When supply and demand are perfectly elastic/inelastic
Inelastic which is mostly vertical with a slight tilt.
Demand and cost are inversely related, i.e., as the cost goes up, the demand goes down, and as cost goes down, demand goes up. So any two cost-demand curves are are inversely related constitute a perfect elastic supply curve.
The price-consumption curve explains how changes in the cost of a good, relative to another good, also effects an individuals consumption choices. The individual demand curve takes a single good and explains the relationship between the cost of that good, and the quantity demanded. Therefore shifts in the indifference curves (PCC) based on consumption possibilities, should correlate to the shifts in the demand curves. The easiest way to look at it, is that that your horizontal axis points on both your budget line, and your individual demand curve, should be the same. Your Vertical axises will differ because they are measuring different costs, ie, monetary cost (Demand Curve) and oppurtunity cost (budget line/constraint).
When trying to decide what to produce, businesses will look at the demand for their goods.
When supply and demand are perfectly elastic/inelastic
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Inelastic which is mostly vertical with a slight tilt.
Demand and cost are inversely related, i.e., as the cost goes up, the demand goes down, and as cost goes down, demand goes up. So any two cost-demand curves are are inversely related constitute a perfect elastic supply curve.
The "bell curve" of anything, with the peak of the curve supposedly at a score of 100.
What does a typical day for a taxi driver look like
A diagram of a perfectly competitive market typically shows a horizontal demand curve representing perfect competition, a horizontal supply curve at the market price, and a point where supply equals demand to show equilibrium. It also includes the producer and consumer surplus to illustrate market efficiency.
because it does
A normal curve. A Bell curve.
An ellipse is a closed curve that is elongated.
a bell curve.
The price-consumption curve explains how changes in the cost of a good, relative to another good, also effects an individuals consumption choices. The individual demand curve takes a single good and explains the relationship between the cost of that good, and the quantity demanded. Therefore shifts in the indifference curves (PCC) based on consumption possibilities, should correlate to the shifts in the demand curves. The easiest way to look at it, is that that your horizontal axis points on both your budget line, and your individual demand curve, should be the same. Your Vertical axises will differ because they are measuring different costs, ie, monetary cost (Demand Curve) and oppurtunity cost (budget line/constraint).