Demand Flashcards

1
Q

Define Demand

A

The relationship between the amount of a good that consumers are willing and able to buy at various prices

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2
Q

What are the determinants of demand?

A
= f (P, Y, Pc, Ps, T)
P = Price of a good
Y = Consumer income
Pc = Price of complementary good
Ps = Price of substitute good
T = Tastes and preferences
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3
Q

What does a demand curve show?

What makes a demand curve downward facing?

A

The relationship between price and quantity demanded.

Generally inverse relationship between price and quantity -> as price increases, quantity decreases and vice versa. Due to:

  • Income effect - amount of income available to spend
  • Substitution effect - consumers adjust consumption to increase satisfaction per $ spent
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4
Q

What does a movement along the demand curve represent?

A

A movement along the demand curve (up or down) shows a change in the quantity demanded due to a change in price.

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5
Q

What does a shift in the demand curve represent?

A

A shift in the demand curve (left or right) shows a change in the demand due to the influence of other variables (income, price of substitute etc.)

Examples:
Tastes and Preferences - public health campaign on dental health increases demand
Income - increase in household wealth means more able to spend money eg. dentist, physio etc.
Other goods - Paracetamol price rises so demand for substitutes like ibuprofen or aspirin increase

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6
Q

Define utility

Including - total utility, marginal utility and diminishing marginal utility

A

Utility is maximised when ratio of utility (marginal benefit) is equal to the price (marginal cost) for all goods. Each $ spent on the good yields the same marginal utility.

Total utility = satisfaction gained from consuming a good or service

Marginal utility = change in utility/additional utility from a one-unit increase

Diminishing marginal utility = the more we consume a good, the less extra value we obtain from it
Examples in healthcare: screening, painkillers

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7
Q

What is consumer surplus?

A

Difference between what someone is willing to pay (value determined by the consumer) and the amount they do pay (the price determined by the market – market price)
Essentially ‘profit’ for a consumer – in theory rational consumers will only buy goods that are worth more than they pay for them

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8
Q

How is demand different from a simple model in the context of healthcare?

A

Healthcare = derived demand (utility does not come from health care directly but the positive effect it has on health); thus more complex than a simple model

Affected by:

  • Single one-off interventions
  • Decisions delegated to, and influenced by health professional (non-sovereign consumer)
  • Heterogenous (different illnesses and interventions)
  • Third party payments
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9
Q

What is price elasticity of demand?

A

Responsiveness of quantity demanded to change in price

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10
Q

How is price elasticity of demand calculated?

A

The percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price

= % Change in Qty / % Change in Price

= (Change in Qty/Average Qty) / (Change in Price/Average Price)

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11
Q

How do you interpret price elasticity of demand calculations?

A

E Infinite = Perfectly Elastic
Quantity demanded is infinitely responsive to changes in price

E > 1 Price Elastic
Quantity demanded is responsive to changes in price
Eg. Dental Care

E = 1 Unit Elastic
Change in quantity demanded is equal to change in price

E < 1 Price inelastic
Quantity demanded is unresponsive to change in price
Eg. Insulin

E = 0 Perfectly Inelastic
Quantity demanded is constant regardless of price

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12
Q

What are some determinants of price elasticity of demand?

A
  • Availability of substitute goods (more elastic)
  • Income (% of income spent on goods) (more elastic)
  • Period of time (more elastic)
  • Necessity (more inelastic)
  • Who pays (more inelastic)
  • Brand loyalty (more inelastic)
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13
Q

How is demand measured?

A

Demand measured by quantity of services delivered or expenditure on services

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14
Q

Describe the relationship between PED and total revenue

A

Total revenue = number of units sold (qty) multiplied by price per unit (price)

Price Inelastic –
Price increase, equals total revenue increase;
Price decrease = total revenue decrease

Price Elastic –
Price increase, equal total revenue decrease;
Price decrease = total revenue increase
(gain in revenue for single unit less than gain in total revenue due to decrease in production/qty supplied)

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15
Q

What is the relevance of demand for healthcare planning and policy?

A

Can be used to reduce unwanted behaviours, increase desirable behaviours and raise revenue

Individual behaviour - Can help predict responses to, and analyse welfare effects of, policy change

Markets – Key building block in understanding how markets operate

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16
Q

Why is demand for healthcare services outstripping supply?

A
  • Ageing population - generally needs more healthcare
  • New health technologies - more conditions are now treatable
  • Increased expectations