Market Demand: Demand is the quantity of a good or service that
consumers and businesses are willing and able to buy at a given price in a
given time period. Market demand is the sum of the individual demand for a
product from buyers in the market. If more buyers enter the market and they
have the ability to pay for items on sale, then market demand at each price
level will rise or if they have not the ability to pay, then market demand at
each price level will fall.
Determinants
of Market Demand: Following are several factors that determine
the demand for a product:-
i) Price of the Product:
The price
of a product is the most important determinant of market demand in the long-run
and the only determinant in the short-run. As per the law of demand, the price of a product
and its quantity demanded are inversely related, i.e. the quantity demanded
increases when the price falls and decreases when the price rises, other things
remaining the same.
Here, other
things imply that the income of the consumer, the price of the substitute and
complementary goods, tastes and preferences and the number of consumers, all
remains constant. The price-demand relationship has more significance in the
oligopolistic market structure in which the result of a price war among the
firm and its rival decides the level of success of the firm.
ii) Price of the Related Goods: The market demand for a commodity is also
affected by the changes in the price of the related goods. The related goods
may be the substitute or complementary goods. Two commodities are said
to be a substitute for one another if they satisfy the same want of an individual and the
change in the price
of one commodity affects the demand for another in the same direction. Such as, tea and
coffee, Maggi and Macaronis, Pepsi and Coca-Cola are close substitutes for each
other. The increase in the price of either commodity the demand for the other
also increases and vice-versa. A commodity is
said to be a complement for another if the use of two goods goes together such that
their demand changes (increases or
decreases) simultaneously.
iii) Consumer’s Income: The income is the basic determinant of the quantity
demanded of a product as it decides the purchasing power of the consumers.
Thus, people with higher
disposable income spend a larger amount of income on consumer goods
and services as compared to those with lower disposable income. Consumer goods
and services can be grouped under four categories: essential goods, inferior
goods, normal goods, and prestige or luxury goods.
iv) Consumers’ tastes and preferences:
Consumer’s Tastes and preferences play a vital role
in determining a demand for a product. Tastes and preferences often depend on
the lifestyle, culture, social customs, hobbies, age and sex of the consumers
and the religious sentiments attached to a commodity. The change in any of
these factors results in the change in the consumer’s tastes and preferences,
thereby resulting in either increase or decrease in the demand for a product.
v) Advertisement
Expenditure: Advertisement
is done to promote sales of a product. It helps in stimulating demand for a product in four ways; by informing the
prospective consumers about the availability of a product, by showing its
superiority over the competitor’s brand, by influencing the consumer’s choice
against the rival product and by setting new fashion and changing tastes of the
consumers. The effect of advertisement is said to be fruitful if it leads to
the upward shift in the demand curve, i.e. the demand increases with the
increase in the advertisement expenditure, other things remaining constant.
vi) Consumers’
Expectations: In the
short run, the consumer’s expectation with respect to the income,
future prices of the product and its supply position plays a
vital role in determining the demand for a commodity. If the consumer expects a
high rise in the price of the commodity, shall purchase it today at a high
current price so as to avoid the pinch of the high price in the future. On the
contrary, if the prices are expected to fall in the future the consumer will
postpone their purchase with a view to avail benefits of lower prices in the
future, especially in case of nonessential goods.
vii) Demonstration Effect: Often, the new commodities or new models of
an existing product are bought by the rich people. Some people buy goods due to
their genuine need for them or have excess purchasing power. While some others
do so because they want to exhibit their affluence. Once the commodity is in
very much fashion, many households buy them not because they have a genuine
need for them but their neighbours have purchased it. Thus, the purchase made
by such people arises out of feelings as jealousy, equality in society, competition, social inferiority, status
consciousness. The purchases made on the account of these factors
results in the demonstration effect, also called as Bandwagon Effect.
viii) Consumer-Credit Facility: The availability of credit to the consumer also determines
the demand for a product. The credit extended by sellers, banks, friends,
relatives or from other sources induces a consumer to buy more than what would
have not been possible in the absence of the credit. Thus, the consumers with more borrowing capacity
consumes more than the ones who borrow less.
ix) Population of the Country: The population of the country also determines the
total domestic demand for a product of mass consumption. For a given level of
per capita income, tastes and preferences, price, income, etc., the larger the size of the population the
larger the demand for a product and vice-versa.
x) Distribution of National Income: The national income is one of the basic
determinants of the market demand for a product, such as the higher the national income, the higher the demand for all the normal
goods. Apart from its level, the distribution pattern of the national income also determines
the overall demand for a product. Such as, if the national income is unevenly
distributed, i.e., the majority of the population falls under the low-income
groups, then the market demand for the inferior goods will be more than the
other category goods.
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