In a general market model, equilibrium is found where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied: D(P, α) = S(P). Here, P is the price and α is a parameter that positively shifts the demand curve (an increase in α increases the quantity demanded at any price). Using calculus, the effect of this shift on the equilibrium price (P*) is given by the expression: ∂P*/∂α = - (∂D/∂α) / (∂D/∂P* - ∂S/∂P*). Given that an increase in α represents a positive demand shock (∂D/∂α > 0), what conditions are necessary to guarantee that the equilibrium price will always increase (∂P*/∂α > 0)?
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In a general market model, equilibrium is found where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied: D(P, α) = S(P). Here, P is the price and α is a parameter that positively shifts the demand curve (an increase in α increases the quantity demanded at any price). Using calculus, the effect of this shift on the equilibrium price (P*) is given by the expression: ∂P*/∂α = - (∂D/∂α) / (∂D/∂P* - ∂S/∂P*). Given that an increase in α represents a positive demand shock (∂D/∂α > 0), what conditions are necessary to guarantee that the equilibrium price will always increase (∂P*/∂α > 0)?
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