Demand Dynamics
Supply Shifts
Equilibrium & Market Changes
Elasticity & Utility
Government Interventions
100

What does the law of demand state? 

As price rises, quantity demand falls

100

What does the law of supply state?

As price increases, quantity supplied increases.

100

Define market equilibrium

The point where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied.
100

What is elasticity of demand?

The measure of how responsive quantity demanded is to price changes. 

100
What is a price ceiling?

A legal maximum price that can be charged for a good or service. 

200

Name two factors that can shift the demand curve? 

Income, tastes/preferences, population, expectations, price of related goods 

200

Name two factors that can shift supply

resource costs, technology, government intervention, number of sellers, future expectations, natural events. 

200

What happens when the price is below equilibrium?

a shortage

200

What type of good has inelastic demand?

Necessities (e.g., gasoline, medicine)

200

What is a price floor?

A legal minimum price that must be paid for a good or service.

300

What is the difference between a change in quantity demanded and a change in demand? 

Change in QD = movement along the curve (price change); Change in demand = entire curve shifts (non-price factors).

300

If technology improves, what happens to the supply curve?

It shifts to the right (increase in supply)

300

What happens when a price is above the equilibrium? 

a surplus

300

What is marginal utility? 

The additional satisfaction gained from consuming more unit of a product. 

300

Give an example of a price ceiling and its effect.

Rent control -> shortage of apartments

400

If the price of pizza rises, what happens to the demand for hamburgers (a substitute)?

Demand for hamburgers inceases

400

What happens to supply if the government increases taxes on producers?

supply decreases and curve shifts left

400

In a market, how do shortages and surpluses get eliminated? 

Price adjustments - rising or falling- move the market back to equilibrium. 

400

Explain the law of diminishing marginal utility.

Each additional unit of a good gives less additional satisfaction than the one before. 

400

Give an example of a price floor and its effect.

Minimum wage -> surplus of labor

500

Explain how future expectations can affect today's demand for a product.

If consumers expect higher future prices, current demand increases (and vice versa).

500
A drought destroys half of the nation's corn crop. What happens to the supply of corn and to its equilibrium?

supply decreases (shifts left) and equilibrium price rises. 

500
Suppose a new study says coffee causes health problems. What happens to equilibrium price and quantity of coffee?

Demand decreases -> both equilibrium price and quantity decrease. 

500

Give a real-world example of diminishing marginal utility.

The first slice of pizza is great, but by the fourth slice, satisfaction decreases. 

500

A city government imposes a price floor on ride-share services (like Uber and Lyft) that is set above the equilibrium price. Demand stays the same, but more drivers join the market because of the higher guaranteed price. What is the most likely economic outcome of this policy?

There will be a surplus of ride-share drivers because the price floor is above equilibrium, causing quantity supplied to exceed quantity demanded. Riders will take fewer trips at the higher price, while more drivers will want to work.

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