Demand and Supply

Demand & Supply

Overview

  • Market decisions depend on Demand (consumer side) and Supply (producer side).
  • Both together create Equilibrium in the market.

Demand

Meaning

  • Based on:
    • Utility (Satisfaction)
    • Affordability
    • Eagerness to buy

Marginal Utility

  • Extra satisfaction gained from consuming one additional unit of a good/service.
    Memory: MU = “More Unit → More Utility (small)”.

Demand Curve

  • Shows consumer affordability at different prices.
  • Usually slopes downward (price ↑ → demand ↓).

Supply

Supply Curve

  • From producer’s side, based on profitability.
  • Slopes upward (price ↑ → producers supply more).

Market Equilibrium

  • Point where Demand = Supply.
  • Market becomes stable (no shortage/surplus).

Exceptions to Law of Demand

Giffen Goods

  • Non-luxury, essential goods.
  • When price increases, demand increases (due to low-income trap).
  • Example: Wheat

Veblen Goods

  • Luxury/status goods.
  • High price increases prestige, so demand rises.
  • Example: iPhone, Mercedes

Perfectly Inelastic Demand

  • Demand does not change even if price changes.
  • Often applies to goods with no substitutes.

Elasticity Concepts

Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

  • Measures how demand changes when price changes (usually negative relation).

Types

  • Perfectly Elastic Demand (tiny change in price → infinite change in demand)
  • Relatively Elastic Demand
  • Perfectly Inelastic Demand (price change → no change in demand)
  • Relatively Inelastic Demand

Income Elasticity

  • Shows relation between income change and demand for goods.

Cross Price Elasticity

  • Shows how demand of one good changes when price of another good changes
    (substitutes & complements).

Why People Hold Money (Keynes)

Transaction Motive

  • Daily transactions (buying essentials).

Precautionary Motive

  • Future uncertainties; “just in case” money.

Speculative Motive

  • To invest when opportunities arise (buy assets when prices fall).
    Keynes = Father of Modern Macroeconomics.

Famous Economists

  • J.M. Keynes → Speculative motive
  • Adam SmithFather of Modern Economics

Types of Markets

Monopoly

  • One seller, strong entry barriers.
  • Example: Indian Railways

Oligopoly

  • Few dominant sellers, many buyers.
  • No easy entry.
  • Example: Telecom, Laptop market

Monopolistic Competition

  • Many sellers/buyers, products slightly different.
  • Example: Toothpaste brands

Perfect Competition

  • Many buyers & sellers, free entry/exit, homogeneous products.
  • Example: Agricultural goods

Memory Tricks (Quick Revision)

  • Demand ↓ when price ↑ except Giffen & Veblen.
  • MU = More Unit → Less Utility but still added satisfaction.
  • PED: Elastic = ‘Easily changes’, Inelastic = ‘Not changing’.
  • Keynes motives: T-P-S = Today, Protection, Speculation.
  • Market Types Order (Most → Least competition):
    Perfect → Monopolistic → Oligopoly → Monopoly.

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