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keeping the demand curve you created for susan in mind, analyze how the…

Question

keeping the demand curve you created for susan in mind, analyze how the following situations would affect the quantity demanded or the demand for long - distance phone service.

  1. susan receives a pay increase in her campus job.
  2. the long - distance service susan subscribes to lowers its price by 15 percent.
  3. susan has a fight with her boyfriend.
  4. susan receives an inheritance from her aunt.
  5. susan gets an e - mail account through the university.
  6. the long - distance service susan subscribes to increases its price by 10 percent.
  7. susan receives notice that she has been accepted in a summer internship program that will pay her substantially more than her current position.

Explanation:

Response
1. Susan receives a pay increase in her campus job.
Brief Explanations

A pay increase means Susan's income rises. Long - distance phone service is likely a normal good (assuming it's not an inferior good). For normal goods, as income increases, the demand for the good increases. So the demand for long - distance phone service will shift to the right (increase), not a change in quantity demanded (which is a movement along the curve due to price change) but a change in demand (shift of the curve) because income is a non - price determinant.

Brief Explanations

According to the law of demand, when the price of a good (long - distance phone service here) decreases, ceteris paribus, the quantity demanded of that good increases. This is a movement along the existing demand curve (a change in quantity demanded) because the change is due to the price of the good itself.

Brief Explanations

If Susan has a fight with her boyfriend, she may be less likely to want to communicate with him (or others via long - distance if related to the boyfriend situation) or her preferences for using long - distance phone service may change. A change in preferences is a non - price determinant of demand. If she now has less desire to use long - distance phone service (for example, to call her boyfriend), the demand for long - distance phone service will decrease (shift left).

Answer:

The demand for long - distance phone service will increase (the demand curve shifts right) because Susan's income has increased, and long - distance phone service is likely a normal good.

2. The long - distance service Susan subscribes to lowers its price by 15 percent.