1. Demand
- Definition: The quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at various prices during a specific period.
- Law of Demand: States that, other things being equal, as the price of a good decreases, its demand increases, and vice versa.
- Determinants of Demand:
- Price: Inverse relationship between price and demand.
- Income: Higher income increases demand for normal goods.
- Prices of Related Goods: Substitutes and complements affect demand.
- Tastes and Preferences: Changing consumer preferences impact demand.
- Expectations: Future price or income changes can influence current demand.
- Population: Larger populations typically increase demand.
- Elasticity of Demand:
- Price Elasticity: Measures responsiveness of demand to price changes.
- Income Elasticity: Measures how demand changes with income variations.
- Cross Elasticity: Measures the effect of a price change in one good on the demand for another.
2. Supply
- Definition: The quantity of a good or service that producers are willing and able to sell at various prices during a specific period.
- Law of Supply: States that, other things being equal, as the price of a good increases, its supply increases, and vice versa.
- Determinants of Supply:
- Price: Direct relationship between price and supply.
- Input Costs: Higher production costs reduce supply.
- Technology: Technological advancements increase supply.
- Taxes and Subsidies: Taxes reduce supply, subsidies increase it.
- Expectations: Future price changes affect current supply.
- Number of Sellers: More sellers in the market increase supply.
- Elasticity of Supply:
- Price Elasticity: Measures responsiveness of supply to price changes.
- Time Period: Supply elasticity is higher in the long run due to greater adjustments.
3. Market Equilibrium
- Definition: The point where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied at a given price.
- Equilibrium Price: The price at which demand and supply are balanced.
- Excess Demand: Occurs when demand exceeds supply, causing upward pressure on price.
- Excess Supply: Occurs when supply exceeds demand, causing downward pressure on price.
Key Points
- Demand refers to the quantity of goods or services consumers are willing to buy at different prices.
- Law of Demand: Price and demand are inversely related.
- Key determinants of demand: Price, income, preferences, and population.
- Elasticity of Demand: Measures responsiveness of demand to price, income, and related goods.
- Supply refers to the quantity of goods producers are willing to sell at various prices.
- Law of Supply: Price and supply are directly related.
- Key determinants of supply: Price, input costs, technology, and government policies.
- Elasticity of Supply: Measures how supply responds to price changes.
- Market equilibrium is where demand equals supply.
- Equilibrium price: The price at which the market clears.
- Excess demand leads to higher prices; excess supply leads to lower prices.
- Substitute goods: A price increase in one increases demand for the other.
- Complementary goods: A price increase in one reduces demand for the other.
- Technological improvements reduce costs and increase supply.
- Government subsidies encourage production and increase supply.
- Price elasticity is high for luxury goods and low for necessities.
- Understanding demand and supply is crucial for market analysis.
- Income elasticity helps differentiate between normal and inferior goods.
- Market interventions like price controls disrupt equilibrium.
- Elastic goods: Highly sensitive to price changes (e.g., luxury items).
- Inelastic goods: Less sensitive to price changes (e.g., essential goods).
- Short-run supply: Limited by existing capacity; long-run supply is more flexible.
- High input costs reduce supply and shift the supply curve leftward.
- Changes in consumer preferences shift the demand curve.