➡️ What Happens When Demand Shifts?
The Pattern: When demand shifts, price and quantity move in the same direction. Demand right → P↑ Q↑. Demand left → P↓ Q↓.
Increase in demand (D shifts right)
- D₁ shifts right to D₂ (e.g. higher income for a normal good)
- At the old price, there is now a shortage (Qd > Qs)
- Price is bid UP to a new, higher equilibrium
- Result: BOTH price and quantity INCREASE (P↑ Q↑)
Decrease in demand (D shifts left)
- D₁ shifts left to D₃ (e.g. negative health report about the good)
- At the old price, there is now a surplus (Qs > Qd)
- Price falls to a new, lower equilibrium
- Result: BOTH price and quantity DECREASE (P↓ Q↓)
The exam question from May 2024 asked students to show demand and supply curves and explain how a change in demand would affect equilibrium price. Always draw the original equilibrium FIRST, then show the shift to the new equilibrium.
⬅️ What Happens When Supply Shifts?
The Pattern: When supply shifts, price and quantity move in opposite directions. Supply right → P↓ Q↑. Supply left → P↑ Q↓.
Increase in supply (S shifts right)
- S₁ shifts right to S₂ (e.g. new technology lowers costs)
- At the old price, there is a surplus → price falls
- Result: price DECREASES, quantity INCREASES (P↓ Q↑)
Decrease in supply (S shifts left)
- S₁ shifts left to S₃ (e.g. drought reduces wheat harvest)
- At the old price, there is a shortage → price rises
- Result: price INCREASES, quantity DECREASES (P↑ Q↓)
Past paper scenario: 'Bad weather destroys part of the wheat crop.' This is a decrease in supply → S shifts left → price of wheat rises, quantity falls. You would draw S₁ → S₃, show old and new equilibrium, and explain the adjustment.
Never wonder what to study next
Get a personalized daily plan based on your exam date, progress, and weak areas. We'll tell you exactly what to review each day.
🔀 What If Both Curves Shift?
Sometimes BOTH demand and supply change at the same time. In this case, we can predict what happens to one variable but NOT the other — unless we know which shift is larger.
The four possible combinations
- D↑ and S↑ → Q definitely rises, but P is uncertain (depends on which shift is bigger)
- D↓ and S↓ → Q definitely falls, but P is uncertain
- D↑ and S↓ → P definitely rises, but Q is uncertain
- D↓ and S↑ → P definitely falls, but Q is uncertain
When both curves shift: one variable has a definite outcome, the other is indeterminate (depends on the relative size of the shifts). State this clearly in your exam answer.
If the exam gives you a scenario with two changes, identify each one separately: 'The increase in population shifts D right, while the new technology shifts S right. Quantity will definitely increase, but the effect on price depends on which shift is larger.'