Unit 2: Microeconomics Part I - Demand, Supply & Equilibrium
Welcome to the Core of Microeconomics! This unit explores the fundamental forces that drive market economies: demand and supply. You'll learn how these forces interact to determine prices, allocate resources, and create market equilibrium. Understanding demand and supply is essential for analyzing virtually every microeconomic issue you'll encounter in IB Economics.
1. The Law of Demand
This creates an inverse (negative) relationship between price and quantity demanded.
Why Does the Law of Demand Hold?
The law of demand is based on three key economic principles:
When the price of a good increases, consumers substitute it with relatively cheaper alternatives. When price decreases, consumers buy more of that good instead of alternatives.
Example: If coffee prices rise, consumers may switch to tea. If coffee prices fall, consumers buy more coffee instead of tea.
When the price of a good increases, consumers' real purchasing power (real income) decreases, so they buy less. When price decreases, real income effectively increases, allowing consumers to buy more.
Example: If gasoline prices double, your $100 buys less gas, reducing your real income and forcing you to purchase less.
As consumers consume more units of a good, each additional unit provides less satisfaction (utility). Therefore, consumers are only willing to buy additional units at lower prices.
Example: Your first slice of pizza provides great satisfaction, but the fifth slice provides much less. You'd only buy that fifth slice if the price were lower.
The Demand Curve
Demand vs. Quantity Demanded
- Change in Quantity Demanded: Movement ALONG the demand curve caused by a change in PRICE only
- Change in Demand: SHIFT of the entire demand curve caused by changes in NON-PRICE determinants
2. Determinants of Demand (Non-Price Factors)
Several factors can shift the entire demand curve to the right (increase in demand) or left (decrease in demand):
1. Income
Example: Organic food, branded clothing, restaurant meals
Inferior Goods: Demand decreases when income increases (negative relationship)
Example: Instant noodles, public transportation (for some), second-hand goods
Inferior Goods: \( \text{Income} \uparrow \Rightarrow \text{Demand} \downarrow \)
2. Price of Related Goods
- If the price of Good A (substitute) increases, demand for Good B increases
- Examples: Butter and margarine, Coca-Cola and Pepsi, chicken and beef
\( P_{\text{substitute}} \uparrow \Rightarrow D_{\text{good}} \uparrow \)
- If the price of Good A (complement) increases, demand for Good B decreases
- Examples: Cars and gasoline, coffee and sugar, smartphones and apps
\( P_{\text{complement}} \uparrow \Rightarrow D_{\text{good}} \downarrow \)
3. Tastes and Preferences
- Favorable change: Advertising campaigns, fashion trends, health awareness → Demand increases
- Unfavorable change: Negative publicity, health warnings, changing trends → Demand decreases
4. Consumer Expectations
- Expected future price increase: Current demand increases (buy now before price rises)
- Expected future price decrease: Current demand decreases (wait for lower prices)
- Expected income increase: Current demand may increase (especially for durables)
5. Number of Consumers
- Population increase: Market demand increases
- Demographics: Aging population increases demand for healthcare
- Market expansion: More buyers enter the market → demand increases
Summary Table: Determinants of Demand
Determinant | Change | Effect on Demand | Curve Shift |
---|---|---|---|
Income (Normal Good) | Increases | Increases | Right |
Income (Inferior Good) | Increases | Decreases | Left |
Price of Substitute | Increases | Increases | Right |
Price of Complement | Increases | Decreases | Left |
Favorable Tastes | Change occurs | Increases | Right |
Expected Future Price | Expected to rise | Increases now | Right |
Number of Consumers | Increases | Increases | Right |
3. The Law of Supply
This creates a direct (positive) relationship between price and quantity supplied.
Why Does the Law of Supply Hold?
Higher prices provide greater profit potential, incentivizing producers to increase production. Lower prices reduce profit margins, making production less attractive.
As production increases, marginal costs typically rise due to diminishing returns and capacity constraints. Higher prices are needed to cover these increasing costs and justify expanded production.
Higher prices attract new firms to enter the market, increasing total market supply. Lower prices may force some firms to exit.
The Supply Curve
Supply vs. Quantity Supplied
- Change in Quantity Supplied: Movement ALONG the supply curve caused by a change in PRICE only
- Change in Supply: SHIFT of the entire supply curve caused by changes in NON-PRICE determinants
4. Determinants of Supply (Non-Price Factors)
Several factors can shift the entire supply curve to the right (increase in supply) or left (decrease in supply):
1. Costs of Production
Production costs include wages, raw materials, rent, utilities, and other inputs:
- Costs increase: Supply decreases (shift left) - less profitable to produce
- Costs decrease: Supply increases (shift right) - more profitable to produce
2. Technology
- Technological improvements: Increase productivity and reduce per-unit costs → Supply increases
- Examples: Automation, better machinery, improved production processes
3. Prices of Related Goods in Production
Goods that can be produced using the same resources
- If profit from Good A increases, producers switch resources from Good B to Good A
- Supply of Good B decreases
- Example: A farmer can grow wheat or corn. If wheat prices rise, the farmer allocates more land to wheat, reducing corn supply
Goods produced together from the same process
- Increased production of Good A automatically increases supply of Good B
- Examples: Beef and leather, crude oil and gasoline, lumber and sawdust
4. Producer Expectations
- Expected future price increase: Current supply may decrease (hold inventory for higher future prices)
- Expected future price decrease: Current supply increases (sell now before prices fall)
- Economic optimism: Firms invest more, increasing future supply capacity
5. Number of Firms
- More firms enter: Market supply increases
- Firms exit: Market supply decreases
- Entry/exit often depends on profitability and barriers to entry
6. Government Policies
- Subsidies: Lower production costs → Supply increases
- Taxes: Increase production costs → Supply decreases
- Regulations: Can increase or decrease supply depending on nature
- Price controls: Can affect supply decisions
7. Natural Factors and Other Shocks
- Weather: Droughts, floods, perfect conditions affect agricultural supply
- Natural disasters: Earthquakes, hurricanes reduce supply
- Discoveries: New resource deposits increase supply
Summary Table: Determinants of Supply
Determinant | Change | Effect on Supply | Curve Shift |
---|---|---|---|
Production Costs | Increase | Decreases | Left |
Technology | Improves | Increases | Right |
Price of Substitute in Production | Increases | Decreases (for this good) | Left |
Subsidies | Introduced/Increased | Increases | Right |
Indirect Taxes | Introduced/Increased | Decreases | Left |
Number of Firms | Increases | Increases | Right |
Good Weather (Agriculture) | Occurs | Increases | Right |
5. Market Equilibrium
At equilibrium, we have:
- • Equilibrium Price (P*): The price at which Qd = Qs
- • Equilibrium Quantity (Q*): The quantity bought and sold at P*
Market Disequilibrium
When price is not at equilibrium, the market experiences either a shortage or surplus:
Occurs when price is ABOVE equilibrium \( (P > P^*) \)
- Quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded: \( Q_s > Q_d \)
- Unsold inventory accumulates
- Market pressure pushes price DOWN toward equilibrium
- As price falls: Qd increases, Qs decreases → surplus eliminated
Occurs when price is BELOW equilibrium \( (P < P^*) \)
- Quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied: \( Q_d > Q_s \)
- Consumers cannot buy all they want
- Market pressure pushes price UP toward equilibrium
- As price rises: Qd decreases, Qs increases → shortage eliminated
Changes in Equilibrium
Equilibrium price and quantity change when demand or supply shifts:
Change | Effect on P* | Effect on Q* | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Demand Increases (D shifts right) | Increases | Increases | Rising incomes increase demand for cars |
Demand Decreases (D shifts left) | Decreases | Decreases | Health warnings reduce demand for cigarettes |
Supply Increases (S shifts right) | Decreases | Increases | Technology improves, lowering costs |
Supply Decreases (S shifts left) | Increases | Decreases | Bad weather reduces crop supply |
Market for smartphones:
Demand: \( Q_d = 100 - 2P \)
Supply: \( Q_s = 20 + 3P \)
At equilibrium: \( Q_d = Q_s \)
\( 100 - 2P = 20 + 3P \)
\( 80 = 5P \)
\( P^* = 16 \)
Substitute back: \( Q^* = 100 - 2(16) = 68 \)
Equilibrium: Price = $16, Quantity = 68 units
Simultaneous Shifts
When both demand and supply shift simultaneously, the effects on equilibrium depend on the relative magnitudes:
- Both increase: Q* definitely increases; P* depends on which shift is larger
- Both decrease: Q* definitely decreases; P* depends on which shift is larger
- Demand increases, Supply decreases: P* definitely increases; Q* depends on which shift is larger
- Demand decreases, Supply increases: P* definitely decreases; Q* depends on which shift is larger
6. The Price Mechanism
Three Functions of the Price Mechanism
Prices communicate information to economic agents:
- Rising prices signal scarcity/increasing demand → producers increase supply, consumers reduce demand
- Falling prices signal abundance/decreasing demand → producers reduce supply, consumers increase demand
- Prices convey information about relative scarcity and consumer preferences
Example: Rising oil prices signal scarcity, encouraging exploration, alternative energy development, and conservation.
Prices motivate economic agents to respond:
- High prices incentivize producers to increase supply and allocate more resources to that good
- Low prices incentivize consumers to buy more and producers to switch resources to more profitable goods
- Profit opportunities direct resources to their most valued uses
Example: High profits in smartphone industry incentivize tech companies to invest in research and production.
Prices allocate scarce goods among competing uses:
- When demand exceeds supply, rising prices ration goods to those willing and able to pay
- Prevents shortages without government intervention
- Resources flow to highest-value uses (those willing to pay most)
Example: During fuel shortages, higher prices ration gasoline to those who value it most, preventing queues and complete depletion.
Advantages of the Price Mechanism
- Efficiency: Resources automatically flow to highest-value uses
- Decentralization: No need for central planning or coordination
- Flexibility: Quickly responds to changing conditions
- Information: Prices aggregate millions of individual decisions
- Innovation: Profit motive drives technological advancement
Limitations of the Price Mechanism
- Market Failures: Externalities, public goods, information asymmetries
- Inequality: Rationing by price favors the wealthy
- Merit/Demerit Goods: Market may under/overprovide socially important goods
- Monopoly Power: Firms may manipulate prices
- Lack of Equity: Market outcomes may be socially undesirable
7. Allocative Efficiency
Condition for Allocative Efficiency
In perfectly competitive markets: \[ \text{Price} = \text{Marginal Cost (MC)} \]
Or equivalently: \[ \text{Consumer Surplus} + \text{Producer Surplus is maximized} \]
Understanding Allocative Efficiency
At the market equilibrium in a competitive market:
- Marginal Benefit = Price: Consumers' willingness to pay for the last unit equals the market price
- Marginal Cost = Price: Producers' cost of supplying the last unit equals the market price
- Therefore: MB = MC → Allocative efficiency achieved
Consumer Surplus and Producer Surplus
Graphically: Area below demand curve and above equilibrium price \[ CS = \frac{1}{2} \times (P_{\text{max}} - P^*) \times Q^* \]
Graphically: Area above supply curve and below equilibrium price \[ PS = \frac{1}{2} \times (P^* - P_{\text{min}}) \times Q^* \]
Allocative efficiency is achieved when total economic surplus is maximized. This occurs at competitive market equilibrium where supply equals demand.
Why Market Equilibrium Achieves Allocative Efficiency
If Q < Q*:
- For units between current Q and Q*, consumers' willingness to pay (demand) exceeds production cost (supply)
- Society benefits from producing more → current situation is inefficient
- Both consumers and producers gain from additional trade
If Q > Q*:
- For units beyond Q*, production cost exceeds consumers' willingness to pay
- Resources are wasted producing unwanted goods → inefficient
- Society would be better off reducing production
At Q = Q*:
- No further gains from trade possible
- All mutually beneficial exchanges have occurred
- Resources are allocated optimally
Allocative Inefficiency: Deadweight Loss
Deadweight loss occurs when:
- Price controls: Price ceilings or floors prevent equilibrium
- Taxes: Create wedge between price paid by consumers and received by producers
- Subsidies: Encourage overproduction beyond efficient level
- Quotas: Restrict quantity below efficient level
- Monopoly: Restricts output to raise prices
- Externalities: MSB ≠ MPB or MSC ≠ MPC
Numerical Example: Consumer and Producer Surplus
Demand: \( P = 50 - 2Q \)
Supply: \( P = 10 + Q \)
Step 1: Find Equilibrium
\( 50 - 2Q = 10 + Q \)
\( 40 = 3Q \)
\( Q^* = 13.33 \) units
\( P^* = 10 + 13.33 = 23.33 \)
Step 2: Calculate Consumer Surplus
Maximum willingness to pay (when Q=0): P = 50
\( CS = \frac{1}{2} \times (50 - 23.33) \times 13.33 = 177.78 \)
Step 3: Calculate Producer Surplus
Minimum acceptable price (when Q=0): P = 10
\( PS = \frac{1}{2} \times (23.33 - 10) \times 13.33 = 88.89 \)
Step 4: Total Economic Surplus
\( \text{Total Surplus} = CS + PS = 177.78 + 88.89 = 266.67 \)
8. Real-World Applications
Application 1: COVID-19 Pandemic Effects
- Demand shift: Pandemic fears → massive demand increase (D shifts right)
- Supply constraints: Production couldn't immediately expand
- Result: Severe shortages, price spikes, rationing
- Price mechanism: High prices incentivized production expansion, new entrants
- Long-run: Supply caught up, prices normalized
Application 2: Electric Vehicle Market
- Environmental concerns (tastes/preferences)
- Government subsidies (reduces effective price)
- Rising gasoline prices (substitute)
- Improved technology (expectations)
Factors Increasing Supply:
- Battery technology improvements
- Economies of scale
- More manufacturers entering market
Result: Rapid market growth with both D and S shifting right
Application 3: Housing Market
- Demand factors: Population growth, low interest rates, investment demand
- Supply constraints: Limited land, zoning regulations, construction time
- Result: D increases faster than S → rising prices, affordability crisis
- Allocative efficiency: High prices signal need for more housing, but supply response is slow
9. IB Economics Exam Skills
- Always label axes: Price (P) vertical, Quantity (Q) horizontal
- Label curves: D for demand, S for supply
- Mark equilibrium: Point E where D and S intersect
- Show changes: Use D1→D2 or S1→S2 for shifts
- Indicate new equilibrium: E1→E2 with new P* and Q*
- Use arrows: Show direction of shifts and price/quantity changes
- Explain: Use chain reasoning (cause → effect → consequence)
- Analyze: Use diagrams + explain mechanism
- Evaluate: Consider multiple stakeholders, short-run vs. long-run, assumptions
- Calculate: Practice equilibrium and surplus calculations
Sample Exam Questions
Answer Structure:
- Subsidy reduces production costs for manufacturers
- Supply increases (S shifts right from S1 to S2)
- At original price, quantity supplied > quantity demanded
- Surplus puts downward pressure on price
- New equilibrium: lower price (P1→P2), higher quantity (Q1→Q2)
- Diagram showing S shift right, E1→E2, with P↓ and Q↑
Answer Structure:
- At equilibrium, marginal social benefit (demand) = marginal social cost (supply)
- All mutually beneficial trades have occurred
- Consumer and producer surplus are maximized
- Resources are allocated to their highest-value uses
- No reallocation can improve overall welfare without making someone worse off
Answer Structure:
- Drought is a negative supply shock
- Reduces crop yields → supply decreases (S shifts left)
- At original price, Qd > Qs (shortage)
- Shortage creates upward pressure on price
- Price rises, reducing Qd and increasing Qs along new curve
- New equilibrium: higher price (P↑), lower quantity (Q↓)
- Consequences: Consumers pay more and buy less; producers may earn higher/lower revenue depending on elasticity; food security concerns
- Diagram essential with S shift left, shortage indicated, E1→E2
10. Key Formulas Reference
Consumer Surplus: \( CS = \frac{1}{2} \times (P_{\max} - P^*) \times Q^* \)
Producer Surplus: \( PS = \frac{1}{2} \times (P^* - P_{\min}) \times Q^* \)
Total Economic Surplus: \( TS = CS + PS \)
Allocative Efficiency: \( MSB = MSC \) or \( P = MC \)
Conclusion
Demand and supply analysis forms the foundation of microeconomics. The interaction of these forces through the price mechanism determines market outcomes, allocates resources, and achieves allocative efficiency under ideal conditions. Understanding how markets work, how equilibrium is established and disrupted, and how efficiency is achieved or lost is essential for analyzing virtually every economic issue you'll encounter in IB Economics.
Master These Concepts:
- The inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded (law of demand)
- The positive relationship between price and quantity supplied (law of supply)
- How non-price factors shift entire curves
- How equilibrium is established through market forces
- The three functions of the price mechanism
- How competitive markets achieve allocative efficiency
- How to calculate equilibrium, consumer surplus, and producer surplus
- Practice drawing accurate, labeled diagrams
- Always distinguish between movements along curves vs. shifts of curves
- Explain the mechanism: price change → shortage/surplus → adjustment → new equilibrium
- Consider multiple perspectives: consumers, producers, government, society
- Work through numerical examples to master calculations
- Connect theory to real-world examples for deeper understanding