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Role of Demand and Supply in Economics

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Topics

  • Introduction: The Fundamental Question
  • Key Concepts
  • Free Goods vs Economic Goods
  • Demand, Supply, and Price
  • Real-Life Application
  • Key Point Summary
CISCE: Class 12

Introduction: The Fundamental Question

Why do goods and services in our world have prices? Why are some expensive while others are cheap? Economics helps us understand these questions by looking at two main ideas: usefulness and scarcity.

CISCE: Class 12

Key Concepts

1. Usefulness (Utility)

  • Goods must satisfy our wants or needs (be useful) for us to pay for them.
  • Example: Water is valuable because it quenches our thirst.

2. Scarcity

  • If something is available in unlimited quantity, it cannot have a price.
  • Example: Air is very useful but is free because it is unlimited.
CISCE: Class 12

Free Goods vs Economic Goods

  Free Goods Economic Goods
Availability Unlimited Limited/scarce
Price No price, freely available Bought/sold, has a price
Example Air, sunlight Bread, cars, bottled water
CISCE: Class 12

Demand, Supply, and Price

  • Demand: People are willing to pay for goods that are useful and scarce.
  • Supply: Sellers will offer goods if people are willing to pay for them.
  • Price Formation: Prices are set by the balance between demand (how much people want) and supply (how much is available).
CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Application

Think of free online study notes (available to everyone – no price) versus paid private tuition (not everyone can join – costs money).

CISCE: Class 12

Key Point Summary

  • Goods need to be both useful and scarce to have a price.
  • Free goods are unlimited and free; economic goods are limited and have value.
  • In markets, prices are decided by the forces of demand and supply.

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