Understanding The Law of Supply and Demand
Understanding The Law of Supply and Demand
Understanding The Law of Supply and Demand
The law of supply and demand, one of the most basic economic laws, ties into
almost all economic principles in some way. In practice, people's willingness
to supply and demand a good determines the market equilibrium price, or the
price where the quantity of the good that people are willing to supply just
equals the quantity that people demand. However, multiple factors can affect
both supply and demand, causing them to increase or decrease in various
ways.
Like the law of demand, the law of supply demonstrates the quantities that will
be sold at a certain price. But unlike the law of demand, the supply
relationship shows an upward slope. This means that the higher the price, the
higher the quantity supplied. From the seller's perspective, the opportunity
cost of each additional unit that they sell tends to be higher and higher.
Producers supply more at a higher price because the higher selling price
justifies the higher opportunity cost of each additional unit sold.
For both supply and demand, it is important to understand that time is always
a dimension. on these charts. The quantity demanded or supplied, found
along the horizontal access is always measured in units of the good over a
given time interval. Longer or shorter time intervals can influence the shapes
of both the supply and demand curves.
For all time periods, the demand curve slopes downward because of the law
of diminishing marginal utility. The first unit of good that any buyer demands
will always be put to that buyers highest valued use. For each additional unit,
the buyer will use it (or plan to use it) for a successively lower valued use.
Like a movement along the demand curve, a movement along the supply
curve means that the supply relationship remains consistent. Therefore, a
movement along the supply curve will occur when the price of the good
changes and the quantity supplied changes in accordance to the original
supply relationship. In other words, a movement occurs when a change in
quantity supplied is caused only by a change in price, and vice versa.
Conversely, if the price for a bottle of beer was $2 and the quantity supplied
decreased from Q1 to Q2, then there would be a shift in the supply of beer.
Like a shift in the demand curve, a shift in the supply curve implies that the
original supply curve has changed, meaning that the quantity supplied is
effected by a factor other than price. A shift in the supply curve would occur if,
for instance, a natural disaster caused a mass shortage of hops; beer
manufacturers would be forced to supply less beer for the same price.