CHP 4
CHP 4
Thinking Like an 1
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
Economist
42
Supply and Demand
— Thomas Carlyle
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Supply and Demand
14
Chapter Goals
State the law of demand and distinguish shifts in
demand from movements along a demand curve.
State the law of supply and distinguish shifts in
supply from movements along a supply curve.
Explain how the law of demand and the law of supply
interact to bring about equilibrium.
4-2
Supply and Demand
14
Demand
The law of demand states that the quantity of a good
demanded is inversely related to the good’s price
In other words, other things equal,
• Quantity demanded rises as price falls
• Quantity demanded falls as price rises
As prices change, people change how much they’re
willing to buy
The law of demand is based on the fact that when
prices for a good rise, people substitute away from
that good to other goods
4-3
Supply and Demand
14
P1
As price increases,
P0 quantity demanded
decreases
Demand
Q
Q1 Q0
4-4
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Demand versus Movements Along a
Demand Curve
Quantity demanded refers to a specific amount that will be
demanded per unit of time at a specific price, other things
constant
• Refers to a specific point on the demand curve
• A change in price causes a change in quantity
demanded
• A change in price causes a movement along
the demand curve
4-5
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Demand versus
Movements Along a Demand Curve
Demand refers to a schedule of quantities of a good that
will be bought per unit of time at various prices, other things
constant
• Refers to the entire demand curve
• Demand tells us how much will be bought at various
prices
• A change in anything other than price that affects
the demand curve changes the entire demand curve
• A change in the entire demand curve is a shift in
demand
4-6
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Demand versus Movements Along a
Demand Curve
P Movement along a demand curve
B A change in price
$2 causes a movement along
the demand curve
$1 A
Demand
Q
100 200
4-7
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Demand versus
Movements Along a Demand Curve
P Shift in demand
Demand0
Demand1
Q
175 200
4-8
Supply and Demand
14
4-9
What factors influence market demand?
Income of consumers
Increase in income increases demand if product is normal,
decreases demand if product is inferior.
Prices of related goods
Increase in price of related good increases demand if products
are substitutes, decreases demand if products are
complements
Tastes
Population and demographics
Expected future prices
Effect of subsidies on
•Example:
demand
When states host tax-free weeks during
August's back-to-school shopping season,
consumers load up on products to avoid
sales taxes. Demand for retail goods rises
during the tax holiday.
Demand1
Demand0
Q
4-16
Supply and Demand
14
P Price per
Movie rentals
demanded per
movie
week
$8.00 E A $1.00 9
D
B $2.00 8
$6.00 Demand
for C $4.00 6
$4.00 C movies
D $6.00 4
$2.00 B
$1.00
A E $8.00 2
Q
2 4 6 8 10
4-17
Supply and Demand
14
$2.00 8 5 1 14
$4.00 6 3 0 9
$6.00 4 1 0 5
$8.00 2 0 0 2
4-18
Individual and Market Demand Curves
$6.00
$4.00
Market demand
for movies
$2.00
4-20
Market Demand Curve
Supply
• The law of supply states that the quantity of a good
supplied is directly related to the good’s price
• In other words, other things equal,
• Quantity supplied rises as price rises
• Quantity supplied falls as price falls
• The law of supply occurs because:
• When prices rise, firms substitute production
of one good for another
• Assuming firm’s costs are constant, a higher
price means higher profit
4-23
Supply and Demand
14
Supply
The supply curve is
upward sloping
P1
As price increases,
P0 quantity supplied
increases
Q
Q0 Q1
4-24
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Supply versus
Movements Along a Supply Curve
Quantity supplied refers to a specific amount that will be
supplied per unit of time at a specific price, other things
constant
• Refers to a specific point on the supply curve
• A change in price changes quantity supplied
• A change in price causes a change in quantity
supplied
• A change in price causes a movement along
the supply curve
4-25
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Supply versus
Movements Along a Supply Curve
Supply refers to a schedule of quantities of a good a seller
is willing to sell per unit of time at various prices, other
things constant
• Refers to the entire supply curve
• Supply tells us how much will be sold at various
prices
• A change in anything other than price that affects
the supply curve changes the entire supply curve
• A change in the entire supply curve is a shift in
supply
4-26
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Supply versus
Movements Along a Supply Curve
Movement along a supply curve
P
Supply
C
$80 A change in price
causes a movement along
B the supply curve
$50
Q
4.1 4.3
4-27
Supply and Demand
14
Shifts in Supply versus
Movements Along a Supply Curve
Shift in Supply
P
S0
S1
A change in a shift factor
causes a shift in supply
4-28
Example: Shift vs. Movement
The supply of oil. In September 2005, Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf
Coast region of the United States and disrupted oil supply lines and
production in the United States. U.S. production of oil declined from
4.6 to 4.1 million barrels each day.
This disruption reduced the amount of oil U.S. producers were
offering for sale at every price, thereby shifting the supply of U.S.
oil to the left from S0 to S1, and the quantity of oil that would be
supplied at the $50 price fell from point A to point B in Figure 4-6.
The price did not stay at $50. It rose to $80. In response to the
higher price, other areas in the United States increased their
quantity supplied (from point B to point C in Figure 4-6). That
increase due to the higher price is called a movement along the
supply curve.
If a change in quantity supplied occurs because of a higher price, it is
called a movement along the supply curve; if a change in supply
occurs because of one of the shift factors (i.e., for any reason other
than a change in price), it is called a shift in supply.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Colander, Economics 29
Example:
4-31
Changes in prices of inputs
Inputs are things used in the production of a
good or service.
Examples:
• A new, more productive variety of wheat
would increase the supply of wheat.
• Governmental restrictions on land use for
agriculture might decrease the supply of wheat.
Effect of a negative
change in technology
Example:
•An Illinois farmer can plant corn or soybeans.
If the price of soybeans rises, he will plant
Effect on the supply
(supply) less corn. of corn, of an
increase in the price
of soybeans
Effect of taxes on
supply
Subsidies to producers have the opposite
effect.
$1.00 1 0 0 1
$3.00 3 2 0 5
$5.00 5 4 0 9
$7.00 7 5 2 14
4-37
Individual and Market Supply Curves
$5.00
4-39
Six Things to Remember about a Supply
Curve
1. A supply curve follows the law of supply. When price
rises, quantity supplied increases, and vice versa.
2. The horizontal axis—quantity—has a time dimension.
3. The quality of each unit is the same.
4. The vertical axis—price—assumes all other prices
remain constant.
5. The supply curve assumes everything else is constant.
6. Effects of price changes are shown by movements
along the supply curve. Effects of nonprice
determinants of supply are shown by shifts of the entire
supply curve.
4-42
Supply and Demand
14
4-43
Supply and Demand
14
P*
Excess demand
P0 causes upward
pressure on price
Excess
demand Demand
Q
4-44
Supply and Demand
14
Political and Social Forces and Equilibrium
If social and political forces were included in the analysis,
they’d provide a counter–pressure to the dynamic forces
of supply and demand. For example:
• Social pressures often offset economic pressures and
prevent unemployed individuals from accepting work at
lower wages than currently employed workers receive.
• Existing firms conspire to limit new competition by
lobbying Congress to pass restrictive regulations and by
devising pricing strategies to scare off new entrants.
• Renters often organize to pressure local government to
set caps on the rental price of apartments.
• Farmers use political pressure to obtain prices that are
higher than supply/demand equilibrium prices.
4-45
Supply and Demand
14
Q
Q1 Q0
4-47
Supply and Demand
14
Excess
S0
supply
A decrease in demand
generates excess supply.
P0
Price will decrease until a
P1 new, lower, equilibrium
price is reached
D0
D1
Q
Q1 Q0
4-48
Supply and Demand
14
Chapter Summary
• The law of demand states that the quantity demanded
rises as price falls, other things constant.
• The law of supply states that the quantity supplied
rises as price rises, other things constant.
• A change in quantity demanded (supplied), caused by
only a change in the good’s own price, is a movement
along the demand (supply) curve.
• A change in demand (supply) is a shift of the entire
demand (supply) curve.
• Factors that affect supply and demand other than price
are called shift factors.
4-49
Supply and Demand
14
Chapter Summary
• Important supply shift factors include price of inputs,
technology, expectations, and taxes and subsidies to
producers
• Important demand shift factors include society’s income,
the price of other goods, tastes, expectations, and taxes
and subsidies to consumers
• A market demand (supply) curve is the horizontal sum of
all individual demand (supply) curves
• When quantity demanded equals quantity supplied at
equilibrium, prices have no tendency to change
• When quantity demanded is greater than quantity
supplied, prices tend to rise; when quantity supplied is
greater than quantity demanded, prices tend to fall
4-50