информатика-(17799)Искусство-(1338)История-(13644)Компьютеры-(11121)Косметика-(55)Кулинария-(373)Культура-(8427)Лингвистика-(374)Литература-(1642)Маркетинг-(23702)Математика-(16968)Машиностроение-(1700)Медицина-(12668)Менеджмент-(24684)Механика-(15423)Науковедение-(506)Образование-(11852)Охрана труда-(3308)Педагогика-(5571)Полиграфия-(1312)Политика-(7869)Право-(5454)Приборостроение-(1369)Программирование-(2801)Производство-(97182)Промышленность-(8706)Психология-(18388)Религия-(3217)Связь-(10668)Сельское хозяйство-(299)Социология-(6455)Спорт-(42831)Строительство-(4793)Торговля-(5050)Транспорт-(2929)Туризм-(1568)Физика-(3942)Философия-(17015)Финансы-(26596)Химия-(22929)Экология-(12095)Экономика-(9961)Электроника-(8441)Электротехника-(4623)Энергетика-(12629)Юриспруденция-(1492)Ядерная техника-(1748)

Supply and Demand




Text 1

SUPPLY AND DEMAND

THE MICROECONOMY

GLOSSARY

· Actual budget records the actual dollar expenditures, revenues, and deficits in a given period.

· Automatic stabilizers are federal expenditures and tax revenues that automatically change levels in order to stabilize an economic expansion or contraction; sometimes referred to as nondiscretionary fiscal policy.

· Balance budget is a budget when revenues and expenditures are equal during a given period.

· Budget deficit is a budget in which government expenditures exceed government revenues in a given time period.

· Budget surplus is a budget in which government revenues exceed government expenditures in a given time period.

· Discretionary fiscal policy is the deliberate use of changes in government spending or taxes to alter aggregate demand and stabilize the economy.

· Fiscal policy is the use of government spending and taxes to influence the nation's output, employment, and price level.

· Government debt (sometimes called public debt) consists of the total or accumulated borrowings by the government; it is the total dollar value of government bonds owned by the public (households, banks, businesses, foreigners, and other non-federal entities).

· Spending multiplier is the change in aggregate demand (total spending) resulting from an initial change in any component of aggregate demand, including consumption, investment, government spending, and net export.

· Tax multiplier is the change in aggregate demand (total spending) resulting from an initial change in taxes.

 


 

DISCOVERING CONNECTIONS

 

Have you ever heard the quip “Teach a parrot to say "Demand and supply" and you have an economist!"? Do you know that there is a strong element of truth in it. Can you guess why? Why does the price of hotel rooms in the Caribbean plummet when the weather turns warm in New England every summer? Why does the price of gasoline in the United States rise when a war breaks out in the Middle East? What do these events have in common? Do you know that, in fact, they all show the workings of supply and demand.

So if you want to know how any event or policy will affect the economy, you must think first about how it will affect supply and demand.

 

READING

 

As you read the text, pay special attention to the definitions of terms in italics.

The terms supply and demand refer to the behavior of people as they interact with one another in markets. A market is defined as an institution or mechanism which brings together buyers – “demanders’ and sellers – “suppliers”.

Demand is the amount of the good that buyers are willing and able to purchase. What factors determine the demand for any good? They are as following:

Price. The quantity demanded falls as the price rises and rises as the price falls, so the quantity is negatively related to the price. The relationship between price and quantity demanded is true for most goods in the economy and, in fact, is so pervasive that economists call it the law of demand: other things equal (ceteris paribus in Latin), when the price of a good rises, the quantity demanded of the good falls.

Income. A lower income means that you have less to spend in total so you would have to spend less on some – and probably most – goods. If the demand for a good falls when income falls, the good is called a normal good. Not all goods are normal goods. If the demand for a good rises when income falls, the good is called an inferior good. An example of an inferior good might be bus rides. As your income falls, you are less likely to buy a car or take a cab, and more likely to ride the bus.

Prices of Related Goods. Suppose that the price of frozen yogurt falls. The law of demand says that you will buy more frozen yogurt. At the same time you will probably buy less ice-cream. Ice-cream and frozen yogurt are substitutes, that is pairs of goods that are used in place of each other.

When a fall in one price of one good raises the demand for another good, the two goods are called complements. Complements are often pairs of goods that are used together, such as gasoline and automobiles, computers and software.

Tastes. The most determinant of your demand is your tastes. If you like ice-cream, you buy more of it.

Expectations. Your expectations about the future may affect your demand for a good or service today too.

We now turn to supply that is the amount that sellers are willing and able to sell. What determines the quantity an individual supplies? These are:

Price Because the quantity supplied rises as the price rises and falls as the price falls, we say that the quantity supplied is positively related to the price of the good. This relationship between price and quantity supplied is called the law of supply: Other things equal, when the price of a good rises, the quantity supplied of the good also rises.

Input Prices. The supply of a good is negatively related to the price of the inputs used to make the good.

Technology. By reducing firms’ costs, the advance in technology raises the supply of a good.

Expectations. The amount of goods you supply today may depend on your expectations of the future. For example, if you expect the price of goods to rise in the future, you will put some of your current production into storage and supply less to the market today.

 

Vocabulary Focus

 

Ex. 1. Study the meaning of the following words.

1. To affect means ‘to influence’: The tax increases have affected us all.

2. An effect is a result or consequence of an event: The political crisis has already had an effect on the Stock Market.

3. The word ‘effect’ can have two other meanings: We tried exporting tea to China but with little effect (impact). In effect(in fact) the two systems are identical.

4. There is also a verb ‘to effect’, which is fairly formal: Production was stopped until repairs were effected (made).

Choose the right word in italics:

1. Do you think a rise in interest rates will affect/ effect consumer spending?

2. Cultural attitudes can affect/effect the success or failure of a merger with an overseas firm.

3. The bad publicity has had an adverse affect/effect on our reputation.

Ex. 2. Match the following common collocations with their Russian equivalents:




Поделиться с друзьями:


Дата добавления: 2014-11-16; Просмотров: 811; Нарушение авторских прав?; Мы поможем в написании вашей работы!


Нам важно ваше мнение! Был ли полезен опубликованный материал? Да | Нет



studopedia.su - Студопедия (2013 - 2024) год. Все материалы представленные на сайте исключительно с целью ознакомления читателями и не преследуют коммерческих целей или нарушение авторских прав! Последнее добавление




Генерация страницы за: 0.012 сек.