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Effects of Simultaneous Changes (Shifts) in Demand and Supply

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Topics

  • Understanding Simultaneous Demand and Supply Changes
  • Both Increase Equally (No Change in Price)
  • Demand Increases More Than Supply (Price Rises)
  • Supply Increases More Than Demand (Price Falls)
  • Real-Life Application
CISCE: Class 12

Understanding Simultaneous Demand and Supply Changes

  • In real life, when demand rises (like during a festival), producers often supply more as well.
  • So, both curves can shift at the same time, affecting price and quantity.
CISCE: Class 12

Both Increase Equally (No Change in Price)

1) Explanation:

If demand and supply increase by the same amount, price stays the same, but quantity sold increases.

2) Diagram:

  • Picture both curves (demand and supply) shifting right by an equal amount.
  • The new intersection (equilibrium) is at a higher quantity but the same price.

3) Key Takeaway:

Quantity increases; price remains constant.

CISCE: Class 12

Demand Increases More Than Supply (Price Rises)

1) Explanation:

  • If demand grows more than supply, buyers compete for goods.
  • This pushes price up, and more goods are sold.

2) Diagram:

  • The demand curve shifts more than the supply curve.
  • New equilibrium shows higher price and higher quantity.

3) Key Takeaway:

Both price and quantity increase.

CISCE: Class 12

Supply Increases More Than Demand (Price Falls)

1) Explanation:

  • If supply rises a lot but demand hardly changes, sellers reduce prices to sell more.
  • Quantity sold rises, but price drops.

2) Diagram:

  • Supply curve shifts more than demand.
  • New intersection is at a lower price but higher quantity.

3) Key Takeaway:

Price falls; quantity increases.

CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Application

Think about a new video game console:

  • If lots of people want it (higher demand) and companies make more (higher supply), stores will sell more units.
  • If everyone wants one but few are made (demand rise > supply rise), prices spike, and some miss out.
  • If companies make too many (supply rise > demand rise), stores might discount them.

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