1975 | OriginalPaper | Buchkapitel
Micro-Disequilibrium Economics
verfasst von : J. Van Doorn
Erschienen in: Disequilibrium Economics
Verlag: Macmillan Education UK
Enthalten in: Professional Book Archive
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Prices and quantities are determined in markets where individuals meet and exchange goods. A market is in equilibrium when the volume of trading remains constant and prices are not forced to change either; in other words, when no one has an incentive to modify his behaviour. There are various reasons why one might expect markets not to be in equilibrium. First, there are general external influences on the economy as a whole affecting all markets to a certain extent: for example, a bad summer, a change in the rate of population growth or some political event. But there are also specific influences for a particular market, such as a change in tastes brought about by a successful advertising campaign, the effects of which may be hardly noticeable in other markets. In the first case, the approach to the explanation of price and quantity changes is one of general analysis. In the second case, when isolated markets are dealt with, partial analysis is applied. This latter approach is followed here, when first one, and then just two interrelated markets are analysed.