All goods and services are subject to scarcity at some level, which requires that society develop some allocation mechanism to determine who gets what. Over recorded history, these allocation rules were usually command based, meaning that the king or the emperor would decide. In contemporary times, most countries have turned to market-based allocation systems. In markets, prices act as rationing devices, encouraging or discouraging production and encouraging or discouraging consumption to find an equilibrium allocation of resources. To understand this process, businesses construct demand curves to capture consumer behavior and consider supply curves to capture producer behavior. The resulting equilibrium price “rations” the scarce commodity.

Firm Level Economics: Consumer and Producer Behavior

Firm Level Economics: Consumer and Producer Behavior
This course is part of Managerial Economics and Business Analysis Specialization

Instructor: Larry DeBrock
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107,827 already enrolled
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What you'll learn
Describe consumer behavior as captured by the demand curve and the supply curve.
Explain the impact of taxes and price controls on market equilibrium.
Explain elasticity of demand.
Describe cost theory and how firms optimize given the constraints of their own costs and an exogenously given price.
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This course is part of the following degree program(s) offered by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. If you are admitted and enroll, your completed coursework may count toward your degree learning and your progress can transfer with you.¹
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Reviewed on Apr 26, 2020
Had lot of fun learning in this course. Although I had a basic concept of economics but with the help of this course I now have a clear and better understanding on Consumer and producer behavior.
Reviewed on Sep 19, 2020
A background knowledge of microeconomics would most likely help many. The lectures were awesome but acing the quizzes might be difficult for anyone with little foreknowledge in microeconomics.
Reviewed on May 12, 2017
In the beginning I thought this was going to be a very basic course, but the way the professor explained the topics really make it interesting a practical, going beyond the classical economic theory.
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