Transcript File

Supply
…Meets Demand
Essential Standards




The student will explain how prices and
profits work to determine production and
distribution in a market economy.
The student will describe the role of buyers and
sellers in determining equilibrium price.
The student will illustrate on a graph how supply
and demand determine equilibrium price.
The student will explain and illustrate on a graph
how price floors create surpluses and
price ceilings create shortages.
Market Equilibrium


A situation where
the quantity
supplied and the
quantity demanded
are EQUAL…
And the needs of
both producers and
consumers are
satisfied.
Demand and Supply Schedule for Shoes
Price
Q.D.
Q.S.
$15
180
0
$30
150
30
$45
120
60
$60
90
90
$75
60
120
$90
30
150
$105
0
180
Supply & Demand Schedule for Shoes
$105$90-
P
R
I
C
E
$75$60$45-
$30$15$0,0
30
60
90
120
150
Quantity Demanded and Supplied
180
A Delicate Balance
The market is rarely in
equilibrium.
► Usually the market is in
disequilibrium—when
quantity supplied is not equal
to quantity demanded.
► Disequilibrium results in
surpluses and shortages.
► Surplus—quantity supplied
exceeds quantity demanded.
► Shortage—quantity
demanded exceeds quantity
supplied.
►
Consequences of Price Floors and Ceilings
►
►
►
►
►
To control supply,
governments sometimes set
PRICE CEILINGS and PRICE
FLOORS.
Price ceilings—government
regulations that establish a
maximum price for a
particular good.
Example—rent controls, gas
prices (in some areas).
Price floor—government
regulation that establishes a
minimum price.
Example—minimum wage.
The Unintended Consequences of Price Ceilings
• Remember the gas shortage that
hit Atlanta during September of
2008?
• At its peak, it was ILLEGAL for
gas stations to charge more than
$4.39 a gallon.
• Stations that did were fined (if
they were caught).
• Question: during the shortage,
what did you do nearly EVERY
TIME you were driving and
happened to see a station that
actually had gas?
• Did you really need gas?
• What would have happened if
gas stations would have been
allowed to charge whatever they
wanted--$10, $12, $15 a gallon?
• Price ceilings cause
SHORTAGES!
The
Unintended
Consequences
of Price Floors
►
►
►
►
►
►
►
►
►
Say a company has ten employees…
And the minimum wage is increased from $5.25, to $6.55, to
$7.25 over two years.
That company might have to ELIMINATE two or three of
their employees…
Because they are now too expensive to employ.
If something like that happens at thousands of companies
around the country…
Hundreds of thousands of people will be out of work.
This is a labor SURPLUS…
More WORKERS than JOBS…
Price floors cause SURPLUSSES!
Price Floors and Agriculture
• Let’s say it costs an American farmer $1 to grow a
bushel of corn…
• And the market price for a bushel is only 80 cents.
• The US government will routinely set a “price floor” of
$1.20…
• And pay the farmer the difference, PLUS a little more…
• So the farmer recoups his costs, AND earns a small
profit.
• So what happens?
• Farmers routinely grow TOO MUCH corn…
• Resulting in…?
• Corn surpluses.
• And what are we gonna do with all this extra corn?
• Turn it into high-fructose corn syrup and use it for
sweetener…
• It’s CHEAPER, LESS TASTY and LESS HEALTHY than
sugar cane syrup.
• But what about the poor sugar farmer who has now lost
business to the corn syrup guys?
• Give him a subsidy—pay him NOT to grow sugar cane.
Graphing Changes in Supply
and Demand