ECON 1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Economic Equilibrium, Demand Curve

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3 Jun 2018
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4/17/18
Important Supply Shifters
1. Technological innovations
2. Input prices
3. Taxes and subsidies
4. Expectations
- A hage i podues’ epetatios aout pofitailit ill affet suppl ues
- Ex: events in the Middle East lead to expectations of higher oil prices
- in response, owners of Texas oilfields reduce supply now, save some inventory to sell later at the
higher price
- S curve shifts left
- In general, sellers may adjust supply when their expectations of future price change
5. Entry or exit of producers
- As producers enter and exit the market, the overall supply changes
- Entry: implies more sellers in the market increasing supply
- Exit implies fewer sellers in the market decreasing supply
6. Change in opportunity costs
- Inputs used in production have opportunity costs
- Sellers will supply less of a good if the price of an alternate good using the same input rises (and vice
versa)
- Sellers always chasse the highest profit goods
- Producers have the ability or produce other goods
- Ex: an increase in the profitability of small cars will decrease the supply of SUVs
7. Equilibrium
- Equilibrium: a situation in which the market price has reached the level at which quantity supplied
equals quantity demanded (QS = DD)
The amount consumers would purchase at this price is matched exactly by the amount
producers wish to sell
There is only one price where QS = DD
- Equilibrium price: the price that balances quantity supplied and
quantity demanded
- Equilibrium quantity: the quantity supplied and the quantity
demanded at the equilibrium price
- Surplus: a situation in which quantity supplied is greater than
quantity demanded
- Shortage: a situation in which quantity demanded is greater than
quantity supplied
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Document Summary

Important supply shifters: technological innovations, input prices, taxes and subsidies, expectations. A (cid:272)ha(cid:374)ge i(cid:374) p(cid:396)odu(cid:272)e(cid:396)s" e(cid:454)pe(cid:272)tatio(cid:374)s a(cid:271)out p(cid:396)ofita(cid:271)ilit(cid:455) (cid:449)ill affe(cid:272)t suppl(cid:455) (cid:272)u(cid:396)(cid:448)es. Ex: events in the middle east lead to expectations of higher oil prices in response, owners of texas oilfields reduce supply now, save some inventory to sell later at the higher price. In general, sellers may adjust supply when their expectations of future price change: entry or exit of producers. As producers enter and exit the market, the overall supply changes. Entry: implies more sellers in the market increasing supply. Exit implies fewer sellers in the market decreasing supply: change in opportunity costs. Sellers will supply less of a good if the price of an alternate good using the same input rises (and vice versa) Sellers always chasse the highest profit goods. Producers have the ability or produce other goods. Ex: an increase in the profitability of small cars will decrease the supply of suvs: equilibrium.

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