Lecture 8
Lecture 8
Lecture 8
Supply
$14 curve
$12
Price, P (sellers' reservation prices)
$10
$8
$6
$4
$2
$0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
Quantity, Q, of books (number of sellers)
Supply curve
Supply curve = total quantity that
all firms together would produce at
any given price.
• Represents the willingness to
accept (WTA) of sellers.
• Sellers may have different
reservation prices.
Equilibrium in the market for second-hand books.
$25
$20
Supply
$15
curve
Price, P
$10
A
P*
$5
Demand
curve
$0
0 10 20 Q* 30 40
Quantity, Q, of books
Equilibrium price
At the equilibrium (market-clearing) price, supply equals demand.
• Any other price is not a Nash
equilibrium e.g. if price was
above P*, then there would be
excess supply, so some sellers
could benefit from charging a
lower price.
• Assumes the products are
identical, so buyers would be
willing to buy from any seller.
The market demand curve for bread.
€ 4.5
€ 4.0
€ 3.5
€ 3.0
€ 2.5
Price, P
€ 2.0
€ 1.5
Demand
€ 1.0 curve
€ 0.5
€ 0.0
0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 10,000
€7
€6
€5
€4
€1
Feasible set
€0
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180
Quantity Q: number of loaves
Price-taking firms
Price-taking firms cannot benefit from choosing a different price
from the market price, and cannot influence the market price.
• Demand curve (feasible set) is
completely flat
• Maximize profits when MC=P
(slope of isoprofit = 0)
• Firm’s supply curve = MC curve
Firm chooses quantity, not price
The firm’s supply curve.
€7 €7
Marginal cost curve
€4 €4
Price, P; Cost
€3 €3
€2 €2
€1 €1
€0 €0
0 40 80 120 160 200 0 40 80 120 160 200
Quantity Q: number of loaves Quantity, Q: number of loaves
The firm and market supply curves.
Market
€5 Firm supply €5
supply
(marginal cost) (marginal
cost)
€4 €4
€3 €3
Price, P
Price, P
€2 €2
€1 €1
€0 €0
0 40 80 120 160 200 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000
Quantity, Q: number of loaves Quantity, Q: number of loaves
Price-taking firms: Market supply curve
€ 4.5
Supply (marginal
€ 4.0 cost)
€ 3.5
€ 3.0
A
€ 2.0
€ 1.0
Demand
€ 0.5
€ 0.0
0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 10,000
€ 4.5
Supply (marginal
€ 4.0 cost)
€ 3.5
€ 3.0
€ 2.5
Price, P
Total surplus A
€ 2.0 DWL
€ 1.5
€ 1.0
Demand
€ 0.5
€ 0.0
0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 10,000
$25
$20
Supply
$15
Price
B
$10
A
Excess demand
$5
Original New
demand demand
$0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
Quantity of books
An increase in the supply of bread: A fall in MC.
4.50
Original supply (MC)
4.00
3.50
2.50
Price, €
A
2.00
B Excess
1.50 supply
1.00
Demand
0.50
0.00
0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 10,000
Quantity: number of loaves
Changes in supply and demand
The entire supply or demand curve can shift due to
exogenous shocks e.g. technological change, popularity
Buyers and sellers adjust their
behaviour so that the market clears.
E.g. Improved baking technology
1. Supply of bread increases at every
price (supply curve shifts)
2. Excess supply at the going market
price (move along demand curve)
3. Price falls to a new equilibrium
Market Entry
The supply curve can also shift due to market entry/exit.
If existing firms are earning economic rents and costs of entry are
not too high, other firms may enter the market.
The effect of a 30% salt tax.
Market Supply,
with tax
Price
of
salt
Market Supply
B
P1
A
P*
P0
Market Demand
Q1 Q* Quantity of salt
Taxation and deadweight loss.
Market Supply,
with tax
Price
of
salt
Market Supply
B
P1
A
P*
P0
Market Demand
Q1 Q* Quantity of salt
Taxes
Throughout history, governments have used taxes to raise revenue.
Taxes on suppliers/consumers shift
the supply/demand curve because
the price is higher at each quantity.
Taxes lower surplus:
• Consumer surplus – red
• Producer surplus – purple
• Government revenue – green
• Deadweight loss – white triangle
Taxes: Welfare effects
• Fall in total surplus is positively
related to elasticity of demand
• Tax incidence depends on relative
elasticity of consumers and
producers. The less elastic group
bears more of the tax burden.
• Taxes can still raise welfare if
governments use tax revenue to
provide beneficial goods/services.
D. Perfect competition
Definition
A perfectly competitive market has the following properties:
• The good or service being exchanged is homogeneous
• Very large number of potential buyers and sellers
• Buyers and sellers all act independently of one another
• Price information easily available to buyers and sellers
Characteristics of perfect competition
• Law of One Price: All transactions take place at a single price.
• At that price, the market clears (supply = demand).
• Buyers and sellers are all price-takers.
• All potential gains from trade are realized.
Isoprofit
curve
A
B
Price
Price
P*
Demand
curve
Demand for
chocolate
bars
Q*
Quantity of Choccos Total quantity of chocolate bars
Evidence of perfect competition?
Economists have used two tests for competitive equilibrium:
1. Do all trades take place at the same price?
2. Are firms selling goods at a price equal to marginal cost?