Supply, Price & Quantity (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Economics)

Revision Note

Introduction to Supply

  • Supply is the amount of a good/service that a producer is willing and able to supply at a given price in a given time period

  • A supply curve is a graphical representation of the price and quantity supplied by producers

    • If data were plotted, it would be an actual curve. Economists, however, use straight lines so as to make analysis easier 

  • The supply curve is sloping upward as there is a positive relationship between the price and quantity supplied

    • Rational profit maximising producers would want to supply more as prices increase in order to maximise their profits   

Individual and market supply

  • Market supply is the combination of all the individual supply for a good/service

    • It is calculated by adding up the individual supply at each price level 
       

The Monthly Market Supply of Bread From 4 Bakeries in a Small Town

Bakery 1

Bakery 2

Bakery 3

Bakery 4

Market Supply

300

600

180

320

1400 loaves

  • Individual and market supply can also be represented graphically
     

    Three supply graphs show iPhone and Samsung quantities summing to total supply, each with a positive slope, at a $1000 price point for 300 iPhones and 320 Samsungs.
    Market supply for smart phones in December is predominantly the combination of iPhone and Samsung supply

Diagram analysis

  • In New York City, the market supply for smart phones in December is predominantly the combination of iPhone and Samsung supply

  • At a price of $1000, the supply of iPhones is 300 units and the supply of Samsung phones is 320 units

  • At a price of $1,000, the market supply of smart phones in New York City during December is 620 units

Movements Along a Supply Curve

  • If price is the only factor that changes (ceteris paribus), there will be a change in the quantity supplied (QS)

    • This change is shown by a movement along the supply curve  

Graph showing price vs. quantity with a positive supply curve (S). Points A, B, and C illustrate extensions and contractions in quantity supplied (QS).
A supply curve showing an extension in quantity supplied (QS) as prices increase and a contraction in quantity supplied (QS) as prices decrease

Diagram analysis

  • An increase in price from £7 to £9 leads to a movement up the supply curve from point A to B

    • Due to the increase in price, the quantity supplied has increased from 10 to 14 units

    • This movement is called an extension in QS 

  • A decrease in price from £7 to £4 leads to a movement down the supply curve from point A to C

    • Due to the decrease in price, the quantity supplied has decreased from 10 to 7 units

    • This movement is called a contraction in QS

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