If the price is expected to increase, many producers will hold onto their supply.
If the price is expected to increase, many producers will hold onto their supply.
Determinats of demand * Income * Taste or Preference * Prices of substitutes or complements * Expectations of the future * Population Determinants of Supply * Technology * Factor prices * The number of Suppliers * Expectations of the future * Environmental conditions
1. How do supply and demand affect choices?
I/you/we/they supply. He/she/it supplies. The present participle is supplying.
The price of the product, the price of input goods that are used to make it, the state of the industry's technology, government taxes and subsidies and expectations about the future market price of the good.
If the price is expected to increase, many producers will hold onto their supply.
If the price is expected to increase, many producers will hold onto their supply.
Determinats of demand * Income * Taste or Preference * Prices of substitutes or complements * Expectations of the future * Population Determinants of Supply * Technology * Factor prices * The number of Suppliers * Expectations of the future * Environmental conditions
1. How do supply and demand affect choices?
* change in population * government policies * income change * future expectations
Airline marketing is a process of matching the demands of present, potential and future passenger with the supply offerings of an aircraft
Plz answer this question.
I/you/we/they supply. He/she/it supplies. The present participle is supplying.
The price of the product, the price of input goods that are used to make it, the state of the industry's technology, government taxes and subsidies and expectations about the future market price of the good.
The following will shift the supply curve to the right: cost of resources goes down taxes goes down subsidies goes up government regulations goes down technology/productivity goes up number of sellers goes up future expectations goes down The following will sift the supply curve to the left: cost of resources goes up taxes goes up subsidies goes down government regulations goes up technology/productivity goes down number of sellers goes down future expectations goes up
It is "supply/supplies".
The general term Price of Oil usually referees to the next month yet-unexpired futures contract for the Light Sweet Crude (West Texas Intermediate) oil. Thus, the equilibrium for such defined Oil Price is established by investor's expectation about supply and demand conditions for the yet-unexpired-next-month future contract. Such expectations about supply-demand conditions for the future contracts are driven both by expectations about fundamental supply-demand conditions of the real physical crude oil markets, as well as speculative so-called momentum plays.