The QUANTITY SUPPLIED at any given price is how much firms want to sell at that given price. E.g., in the widget market, the quantity supplied at a price of $10/widget might be 900 widgets.
Error: Confusing the quantity supplied with
the quantity sold.
If the quantity supplied at $10/widget is 900 widgets,
how many widgets are sold at that price?
I don't know! If buyers only want to buy 750
widgets at $10/widget, then the quantity sold will be 750, not 900.
All we can say is that the quantity sold won't be more than 900.
There is a different quantity supplied for each price.
For example:
price | quantity supplied |
---|---|
$5 | 775 widgets |
$6 | 800 widgets |
$7 | 825 widgets |
$8 | 850 widgets |
$9 | 875 widgets |
$10 | 900 widgets |
This table, giving the quantity supplied at different prices, shows the SUPPLY of widgets.
Error: Confusing supply with quantity supplied.
The quantity supplied is how much consumers want
to buy at a PARTICULAR price. The supply is a schedule showing how
much firms want to sell at ANY given price; i.e., the supply is a schedule
showing the quantity supplied at any given price. The table above,
in its entirety, shows supply; each row of the table shows the quantity
supplied at a particular price.
Error: Confusing a change in quantity supplied
with a change in supply.
Say the price starts at $7, where quantity supplied
is 825 widgets. Then the price falls to $5. We say that the
quantity supplied has decreased to 775 widgets. We do not say that
supply has decreased, because it hasn't; the table representing supply
is still the same, we've simply moved to a different row, i.e., a different
quantity supplied.
On the other hand, suppose that the invention of
cold fusion makes widgets cheaper to produce. Suddenly, firms are
willing to sell more widgets for ANY given price:
price | old quantity supplied | new quantity supplied |
---|---|---|
$5 | 775 widgets | 825 widgets |
$6 | 800 widgets | 850 widgets |
$7 | 825 widget | 875 widgets |
$8 | 850 widgets | 900 widgets |
$9 | 875 widgets | 925 widgets |
$10 | 900 widgets | 950 widgets |
Before, whenever the price was $8, firms wanted to sell 850 widgets; now, at $8 the quantity supplied is up to 900 widgets. Similarly for all the other prices. We call this situation an increase in supply: Supply increases if the quantity supplied at each price increases. So a change in quantity supplied occurs when we move to a different row of the table; a change in supply occurs when we move to a different table.
I've made and explained a couple definitions.
Now we're ready to state a fundamental principle of economics:
The Law of Upward Sloping Supply: If the price
increases, with all other factors held constant, then the quantity supplied
rises.
I.e., the higher the price, the more firms want
to sell.
There are some fancy theoretical and empirical "proofs"
of this law, but for now I'm not going to try to convince you that it's
true. We're just going to assume it; I trust you find it convincing.
Surprisingly, this one law, or assumption, has some powerful implications.
And when we combine it with the law of Downward Sloping Demand, we're really
rocking.
For another,
more detailed treatment of supply, see Chapter
5, and then Chapter
9,of David Friedman's Price
Theory.
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This page maintained by Steven Blatt. Suggestions,
comments, questions, and corrections are welcome.