Principles of Economics: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand
Markets and Competition
- Market: Group of buyers and sellers for a specific good/service.
- Buyers: Influence demand.
- Sellers: Influence supply.
- Competitive Market: Many buyers and sellers with negligible impact on prices.
- Perfect Competition: Characteristics include:
- Identical goods offered for sale.
- Many buyers and sellers so that no one influences the price (price takers).
Demand
- Quantity Demanded: Amount buyers are willing and able to purchase.
- Law of Demand: As price rises, quantity demanded typically falls.
- Illustrated by the downward sloping demand curve.
Demand Schedule
- Demand Schedule: Table showing the relationship between price and quantity demanded.
- Example: Helen's demand for lattes shows decreasing quantity as price increases:
| Price of Lattes | Quantity Demanded |
|-----------------|------------------|
| $0.00 | 16 |
| $1.00 | 14 |
| $2.00 | 12 |
| $3.00 | 10 |
| $4.00 | 8 |
| $5.00 | 6 |
| $6.00 | 4 |
Market Demand
- Total quantity demanded at each price by all consumers in the market is the sum of individual demands:
- Example with Helen and Ken in the latte market.
Demand Curve Shifters
- Quantity demanded shifts due to non-price determinants:
- Number of Buyers: Increase in buyers shifts demand curve to the right.
- Income: Normal goods have increased demand with higher incomes; inferior goods have decreased demand.
- Prices of Related Goods:
- Substitutes: Price decrease in one decreases demand for another.
- Complements: Price decrease in one increases demand for another.
- Taste and Preferences: Changes can increase or decrease demand.
- Expectations: Future expectations can affect current demand.
Supply
- Quantity Supplied: Amount sellers are willing to sell at a specific price.
- Law of Supply: Quantity supplied generally increases with increased prices.
Supply Schedule
- Supply Schedule: Table showing relationship between price and quantity supplied for a product.
- Example: Starbucks' supply of lattes.
Market Supply vs. Individual Supply
- Market supply is the total of all sellers' supplies at each price.
Supply Curve Shifters
- Supply shifts due to:
- Input Prices: Lower input prices result in increased supply.
- Technology: Advances can lower costs and increase supply.
- Number of Sellers: More sellers typically mean greater supply.
- Expectations: Future price expectations can also affect current supply.
Supply and Demand Together
- Equilibrium: Occurs where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded.
- Equilibrium Price: Price equating quantity supplied and demanded.
- Surplus: Occurs when quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded. Sellers reduce prices to eliminate surplus.
- Shortage: Occurs when quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied. Sellers increase prices to reduce shortages.
Analyzing Changes in Equilibrium
- Identify if the event shifts the supply or demand curve.
- Determine the direction of the shift.
- Use diagrams to view how shifts change equilibrium price and quantity.
Control on Prices
- Price Ceiling: Legal maximum price of a good.
- Not binding if above equilibrium price (no market effect).
- Binding if below equilibrium price, leading to shortages.
- Price Floor: Legal minimum price.
- Not binding if below equilibrium price (no market effect).
- Binding if above equilibrium price, leading to surpluses.
Key Takeaways
- Buyers and sellers determine market outcomes through interaction of supply and demand.
- Demand decreases as prices rise, while supply increases.
- Market equilibrium is essential for stability in prices and quantities.
- Price controls can cause unintended market consequences such as shortages or surpluses.