Supply and demand: Difference between revisions

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The law of supply and demand is a fundamental law of economics. It can be stated as follows:
*the quantity of a commodity that consumers are prepared to buy, ''(normally)'' rises when the price of that commodity falls,and vice versa;
*the quantity of a commodity that suppliers are prepared to sell, ''(normally)'' rises when the price of that commodity rises, and vice versa; so that,
*the price at which transactions eventually take place is that at which the quantity that consumers are prepared to buy is the same as the quantity that suppliers are prepared to sell.
''(The word "normally" is inserted in recognition of the exceptions noted in the concluding paragraph of this article)''


Because of their importance  to the development of economic theory, an appreciation  of  the significance of the  concepts of supply and demand is essential to the understanding of much of the subject-matter of economics. This article seeks to explain their significance in non-technical terms,  as well as introducing the lay reader to some of the associated terminology used by economists and providing a simple introduction to the concepts for students of economics.


The eventual price at which the hypothetical bargaining normally settles down is referred to as the ''market clearing'' or ''[[equilibrium]]'' price. Higher prices result in unsold surpluses, prompting suppliers to reduce their prices, and vice versa. Only in some exceptional circumstances (described in the tutorials subpage) can equilibrium not be reached.
The definitions of the terms used in italics can be found on the Related Articles subpage, and a selection of the diagrams and mathematical equations that are conventionally used for teaching purposes can be found on the Tutorials subpage


==Overview: origins and applications==


This is among the most familiar of all economic laws (so much so that it might be considered to be a statement of the obvious). It has often been referred to as  tautological, but its dissemination by  Alfred Marshal in 1891 <ref> Alfred Marshall The Principles of Economics Chapter 3,  Phoenix Books 1997 (1st edition 1891) </ref> introduced a major departure in economic theory, previous economists, from Adam Smith to Karl Marx, having taught that prices were determined by the cost of production. (See [[history of economic thought]]).


==The determinants of demand==


In the economics textbooks,  the operation of the law of supply and demand is normally explained by means of a diagram in which the equilibrium price  is determined as the price (on the vertical axis) at which two curves intersect:
* the demand curve, which slopes downwards from left to right in accordance with the assumption (explained in the article on [[utility]]) of a product's  diminishing marginal rate of substitution  with  money; and,
* the supply curve, which slopes upwards from left to right in accordance with the assumption (explained in the article on the [[theory of the firm]]) of the diminishing returns to scale.


==The determinants of supply==


The operation of the law of supply and demand in particular markets may be quantified by the use of the following concepts :
*[[Elasticity]] of demand denotes the change in demand in response to changes of price, income or the prices of substitutes.
*The [[income effect]]  denotes the fact that the demand for most products increases as consumers' income increases.
*The [[substitution effect]] denotes the fact that the demand for a commodity is influenced by the price of close substitutes.
*[[Consumer's surplus]]  denotes the amount by which consumers value a commodity over above what they have to pay for it.


==Market interactions==


The concepts associated with the law of supply and demand are among the basic tools of [[microeconomics]] and some of their applications are described in the article on that subject. They are applicable to all market activity and do not depend upon any assumptions concerning the nature of the commodities concerned. That remains true  notwithstanding the fact that they can  assume zero or even negative values. The concept of elasticity of demand, for example, is not invalidated by the existence of commodities that are so essential that the demand for them is insensitive to price, nor by the existence of goods that are prized simply because they are expensive. Their textbook derivations depend, however, upon  assumptions about consumer behaviour that are discussed in the article on [[utility]], and assumptions about the production function that are discussed in the article on the [[theory of the firm]]. 
 
==Equilibrium and disequilibrium==
 
 
==Empirical evidence==




==References==
==References==
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Revision as of 09:54, 25 April 2008

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This editable, developed Main Article is subject to a disclaimer.

Because of their importance to the development of economic theory, an appreciation of the significance of the concepts of supply and demand is essential to the understanding of much of the subject-matter of economics. This article seeks to explain their significance in non-technical terms, as well as introducing the lay reader to some of the associated terminology used by economists and providing a simple introduction to the concepts for students of economics.

The definitions of the terms used in italics can be found on the Related Articles subpage, and a selection of the diagrams and mathematical equations that are conventionally used for teaching purposes can be found on the Tutorials subpage

Overview: origins and applications

The determinants of demand

The determinants of supply

Market interactions

Equilibrium and disequilibrium

Empirical evidence

References