4 The Market Forces of Supply and Demand PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS FOURTH EDITION N. G R E G O R Y M A N K I W PowerPoint® Slides by Ron Cronovich © 2007 Thomson South-Western, all rights reserved In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions: What factors affect buyers’ demand for goods? What factors affect sellers’ supply of goods? How do supply and demand determine the price of a good and the quantity sold? How do changes in the factors that affect demand or supply affect the market price and quantity of a good? How do markets allocate resources? CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 1 Markets and Competition A market is a group of buyers and sellers of a particular product. A competitive market is one with many buyers and sellers, each has a negligible effect on price. A perfectly competitive market: • all goods exactly the same • buyers & sellers so numerous that no one can affect market price – each is a “price taker” In this chapter, we assume markets are perfectly competitive. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 2 Demand Demand: is a willingness and an ability to pay (comes from the behavior of buyers) The demand function: Demand = f{Price, income, the prices of related goods, tastes, etc.} other things constant (ceteris paribus) Prices are the tool by which market coordinates individuals’ desires and limits how much people demand. Thus, price mechanism ensures what people demand matches what’s available Example: when goods are scarce, the market reduces the quantity people demand; as their prices go up, people buy fewer goods, vice versa 3 Cont,… The quantity demanded of any good is the amount of the good that buyers are willing and able to purchase. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 4 Quantity Demanded 1) Desired quantity It is the amount that consumers wish to purchase, given the price of the product, other prices, their incomes, their taste and everything else that might matter Quantity Demanded 2) Effective quantity It is not an idle dream but it is the amounts that people are willing to buy, given the price they must pay for the product 3) Continuous flow of purchase It must therefore expressed as so much per period of time: 1 million units per day, etc. Source: Lipsey and Courant 5 The Law of Demand Quantity demanded rises as price falls, other things constant or alternatively: Quantity demanded falls as price rises, other things constant As price changes, people change how much of a particular good they are willing to buy What accounts for the law of demand? Individual’s tendency to substitute other goods for goods whose relative price has gone up An inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded, other things constant 6 The Demand Schedule Demand schedule: A table that shows the relationship between the price of a good and the quantity demanded. Example: Helen’s demand for lattes. Notice that Helen’s preferences obey the Law of Demand. CHAPTER 4 Price Quantity of of lattes lattes demanded $0.00 16 1.00 14 2.00 12 3.00 10 4.00 8 5.00 6 6.00 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 7 Helen’s Demand Schedule & Curve Price Quantity of of lattes lattes demanded Price of Lattes $6.00 $0.00 16 1.00 14 $4.00 2.00 12 $3.00 3.00 10 $2.00 4.00 8 5.00 6 6.00 4 $5.00 $1.00 $0.00 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 Quantity 15 of Lattes THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 8 Alasan Kurva Permintaan Berslope Negatif Konsumen cenderung membagi pendapatannya untuk mengkonsumsi bermacam barang. Peningkatan harga salah satu barang yang dikonsumsinya berarti lebih sedikit barang lain yang bisa dikonsumsi atau harga relatif barang yang naik tersebut menjadi lebih mahal diukur dengan unit barang lainnya. Hal ini yang mendorong konsumen untuk mengurangi jumlah yang diminta ketika harga naik Hukum utilitas marginal yang semakin menurun Semakin banyak unit barang yang dikonsumsi, tambahan kepuasan (utilitas) yang diperoleh dari mengkonsumsi unit barang terakhir akan semakin menurun 9 10 Market Demand versus Individual Demand The quantity demanded in the market is the sum of the quantities demanded by all buyers at each price. Suppose Helen and Ken are the only two buyers in the Latte market. (Qd = quantity demanded) Price Helen’s Qd Ken’s Qd $0.00 16 + 8 = 24 1.00 14 + 7 = 21 2.00 12 + 6 = 18 3.00 10 + 5 = 15 4.00 8 + 4 = 12 5.00 6 + 3 = 9 6.00 4 + 2 = 6 Market Qd The Market Demand Curve for Lattes P Qd (Market) $0.00 24 $5.00 1.00 21 $4.00 2.00 18 3.00 15 4.00 12 5.00 9 6.00 6 P $6.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 12 Another Example Demand for DVD Price (per DVD) A $ 0.50 B $ 1.00 Alice’s Demand 6 5 Terry’s Demand 3 2 Raul’s Demand 2 1 Market Demand 11 8 C D E $ 1.50 $ 2.00 $ 2.50 4 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 3 2 F $ 3.00 1 0 0 1 13 Cont,… Prices of DVD 3.00 2.50 2.00 1.50 1.00 Terry Market Demand Raul 0.50 1 2 3 4 5 6 Alice 7 8 9 10 11 Quantities of DVD 14 15 Change in quantity demanded Happens due to price movements, a change in price changes the quantity demanded Graphically, this situation is showed by a movement along a demand curve Price of X PA A B PB Qd QA QB Quantity of X 16 Change in demand Happens due to the change in anything other than price (the ‘constant factors’) Graphically, this situation is showed by a shift in demand (a shift in entire demand curve) Price of X PA A B Q d1 QA QB Q d2 Quantity of X 17 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… CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 18 Demand Curve Shifters: # of buyers An increase in the number of buyers causes an increase in quantity demanded at each price, which shifts the demand curve to the right. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 19 Demand Curve Shifters: # of buyers Suppose the number of buyers increases. Then, at each price, quantity demanded will increase (by 5 in this example). P $6.00 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 Q $0.00 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 20 Demand Curve Shifters: income Demand for a normal good is positively related to income. • An increase in income causes increase in quantity demanded at each price, shifting the D curve to the right. (Demand for an inferior good is negatively related to income. An increase in income shifts D curves for inferior goods to the left.) CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 21 Demand Curve Shifters: prices of related goods Two goods are substitutes if an increase in the price of one causes an increase in demand for the other. Example: pizza and hamburgers. An increase in the price of pizza increases demand for hamburgers, shifting hamburger demand curve to the right. Other examples: Coke and Pepsi, laptops and desktop computers, compact discs and music downloads CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 22 Demand Curve Shifters: prices of related goods Two goods are complements if an increase in the price of one causes a fall in demand for the other. Example: computers and software. If price of computers rises, people buy fewer computers, and therefore less software. Software demand curve shifts left. Other examples: college tuition and textbooks, bagels and cream cheese, eggs and bacon CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 23 Demand Curve Shifters: tastes Anything that causes a shift in tastes toward a good will increase demand for that good and shift its D curve to the right. Example: The Atkins diet became popular in the ’90s, caused an increase in demand for eggs, shifted the egg demand curve to the right. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 24 Demand Curve Shifters: expectations Expectations affect consumers’ buying decisions. Examples: • If people expect their incomes to rise, their demand for meals at expensive restaurants may increase now. • If the economy turns bad and people worry about their future job security, demand for new autos may fall now. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 25 Demand Curve Shifters: taxes & subsidies Taxes Taxes levied on consumers increase the cost of goods to consumers and therefore reduce demand for those goods Subsidies Subsidies have the opposite effect Subsidies reduce the cost of goods to consumers and therefore increase demand for those goods 26 Demand Curve Shifters: population growth Population growth does not by itself create new demand. The additional people must have purchasing power (that is, earning income) before demand is change If population growth results in an extra employed people, then the following statement is usually true: An increase in population will shift the demand of most products to the right, indicating that more will be bought at each price 27 Summary: Variables That Affect Demand Variable A change in this variable… Price …causes a movement along the D curve No. of buyers …shifts the D curve Income …shifts the D curve Price of related goods …shifts the D curve Tastes …shifts the D curve Expectations …shifts the D curve CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 28 Cont,… Variable A change in this variable… Taxes …shifts the D curve Subsidies …shifts the D curve Population growth …shifts the D curve CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 29 Additional Information on Demand Each individual has his/her owns limitations on how much of goods or services that they can consume.. The limit is perhaps time constraint, the number of his/her fortunes or the work of the law of diminishing marginal utility— an increase in consuming one good/service will eventually decrease utility derived from that consumption Consequently, these facts are depicted on the graph by the intersection of the demand curve with each of the axis – Case and Fair CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 30 Cont.,… The demand curve will intersect with axis if… causes… Axis Price (Y) the limitation on consumer’s income and wealth Quantity (X) the limitation of time and the work of the law of diminishing marginal utility CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 31 Cont.,… P $6.00 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 Q $0.00 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 32 Kurva Permintaan Memotong Sumbu Kurva permintaan akan memotong sumbu harga (Y) sebagai akibat terbatasnya pendapatan dan kekayaan rumah tangga. Akan ada tingkat harga tertentu yang maksimal bisa disanggupi oleh konsumen Kurva permintaan akan memotong sumbu kuantitas (X) sebagai akibat keterbatasan waktu dan hukum utilitas marginal yang semakin menurun. Keterbatasan waktu menyebabkan jumlah yang diminta konsumen pada saat harga suatu barang adalah nol terbatas. Pada tingkat konsumsi tertentu, tambahan utilitas yg didapat dari mengkonsumsi suatu barang sama dengan nol. Sehingga mengkonsumsi lebih banyak dari titik ini tidak memberikan manfaat bagi konsumen. 33 ACTIVE LEARNING Demand curve 1: Draw a demand curve for music downloads. What happens to it in each of the following scenarios? Why? A. The price of iPods falls B. The price of music downloads falls C. The price of compact discs falls 34 ACTIVE LEARNING A. price of iPods falls 1: Music downloads and iPods are complements. Price of music downloads A fall in price of iPods shifts the demand curve for music downloads to the right. P1 D1 Q1 Q2 D2 Quantity of music downloads 35 1: B. price of music downloads falls ACTIVE LEARNING Price of music downloads The D curve does not shift. Move down along curve to a point with lower P, higher Q. P1 P2 D1 Q1 Q2 Quantity of music downloads 36 ACTIVE LEARNING C. price of CDs falls 1: CDs and music downloads are substitutes. Price of music downloads A fall in price of CDs shifts demand for music downloads to the left. P1 D2 Q2 Q1 D1 Quantity of music downloads 37 Supply Supply comes from the behavior of sellers. The quantity supplied of any good is the amount that sellers are willing and able to sell. Law of supply: the claim that the quantity supplied of a good rises when the price of the good rises, other things equal CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 38 The Supply Schedule Supply schedule: A table that shows the relationship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied. Example: Starbucks’ supply of lattes. Notice that Starbucks’ supply schedule obeys the Law of Supply. CHAPTER 4 Price of lattes Quantity of lattes supplied $0.00 0 1.00 3 2.00 6 3.00 9 4.00 12 5.00 15 6.00 18 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 39 Starbucks’ Supply Schedule & Curve Price of lattes Quantity of lattes supplied $0.00 0 1.00 3 2.00 6 $3.00 3.00 9 $2.00 4.00 12 5.00 15 6.00 18 P $6.00 $5.00 $4.00 $1.00 $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 40 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) Market Qs Price Starbucks Jitters $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 P QS (Market) $0.00 0 1.00 5 2.00 10 $4.00 3.00 15 $3.00 4.00 20 $2.00 5.00 25 6.00 30 P $6.00 $5.00 $1.00 Q $0.00 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 42 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… CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 43 Supply Curve Shifters: input prices Examples of input prices: wages, prices of raw materials. A fall in input prices makes production more profitable at each output price, so firms supply a larger quantity at each price, and the S curve shifts to the right. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 44 Supply Curve Shifters: input prices Suppose the price of milk falls. At each price, the quantity of Lattes supplied will increase (by 5 in this example). P $6.00 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 Q $0.00 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 45 Supply Curve Shifters: technology Technology determines how much inputs are required to produce a unit of output. A cost-saving technological improvement has same effect as a fall in input prices, shifts the S curve to the right. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 46 Supply Curve Shifters: # of sellers An increase in the number of sellers increases the quantity supplied at each price, shifts the S curve to the right. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 47 Supply Curve Shifters: expectations Suppose a firm expects the price of the good it sells to rise in the future. The firm may reduce supply now, to save some of its inventory to sell later at the higher price. This would shift the S curve leftward. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 48 Summary: Variables That Affect Supply Variable A change in this variable… Price …causes a movement along the S curve Input prices …shifts the S curve Technology …shifts the S curve No. of sellers …shifts the S curve Expectations …shifts the S curve CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 49 ACTIVE LEARNING Supply curve 2: Draw a supply curve for tax return preparation software. What happens to it in each of the following scenarios? A. Retailers cut the price of the software. B. A technological advance allows the software to be produced at lower cost. C. Professional tax return preparers raise the price of the services they provide. 50 2: A. fall in price of tax return software ACTIVE LEARNING Price of tax return software S1 The S curve does not shift. Move down along the curve to a lower P and lower Q. P1 P2 Q2 Q1 Quantity of tax return software 51 2: B. fall in cost of producing the software ACTIVE LEARNING Price of tax return software S1 P1 S2 The S curve shifts to the right: at each price, Q increases. Q1 Q2 Quantity of tax return software 52 2: C. professional preparers raise their price ACTIVE LEARNING Price of tax return software S1 This shifts the demand curve for tax preparation software, not the supply curve. Quantity of tax return software 53 Supply and Demand Together P $6.00 D S $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 Equilibrium: P has reached the level where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded $2.00 $1.00 $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 54 Equilibrium price: The price that equates quantity supplied with quantity demanded P S D $6.00 P QD QS $5.00 $0 24 0 $4.00 1 21 5 2 18 10 3 15 15 4 12 20 5 9 25 6 6 30 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 55 Equilibrium quantity: The quantity supplied and quantity demanded at the equilibrium price P S D $6.00 P QD QS $5.00 $0 24 0 $4.00 1 21 5 2 18 10 3 15 15 4 12 20 5 9 25 6 6 30 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 56 Surplus: when quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded P Example: S D Surplus $6.00 If P = $5, $5.00 then QD = 9 lattes $4.00 $3.00 and QS = 25 lattes $2.00 resulting in a surplus of 16 lattes Q $1.00 $0.00 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 57 Surplus: when quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded P S Facing a surplus, D Surplus $6.00 sellers try to increase $5.00 sales by cutting the price. $4.00 This causes QD to rise and QS to fall… $3.00 …which reduces the surplus. $2.00 $1.00 $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 58 Surplus: when quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded P Facing a surplus, S D Surplus $6.00 sellers try to increase $5.00 sales by cutting the price. $4.00 Falling prices cause QD to rise and QS to fall. $3.00 Prices continue to fall until market reaches equilibrium. $2.00 $1.00 $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 59 Shortage: when quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied P Example: S D $6.00 If P = $1, $5.00 then $4.00 QD = 21 lattes and $3.00 QS = 5 lattes $2.00 resulting in a $1.00 shortage of 16 lattes $0.00 Shortage 0 CHAPTER 4 5 Q 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 60 Shortage: when quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied P Facing a shortage, S D $6.00 sellers raise the price, $5.00 causing QD to fall and QS to rise, …which reduces the shortage. $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 Shortage $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 61 Shortage: when quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied P Facing a shortage, S D $6.00 sellers raise the price, $5.00 causing QD to fall and QS to rise. $4.00 Prices continue to rise until market reaches equilibrium. $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 Shortage $0.00 Q 0 CHAPTER 4 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 62 Three Steps to Analyzing Changes in Eq’m To determine the effects of any event, 1. Decide whether event shifts S curve, D curve, or both. 2. Decide in which direction curve shifts. 3. Use supply-demand diagram to see how the shift changes eq’m P and Q. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 63 EXAMPLE: The Market for Hybrid Cars P price of hybrid cars S1 P1 D1 Q Q1 quantity of hybrid cars CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 64 EXAMPLE 1: A Change in Demand EVENT TO BE ANALYZED: P Increase in price of gas. STEP 1: P2 D curve shifts because STEP 2: price of gas affects demand for D shifts right hybrids. because high gas STEP 3: S curve doeshybrids not price makes The shift causes an shift, because price more attractive increase in price of gas does not cars. relative to other and quantity affect cost of of hybrid cars. producing hybrids. CHAPTER 4 S1 P1 D1 Q1 Q2 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND D2 Q 65 EXAMPLE 1: A Change in Demand Notice: When P rises, producers supply a larger quantity of hybrids, even though the S curve has not shifted. Always be careful to distinguish b/w a shift in a curve and a movement along the curve. CHAPTER 4 P S1 P2 P1 D1 Q1 Q2 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND D2 Q 66 Terms for Shift vs. Movement Along Curve Change in supply: a shift in the S curve • occurs when a non-price determinant of supply changes (like technology or costs) Change in the quantity supplied: a movement along a fixed S curve • occurs when P changes Change in demand: a shift in the D curve • occurs when a non-price determinant of demand changes (like income or # of buyers) Change in the quantity demanded: a movement along a fixed D curve • occurs when P changes EXAMPLE 2: A Change in Supply EVENT: New technology P reduces cost of producing hybrid cars. S1 S2 STEP 1: S curve shifts because STEP 2: event affects P1 cost of production. P2 S shifts right D curve does not because event STEPbecause 3: shift, reduces cost, The shift causes production technology makes production price to fallof the is not one more profitable at and quantity to rise. factors that affect any given price. demand. CHAPTER 4 D1 Q1 Q2 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND Q 68 EXAMPLE 3: A Change in Both Supply and Demand EVENTS: price of gas rises AND new technology reduces production costs STEP 1: Both curves shift. P S1 S2 P2 P1 STEP 2: Both shift to the right. STEP 3: Q rises, but effect on P is ambiguous: If demand increases more than supply, P rises. CHAPTER 4 D1 Q1 Q2 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND D2 Q 69 EXAMPLE 3: A Change in Both Supply and Demand EVENTS: price of gas rises AND new technology reduces production costs P S1 S2 STEP 3, cont. But if supply increases more than demand, P falls. P1 P2 D1 Q1 CHAPTER 4 Q2 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND D2 Q 70 3: Changes in supply and demand ACTIVE LEARNING Use the three-step method to analyze the effects of each event on the equilibrium price and quantity of music downloads. Event A: A fall in the price of compact discs Event B: Sellers of music downloads negotiate a reduction in the royalties they must pay for each song they sell. Event C: Events A and B both occur. 71 ACTIVE LEARNING A. fall in price of CDs 3: P The market for music downloads S1 STEPS 1. D curve shifts P1 2. D shifts left P2 3. P and Q both fall. D2 Q2 Q1 D1 Q 72 ACTIVE LEARNING B. fall in cost of royalties 3: P The market for music downloads S1 STEPS 1. S curve shifts P1 2. S shifts right P2 S2 3. P falls, Q rises. (royalties are part of sellers’ costs) D1 Q1 Q2 Q 73 ACTIVE LEARNING 3: C. fall in price of CDs AND fall in cost of royalties STEPS 1. Both curves shift (see parts A & B). 2. D shifts left, S shifts right. 3. P unambiguously falls. Effect on Q is ambiguous: The fall in demand reduces Q, the increase in supply increases Q. 74 CONCLUSION: How Prices Allocate Resources One of the Ten Principles from Chapter 1: Markets are usually a good way to organize economic activity. In market economies, prices adjust to balance supply and demand. These equilibrium prices are the signals that guide economic decisions and thereby allocate scarce resources. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 75 CHAPTER SUMMARY A competitive market has many buyers and sellers, each of whom has little or no influence on the market price. Economists use the supply and demand model to analyze competitive markets. The downward-sloping demand curve reflects the Law of Demand, which states that the quantity buyers demand of a good depends negatively on the good’s price. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 76 CHAPTER SUMMARY Besides price, demand depends on buyers’ incomes, tastes, expectations, the prices of substitutes and complements, and # of buyers. If one of these factors changes, the D curve shifts. The upward-sloping supply curve reflects the Law of Supply, which states that the quantity sellers supply depends positively on the good’s price. Other determinants of supply include input prices, technology, expectations, and the # of sellers. Changes in these factors shift the S curve. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 77 CHAPTER SUMMARY The intersection of S and D curves determine the market equilibrium. At the equilibrium price, quantity supplied equals quantity demanded. If the market price is above equilibrium, a surplus results, which causes the price to fall. If the market price is below equilibrium, a shortage results, causing the price to rise. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 78 CHAPTER SUMMARY We can use the supply-demand diagram to analyze the effects of any event on a market: First, determine whether the event shifts one or both curves. Second, determine the direction of the shifts. Third, compare the new equilibrium to the initial one. In market economies, prices are the signals that guide economic decisions and allocate scarce resources. CHAPTER 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 79