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What does a supply curve show?
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2.2.115 cards
What does a supply curve show?
A graph showing how much of a good producers are willing to sell at every possible price. Price (P) on the Y-axis, quantity supplied (Q) on the X-axis. It slopes upward from left to right.
Price on Y, Quantity on X, slopes up.
What is the economic definition of supply?
The quantity of a good or service that producers are willing and able to sell at each possible price, over a given time period. Both willingness (profitable enough) and ability (resources available) are required.
Two conditions: willing + able to sell.
Why does the supply curve slope upward?
Because of the profit motive: higher prices mean higher revenue per unit and more profit, so firms want to produce more. Existing firms increase output and new firms may enter the market when price rises.
Higher price ā more profit ā more supplied.
How do you correctly draw and label a supply curve?
Price (P) on Y-axis, Quantity (Q) on X-axis. Curve slopes upward from left to right. Label the curve "S" (or "Sā" if showing a shift later). Add a title (e.g., "Market for wheat"). Label everything for full marks.
Upward slope, label S, axes, and title.
State the law of supply.
As the price of a good rises, the quantity supplied rises ā and as the price falls, the quantity supplied falls ā ceteris paribus. There is a positive (direct) relationship between price and quantity supplied.
Price and Qs move in the same direction, ceteris paribus.
What is the main motivation for producers to supply goods?
Profit ā the difference between total revenue and total costs. Higher prices generally mean higher profit per unit, giving firms a stronger incentive to produce and sell more.
Profit drives supply decisions.
What is the law of increasing opportunity cost and how does it relate to supply?
As firms produce more, they face rising costs ā less efficient workers, overtime pay, scarcer raw materials. Each additional unit costs more to produce, so firms need a higher price to justify each extra unit. This explains the upward slope.
More output ā rising costs ā need higher price.
How does supply relate to demand in determining market outcomes?
Demand is the buyer's side (how much consumers want to buy at each price). Supply is the producer's side (how much firms want to sell at each price). Together, they determine the equilibrium price and quantity in a market.
Demand = buyers, Supply = sellers ā market outcome.
What is the positive relationship shown by a supply curve?
As price rises, quantity supplied rises; as price falls, quantity supplied falls. Price and quantity move in the same direction. High price = top-right (high Q). Low price = bottom-left (low Q).
Price and quantity move together.
How does a higher price attract new firms into the market?
When the market price rises, profits increase. This makes the market attractive to firms that previously found it unprofitable. They enter the market, increasing total market supply. Firms with higher costs can now also cover those costs.
Higher price ā profits attract new entrants.
How can you remember that demand slopes down and supply slopes up?
Demand slopes DOWN (ā) ā higher price, less bought. Supply slopes UP (ā) ā higher price, more sold. The "S" in Supply looks like a curve going upward. They slope in opposite directions because buyers and sellers respond to price differently.
D = down, S = up. Opposite responses to price.
What does "willing and able to sell" mean for supply?
Willing: it is profitable enough for the firm to bother producing. Able: the firm has the necessary resources, labour, technology, and capacity to actually produce the good at that price.
Profitable enough + resources available.
On a supply curve, what does a point at the bottom-left represent versus top-right?
Bottom-left: low price, low quantity supplied (few firms willing to sell at a low price). Top-right: high price, high quantity supplied (more firms willing to sell and existing firms produce more).
Low P = low Qs (bottom-left); high P = high Qs (top-right).
Compare the reasons demand slopes downward with the reasons supply slopes upward.
Demand slopes down because of the income and substitution effects (lower price ā consumers buy more). Supply slopes up because of the profit motive (higher price ā producers sell more). Both respond to price, but in opposite directions.
Consumers and producers respond to price differently.
Why must supply always relate to a specific price and time period?
Because the quantity firms want to sell changes at different prices and over different time frames. Stating "supply is 1,000 units" is incomplete without specifying at what price and per what period (day, week, year).
Quantity supplied depends on price and timeframe.
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How does the number of firms in a market affect supply?
More firms entering the market increases total market supply (shifts right) because total output across all producers rises. Firms leaving the market reduces supply (shifts left).
More firms ā more supply. Fewer firms ā less supply.
What is the difference between a movement along and a shift of the supply curve?
A change in the good's own price causes a movement along the existing supply curve. A change in any non-price factor (costs, technology, government policy, etc.) shifts the entire curve to a new position.
Own price = movement. Anything else = shift.
How do changes in production costs affect the supply curve?
Rising costs (higher wages, raw material prices, energy, rent) shift supply left ā firms produce less at every price because it is more expensive. Falling costs shift supply right ā firms can produce more profitably.
Costs up ā supply left. Costs down ā supply right.
How does weather affect supply, especially for agricultural products?
Good weather ā bumper harvest ā supply shifts right. Bad weather (drought, floods, disease) ā poor harvest ā supply shifts left. Weather is a major supply factor for agriculture and natural resources.
Good weather ā right. Bad weather ā left.
How does improved technology affect the supply curve?
Better technology allows firms to produce the same quantity at lower cost, or more quantity at the same cost. Technology improvements almost always shift supply right. Examples: automation, better machinery, digital efficiency tools.
Better technology ā lower costs ā supply shifts right.
List the main determinants (non-price factors) that shift the supply curve.
Costs of production (wages, raw materials, energy, rent), technology and innovation, government policy (taxes, subsidies, regulations), number of firms in the market, expectations about future prices, and weather/natural conditions.
Costs, technology, government, # firms, expectations, weather.
How do producers' expectations about future prices affect supply?
If firms expect the price to rise in the future, they may hold back supply today (shift left now) to sell later at the higher price. This is common in commodity markets like oil, where producers can store output.
Expect higher future price ā sell less now.
How do indirect taxes and subsidies affect the supply curve?
Indirect taxes (on tobacco, alcohol, etc.) raise production costs ā supply shifts left. Subsidies (for renewable energy, farming, etc.) reduce production costs ā supply shifts right. Both are government policy tools.
Taxes ā left. Subsidies ā right.
What does a rightward shift of the supply curve mean?
An increase in supply ā at every price, producers now supply more. The whole curve moves right (Sā ā Sā). Usually caused by lower costs, better technology, subsidies, or more firms entering the market.
More supplied at every price.
Give an example of bad weather shifting the supply curve in a past paper context.
A drought reduces the wheat harvest ā supply of wheat shifts left, raising the price of wheat. This is a supply-side change: the cost of producing has not changed, but the physical ability to produce has been reduced by the weather.
Drought ā less wheat harvested ā supply shifts left ā price rises.
What does a leftward shift of the supply curve mean?
A decrease in supply ā at every price, producers now supply less. The whole curve moves left (Sā ā Sā). Usually caused by higher costs, new taxes, stricter regulations, or firms exiting the market.
Less supplied at every price.
How do regulations and deregulation affect supply?
Regulations (e.g., pollution standards, safety requirements) raise costs for firms ā supply shifts left. Deregulation removes cost burdens and restrictions ā supply shifts right. Regulation is a trade-off between protection and efficiency.
Regulation ā more costs ā left. Deregulation ā right.
Give an example of rising energy prices shifting the supply curve.
When fuel or electricity costs increase, production becomes more expensive across many industries. If oil prices double, transport and manufacturing costs rise, shifting supply left in industries from food to electronics ā less is produced at every price.
Energy price rise ā higher costs ā supply shifts left.
Why should you always name the specific supply determinant in an exam answer?
Because saying "supply decreased" is incomplete. You must identify the cause: "rising fuel costs increased production costs, shifting supply left." Naming the specific determinant and explaining the mechanism earns full marks.
Name the cause and explain direction for full marks.
What is the simple rule for remembering which way the supply curve shifts?
Anything that makes production cheaper shifts supply right (firms can produce more at every price). Anything that makes production more expensive shifts supply left (firms produce less at every price).
Cheaper ā right. More expensive ā left.
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What causes a movement along the supply curve?
A change in the price of the good itself. When price rises, you move up and right along the curve (Qs rises). When price falls, you move down and left (Qs falls). The curve stays in the same position.
Only own price causes a movement along supply.
What causes a shift of the supply curve?
A change in any non-price factor: costs of production, technology, government policy (taxes, subsidies, regulations), number of firms, expectations, or weather. The entire curve moves to a new position.
Non-price factor changes shift the whole curve.
How do you identify whether a demand-side or supply-side factor caused a market change?
Demand-side factors: income, tastes, related goods, population, expectations ā shift demand. Supply-side factors: costs, technology, government policy, weather, number of firms ā shift supply. Identify the cause, then shift the correct curve.
Demand factors = consumer side. Supply factors = producer side.
If price and quantity both rise, which curve shifted?
The demand curve shifted right. When demand increases (shifts right), there is upward pressure on both price and quantity at the new equilibrium. Pā Qā = demand shifted right.
Same direction (Pā Qā) = demand shift.
What is the correct term for a movement along the supply curve?
A "change in quantity supplied" (not a "change in supply"). "Change in supply" means the whole curve shifted. This terminology distinction matters for IB exam marks ā examiners check for it.
"Change in quantity supplied" vs "change in supply".
What is the correct term for a shift of the supply curve?
A "change in supply" (or "increase/decrease in supply"). This means the whole curve has shifted to a new position ā at every price, the quantity supplied is now different.
"Change in supply" = whole curve shifts.
If price rises but quantity falls, which curve shifted?
The supply curve shifted left. When supply decreases (shifts left), less is available so price rises but quantity falls. Pā Qā = supply shifted left. Price and quantity moving in opposite directions signals a supply shift.
Opposite direction (Pā Qā) = supply shift.
Give an example of a factor that shifts supply right and one that shifts it left.
Right shift: a new technological advance (e.g., automation) lowers production costs, increasing supply. Left shift: a new government regulation (e.g., stricter environmental rules) raises production costs, decreasing supply.
Technology ā right. Regulation ā left.
How does the direction of movement along a supply curve differ from demand?
Supply: price rises ā move up and RIGHT (Qs rises). Demand: price rises ā move up and LEFT (Qd falls). They move in opposite horizontal directions because buyers and sellers respond to price changes differently.
Supply: P up ā Qs up. Demand: P up ā Qd down.
What is the rule for using price-quantity patterns to identify which curve shifted?
Price and quantity move in the SAME direction ā demand shifted (PāQā = D right, PāQā = D left). Price and quantity in OPPOSITE directions ā supply shifted (PāQā = S right, PāQā = S left).
Same direction = demand. Opposite = supply.
If the price of wheat rises from $4 to $7 per bushel, what happens on the supply curve?
There is a movement UP and to the RIGHT along the existing supply curve. Quantity supplied rises because the higher price makes production more profitable. The curve itself does not shift.
Price up ā move up-right ā Qs rises.
On a diagram, how do you show a shift in supply?
Draw the original supply curve Sā. Then draw Sā to the right (increase) or left (decrease). Add an arrow showing the direction. Label both curves clearly and mark the new equilibrium if applicable.
Sā ā Sā with an arrow showing direction.
What three-step process should you follow before drawing a supply or demand diagram in an exam?
Step 1: Is the cause a demand or supply factor? Step 2: Does it shift the curve right or left? Step 3: Draw, label axes, both curves (original and shifted), mark old and new equilibrium, and explain the outcome. This keeps your answer accurate under pressure.
Identify curve ā determine direction ā draw and label.
Why does the supply curve not move when there is a movement along it?
Because only the good's own price changed ā all other factors (costs, technology, government policy) remained the same. The curve represents the relationship at all prices; a price change selects a different point on the same curve.
Same relationship, different point on the curve.
What happens to quantity supplied at the SAME price after a rightward shift of supply?
It increases. A rightward shift means at every given price, producers now supply a larger quantity. The entire price-quantity relationship has changed ā the same price now corresponds to more output.
At any given price, Qs is now higher.
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Write the linear supply function and explain each variable.
Qs = c + dP, where: Qs = quantity supplied, c = the Q-intercept (supply when P = 0; can be negative), d = the slope (how much Qs changes per unit change in P), P = price. The P-intercept = āc/d (minimum price for any supply).
Qs = c + dP. c = Q-intercept. d = slope. P-intercept = āc/d.
If Qs = ā20 + 3P, at what price does supply begin? What is Qs at P = 40?
Supply begins when Qs = 0: 0 = ā20 + 3P ā P = $6.67. Below this price, firms won't supply. At P = 40: Qs = ā20 + 3(40) = ā20 + 120 = 100 units.
Qs = 0 ā P = 20/3 ā 6.67. At P = 40: Qs = 100.
What does a negative value of 'c' mean in Qs = c + dP?
A negative c means the supply curve intersects the P-axis above zero ā there is a minimum price needed before any quantity is supplied. This is realistic: firms need a price above their minimum AVC to supply. If c is positive, supply exists even at very low (or zero) prices.
Negative c ā minimum price needed to start supplying. Realistic scenario.
In Qs = c + dP, what causes a shift versus a movement along the supply curve?
MOVEMENT along: caused by a change in PRICE (change in P). SHIFT: caused by a change in 'c' ā i.e. non-price supply determinants: input costs, technology, number of firms, taxes/subsidies, expectations. Increase in c ā rightward shift. Decrease in c ā leftward shift.
Movement = P change. Shift = c changes (input costs, tech, taxes, etc.).
If a per-unit tax of $5 is imposed, how does the supply function change?
The supply function shifts LEFT. If originally Qs = c + dP, a per-unit tax of $5 effectively reduces the price received by the firm by $5: new Qs = c + d(P ā 5) = (c ā 5d) + dP. The 'c' value decreases by 5d. The slope d stays the same ā it's a parallel shift.
Tax of $5 ā Qs = c + d(Pā5) = (cā5d) + dP. Leftward parallel shift.
How does the graph slope of supply relate to the equation slope?
Like demand, supply is conventionally plotted with P on the y-axis. The equation slope is d (ĪQs/ĪP), but the GRAPH slope = 1/d (ĪP/ĪQ). Steeper graph = lower d (less responsive to price). Flatter graph = higher d (more responsive to price ā more elastic).
Equation slope = d. Graph slope = 1/d. Flatter = more elastic.
Topic 2.2 study notes
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