Index
The Demand Curve 1
The Demand Curve 2
The Demand Curve 3
The Laws of Supply and Demand - 4
The Laws of Supply and Demand - 5
A ''Contraction'' of Demand - 6
''Ceteris Paribus'' - 7
An ''Expansion'' of Demand - 8
Marginal Utility - 9
Marginal Utility - 10
Marginal Utility - 11
Marginal Utility - 12
Consumer Surplus - 13
Consumer Surplus - 14
Price Discrimination - 15
An ''Expansion'' of Supply - 16
An ''Expansion'' of Supply - 17
Market Equilibrium - 18
Market Equilibrium - 19
Market Equilibrium - 20
Movements of the Demand Curve - 21
Movements of the Demand Curve - 22
Movements of the Demand Curve - 23
Inferior Goods - 24
Movements of the Demand Curve - 25
Movements of the Supply Curve - 26
Movements of the Supply Curve - 27
Movements of the Supply Curve - 28
The Income Effect - 29
The Substitution Effect - 30
The Substitution Effect - 31
The Substitution Effect - 32
The Substitution Effect - 33
Complements - 34
Complements - 35
Review: Factors Effecting Demand - 36
Review: Factors Effecting Demand - 37
The Goals of Firms - 38
The Goals of Firms - 39
To: Elasticity

The Substitution Effect - 31

The improvement in the conditions of supply of new computers will impact on the price of old computers, as the two are close substitutes. Market demand for the old model computer will decrease. The demand curve for old computers will shift to the left. This change in the market is called a decrease in demand.

Not only will households demand fewer old computers (demand contracts from ten per week to seven), they will only buy them if the price falls to $2,700.