productivity due to better methods of growing or manufacturing
the product. Figure 2.8 shows the result of an increase in S:
24
The Mystery of Banking
F
IGURE
2.8 — I
NCREASE OF
S
UPPLY
Supply increases from 10 to 14
million pounds or from S to
S
′
. But this means that at the old equilibrium price, $3, there is
now an excess of supply over demand, and 4 million pounds will
remain unsold at the old price. In order to sell the increased prod-
uct, sellers will have to cut their prices, and as they do so, the
price of coffee will fall until the new
equilibrium price is reached,
here at $1 a pound. Or, to put it another way, businessmen will
now have to cut prices in order to induce consumers to buy the
increased product, and will do so until the new equilibrium is
reached.
In short, price responds inversely to supply. If supply
increases, price will fall;
if supply falls, price will rise.
The other factor that can and does change and thereby alters
equilibrium price is demand. Demand can change for various rea-
sons. Given total consumer income, any increase in the demand
for one product necessarily reflects a fall in the demand for
another. For an increase in demand is defined as a willingness by
Chapter Two.qxp 8/4/2008 11:37 AM Page 24
buyers to spend more money on—that is, to buy more—of a
product at any given hypothetical price.
In our diagrams, such an
“increase in demand” is reflected in a shift of the entire demand
curve upward and to the right. But given total income, if con-
sumers are spending more on Product A, they must necessarily be
spending less on Product B. The
demand for Product B will
decrease, that is, consumers will be willing to spend less on the
product at any given hypothetical price. Graphically, the entire
demand curve for B will shift downward and to the left. Suppose
that we are now analyzing a shift in consumer tastes toward beef
and away from pork. In that case, the
respective markets may be
analyzed as follows:
We have postulated an increase in consumer preference for
beef, so that the demand curve for beef increases, that is, shifts
upward and to the right, from D to D
′
. But the result of the
increased demand is that there is now
a shortage at the old equi-
librium price, 0X, so that producers raise their prices until the
shortage is eliminated and there is a new and higher equilibrium
price, 0Y.
What Determines Prices: Supply and Demand
25
F
IGURE
2.9 — T
HE
B
EEF
M
ARKET
: I
NCREASE IN
D
EMAND
Chapter Two.qxp 8/4/2008 11:37 AM Page 25
On the other hand, suppose that there is a drop in preference,
and therefore a fall in the demand for pork. This means that the
demand curve for pork shifts
downward and to the left, from D
to D
′
, as shown in Figure 2.10:
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