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Some Special Cases of Equilibrium

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Topics

  • Perfectly Elastic and Perfectly Inelastic Demand
  • Perfectly Elastic and Perfectly Inelastic Supply
  • Real-Life Application
  • Key Points: Some Special Cases of Equilibrium
CISCE: Class 12

Perfectly Elastic and Perfectly Inelastic Demand

a. Perfectly Elastic Demand

  • Demand curve is a straight horizontal line (parallel to X-axis).
  • This means buyers will buy any quantity at the same price.
  • If supply increases, only the quantity changes—price stays the same.

b. Perfectly Inelastic Demand

  • Demand curve is a straight vertical line (parallel to Y-axis).
  • This means buyers want a fixed quantity, no matter the price.
  • If supply changes, only price changes—quantity stays the same.

Diagram:

CISCE: Class 12

Perfectly Elastic and Perfectly Inelastic Supply

a. Perfectly Elastic Supply

  • Supply curve is a straight horizontal line.
  • Sellers provide any quantity at the same price.
  • If demand increases, only quantity changes—price will not change.

b. Perfectly Inelastic Supply

  • Supply curve is a straight vertical line.
  • Sellers offer a fixed quantity, no matter the price.
  • If demand changes, only price changes—quantity will not change.

Diagram:

CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Application

  • Elastic demand: Mobile recharge offers—if data price drops, users buy more, but if price is fixed, the amount bought depends on offer availability.
  • Inelastic demand: Lifesaving medicines—people need a fixed quantity even if price rises.
  • Elastic supply: Festival sale items—stores can supply more at the same price if people demand more.
  • Inelastic supply: Limited seats in an entrance exam—the number of seats is fixed no matter how many people want to join.
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Some Special Cases of Equilibrium

  • If either curve is perfectly elastic, only quantity changes for market shocks; price stays the same.
  • If either curve is perfectly inelastic, only price changes for market shocks; quantity stays the same.
  • Diagrams help show if price or quantity is affected by changes in demand or supply.

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