Demand
Supply Basics
Determinants
Elasticity
Real-World Examples
100

What is the Law of Demand?

 As price increases, quantity demanded decreases (and vice versa).

100

What is the Law of Supply?

 As price increases, quantity supplied increases (and vice versa).

100

 A movement along the demand or supply curve is caused by what?

A change in price.

100

What does elasticity measure?

How sensitive quantity is to a change in price.

100

 Is insulin an elastic or inelastic good? Why?

 Inelastic, because it’s a necessity with few substitutes.

200

 What does ceteris paribus mean in economics?

All other things held equal.

200

What is quantity supplied?

The amount producers are willing and able to sell at a given price.

200

 A shift of the demand or supply curve is caused by what?

 A factor other than price (like income, technology, or preferences).

200

 What is elastic demand?

When quantity demanded changes a lot with price changes.

200

 If the price of Pepsi rises, what happens to demand for Coke?

 It increases — they are substitute goods.

300

 What is the difference between demand and quantity demanded?

Demand is the overall desire for a good; quantity demanded is the amount purchased at a specific price.

300

On a supply graph, which axis represents price?

 The vertical (Y) axis.

300

What happens to the demand curve when income rises for normal goods?

The demand curve shifts right (demand increases).

300

What is inelastic demand?

When quantity demanded changes very little with price changes.

300

 If wages for factory workers rise, what happens to supply?

Supply decreases — costs go up.

400

What happens to the demand for a good when its price decreases?

Quantity demanded increases.

400

What happens to quantity supplied when prices fall?

Producers supply less.

400

What happens to the supply curve when the cost of inputs rises?

The supply curve shifts left (supply decreases).

400

Give one example of an inelastic good.

 Insulin, gasoline, or electricity.

400

 If new technology makes production cheaper, what happens to the supply curve?

 It shifts right (increases).

500

What is a market demand curve?

The total demand from all consumers for a good at each price.

500

 What is market supply?

The total supply from all sellers at each price.

500

Name two factors that can shift the supply curve.

Changes in technology, input costs, number of firms, taxes/subsidies, or price expectations.

500

What does an elasticity coefficient less than 1 mean?

Demand or supply is inelastic.

500

 If consumers expect prices to rise soon, what happens to demand today?

 Demand increases now.