6 Supply Flashcards
Supply
the ability and willingness of a firm to sell products at a given price
Individual supply
one business’s willingness and ability to sell a product at a given price
Market supply
Sum of all businesses willingness and ability to sell a product at a given set of prices
Supply curve
- relationship between the price of a product and the quantity supplied by businesses
- the higher the price the greater incentive for a business to supply products
Joint supply
When products are supplies together, often as a byproduct
Competitive supply
When producers choose to supply one or the other product with given factors of production
extension of supply
increases in price which increases the quantity demanded
contraction of supply
there is a decrease in price which decreases the quantity supplied
increase in supply
- outward shift of supply curve
- at every price there is an increased quantity supplied
decrease in supply
- inward shift of supply curve
- at every price there is a decreased quantity supplied
Factors that shift the supply curve (the cost of labour)
- need labour to produce product
- cost of labour increases then the overall cost of production increases
- supply curve shifts to the left
Factors that shift the supply curve (the cost of capital)
- businesses require capital to produce
- machinery, vehicles and cost of borrowing money
- cost of capital increases
- supply will decrease
Factors that shift the supply curve (the cost of land)
- need land and raw materials
- need to be purchased or hired and so cost increases
- supply decreases
Factors that shift the supply curve (technology)
- use technology in production process
- tech can improve a firms productivity
- as tech improves firms are able to produce more products for less money
- supply increases
Factors that shift the supply curve (prices of jointly supplied products)
- price of a jointly supplied product increases
- make more profit
- supply of original increases