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The Law of Supply What is Supply?.

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Presentation on theme: "The Law of Supply What is Supply?."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Law of Supply What is Supply?

2 The Law of Supply States that when prices decrease, quantity supplied decreases, and when prices increase, quantity supplied increases.

3 Supply Supply is the willingness and ability to offer goods and services for sale. Two key words in the definition of supply: willingness and ability.

4 Supply Schedule vs. Market Supply Schedule
A Supply Schedule is a table that shows how much of a good or service an individual producer is willing and able to offer for sale at each price in a market. A Market Supply Schedule is a table that shows how much of a good or service all producers in a market are willing and able to offer for sale at each price in a market.

5 Marginal Product The change in total product that results from hiring one more worker.

6 Increasing Returns vs. Diminishing Returns
Increasing returns occurs when hiring new workers causes marginal product to increase. Diminishing returns occur when hiring new workers causes marginal product to decrease.

7 Fixed Costs vs. Variable Costs
Fixed costs are those that business owners incur no matter how much they produce. Variable costs depend on the level of production output.

8 Total Cost vs. Marginal Cost
Total cost is the sum of fixed and variable costs. Marginal cost is the extra cost of producing one more unit.

9 Total Revenue vs. Marginal Revenue
Total revenue is a company’s income from selling its products. Marginal revenue is the money made from the sale of each additional unit of output.

10 Profit-Maximizing Output
The level of production at which a business realizes the greatest amount of profit.

11 What changes supply? Input Costs – the collective price of the resources that go into producing a good or service, affect supply directly. Labor Productivity - Better trained or more skilled workers are usually more productive. Increased productivity decreases costs and increases supply. Government Action – Such as taxes or subsidies, can have a positive or a negative effect on production costs.

12 What changes supply? Number of Producers – A successful new product or service always brings out competitors who initially raise overall supply Producer Expectations – The amount of product producers are willing and able to supply may be influenced by whether they believe prices will go up or down. Technology – By applying scientific advances to the production process, producers have learned to generate their goods and services more efficiently

13 Crash Course


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