Demand remains constant
ceteris paribus
Economists used ceteris paribus to separate cause and effect by holding all other things constant.
The ceteris paribus clause means, in economics, that other factors will remain unchanged. For example: If you lower the price in a demand curve, quantity demanded will increase but other affecting factors will remain.
Ceteris paribus means all other factors remain the same, so if you want to see what happens when demand changes, you have to eliminate any other changes that may affect the results of your study.
yes
Ceteris paribus means "with all other things being equal or held constant."
Ceteris Paribus means "assuming all else is held constant". The author using ceteris paribus is attempting to distinguish an effect of one kind of change from any others.Index from: http://economics.about.com/od/termsbeginningwithc/g/ceteris_paribus.htm
ceteris paribus
ceteris paribus.
Economists used ceteris paribus to separate cause and effect by holding all other things constant.
The ceteris paribus clause means, in economics, that other factors will remain unchanged. For example: If you lower the price in a demand curve, quantity demanded will increase but other affecting factors will remain.
Ceteris paribus is a Latin phrase used widely in economics. It assumes that all things are equal, excluding outside variables.
Ceteris paribus does translate into meaning "all other things being equal or held constant.
Ceteris paribus means all other factors remain the same, so if you want to see what happens when demand changes, you have to eliminate any other changes that may affect the results of your study.
yes
It means "everything else being equal". Not just to an economist, BTW
It means "everything else being equal". Not just to an economist, BTW