Demand and Supply: Abu Naser Mohammad Saif
Demand and Supply: Abu Naser Mohammad Saif
Income Effect
When the price of a good or service rises
relative to income, people cannot afford all
the things they previously bought, so the
quantity demanded of the good or service
decreases.
A substitute is a good that can be
consumed in place of another good.
For example, apples and oranges are
substitutes.
Qd
P P
(Market)
$6.00
$0.00 24
$5.00 1.00 21
$4.00 2.00 18
$3.00
3.00 15
4.00 12
$2.00
5.00 9
$1.00 6.00 6
$0.00 Q
0 5 10 15 20 25
A rise in the price, other things remaining the
same, brings a decrease in the quantity
demanded and a movement up along the
demand curve.
Income
When income increases, consumers buy more of
most goods and the demand curve shifts rightward.
A normal good is one for which demand increases
as income increases.
An inferior good is a good for which demand
decreases as income increases.
Expected Future Income and Credit
When expected future income increases or
when credit is easy to obtain, the demand
might increase now.
Population
The larger the population, the greater is the
demand for all goods.
Preferences
People with the same income have different
demands if they have different preferences.
The figure shows an
increase in demand.
Because an energy
bar is a normal good,
an increase in
income increases the
demand for energy
bars.
Demand Curve Shifters
▪ The demand curve shows how price
affects quantity demanded, other things
being equal.
▪ These “other things” are non-price
determinants of demand (i.e., things
that determine buyers’ demand for a
good, other than the good’s price).
▪ Changes in them shift the D curve…
Demand Curve Shifters: # of Buyers
Q1 Q2 Quantity of
music downloads
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
B. Price of music downloads falls
Price of
music The D curve
down- does not shift.
loads
Move down along
P1 curve to a point with
lower P, higher Q.
P2
D1
Q1 Q2 Quantity of
music downloads
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
C. Price of CDs falls
Price of CDs and
music music downloads
down- are substitutes.
loads
A fall in price of CDs
P1 shifts demand for
music downloads
to the left.
D2 D1
Q2 Q1 Quantity of
music downloads
Movement Along the
Demand Curve
When the price of the
good changes and
everything else
remains the same, the
quantity demanded
changes and there is a
movement along the
demand curve.
A Shift of the
Demand Curve
If the price remains
the same but one of
the other influences
on buyers’ plans
changes, demand
changes and the
demand curve shifts.
Supply
If a firm supplies a good or service, then the firm
1. Has the resources and the technology to produce it,
2. Can make profit from producing it, and
3. Has made a definite plan to produce and sell it.
Resources and technology determine what it is
possible to produce. Supply reflects a decision about
which technologically feasible items to produce.
The quantity supplied of a good or service is the
amount that producers plan to sell during a given time
period at a particular price.
Supply
The Law of Supply states:
Other things remaining the same, the higher the
price of a good, the greater is the quantity supplied;
and the lower the price of a good, the smaller is the
quantity supplied.
The law of supply results from the general
tendency for the marginal cost of producing a good
or service to increase as the quantity produced
increases.
Producers are willing to supply a good only if they
can at least cover their marginal cost of production.
Supply
Supply Curve and Supply Schedule
The term supply refers to the entire
relationship between the quantity supplied
and the price of a good.
The supply curve shows the relationship
between the quantity supplied of a good
and its price when all other influences on
producers’ planned sales remain the
same.
The Supply Schedule
▪ Supply schedule: Price Quantity
of of lattes
A table that shows the
lattes supplied
relationship between the
$0.00 0
price of a good and the
1.00 3
quantity supplied.
2.00 6
▪ Example: 3.00 9
Starbucks’ supply of lattes. 4.00 12
5.00 15
▪ Notice that Starbucks’
6.00 18
supply schedule obeys the
law of supply.
Starbucks’ Supply Schedule & Curve
Price Quantity
P of of lattes
$6.00 lattes supplied
$5.00 $0.00 0
1.00 3
$4.00
2.00 6
$3.00 3.00 9
$2.00 4.00 12
5.00 15
$1.00
6.00 18
$0.00 Q
0 5 10 15
Market Supply versus Individual Supply
▪ The quantity supplied in the market is the sum of
the quantities supplied by all sellers at each price.
▪ Suppose Starbucks and Jitters are the only two
sellers in this market. (Qs = quantity supplied)
Price Starbucks Jitters Market Qs
$0.00 0 + 0 = 0
1.00 3 + 2 = 5
2.00 6 + 4 = 10
3.00 9 + 6 = 15
4.00 12 + 8 = 20
5.00 15 + 10 = 25
6.00 18 + 12 = 30
The Market Supply Curve
QS
P
(Market)
P
$6.00 $0.00 0
1.00 5
$5.00
2.00 10
$4.00 3.00 15
$3.00 4.00 20
$2.00 5.00 25
6.00 30
$1.00
$0.00 Q
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Supply
A Change in Supply
When some influence on selling plans other than the
price of the good changes, there is a change in
supply of that good.
The quantity of the good that producers plan to sell
changes at each and every price, so there is a new
supply curve.
When supply increases, the supply curve shifts
rightward.
When supply decreases, the supply curve shifts
leftward.
Supply
Factors that change supply of a good are:
▪ The prices of factors of production
▪ The prices of related goods produced
▪ Expected future prices
▪ The number of suppliers
▪ Technology
▪ State of nature
Supply
Prices of Factors of Production
If the price of a factor of production used
to produce a good rises, the minimum
price that a supplier is willing to accept for
producing each quantity of that good
rises.
So a rise in the price of a factor of
production decreases supply and shifts
the supply curve leftward.
Supply
Prices of Related Goods Produced
A substitute in production for a good is another
good that can be produced using the same
resources.
The supply of a good increases if the price of a
substitute in production falls.
Goods are complements in production if they
must be produced together.
The supply of a good increases if the price of a
complement in production rises.
Supply
Expected Future Prices
If the expected future price of a good rises,
the supply of the good today decreases and
the supply curve shifts leftward.
The Number of Suppliers
The larger the number of suppliers of a
good, the greater is the supply of the good.
An increase in the number of suppliers
shifts the supply curve rightward.
Supply
Technology
Advances in technology create new products and
lower the cost of producing existing products.
So advances in technology increase supply and
shift the supply curve rightward.
The State of Nature
The state of nature includes all the natural forces
that influence production—for example, the weather.
A natural disaster decreases supply and shifts the
supply curve leftward.
Supply Curve Shifters
▪ The supply curve shows how price
affects quantity supplied, other things
being equal.
▪ These “other things” are non-price
determinants of supply.
▪ Changes in them shift the S curve…
Supply Curve Shifters: Input Prices
P Suppose the
$6.00 price of milk falls.
At each price,
$5.00
the quantity of
$4.00 lattes supplied
will increase
$3.00
(by 5 in this
$2.00 example).
$1.00
$0.00 Q
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Supply Curve Shifters: Technology
Price of
tax return S curve does
S1
software not shift.
P1 Move down
along the curve
P2 to a lower P
and lower Q.
Q2 Q1 Quantity of tax
return software
B. Fall in cost of producing the software
Price of
tax return S curve shifts
S1 S2
software to the right:
at each price,
P1
Q increases.
Q1 Q2 Quantity of tax
return software
C. Professional preparers raise their price
Price of
tax return
S1 This shifts the
software
demand curve for
tax preparation
software, not the
supply curve.
Quantity of tax
return software
Equilibrium
Equilibrium is a situation in which opposing
forces balance each other. Equilibrium in a
market occurs when the price balances the
plans of buyers and sellers.
The equilibrium price is the price at which
the quantity demanded equals the quantity
supplied.
The equilibrium quantity is the quantity
bought and sold at the equilibrium price.
Supply and Demand Together
P Equilibrium:
$6.00 D S
P has reached
$5.00 the level where
$4.00 quantity supplied
$3.00
equals
quantity demanded
$2.00
$1.00
$0.00 Q
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Equilibrium price:
the price that equates quantity supplied
with quantity demanded
P
$6.00 D S
P QD QS
$5.00 $0 24 0
$4.00 1 21 5
$3.00 2 18 10
3 15 15
$2.00
4 12 20
$1.00
5 9 25
$0.00 Q 6 6 30
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Equilibrium quantity:
the quantity supplied and quantity demanded
at the equilibrium price
P
$6.00 D S
P QD QS
$5.00 $0 24 0
$4.00 1 21 5
$3.00 2 18 10
3 15 15
$2.00
4 12 20
$1.00
5 9 25
$0.00 Q 6 6 30
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35