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Ch. 5: Supply

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Ch. 5: Supply. Sec. 1: What Is Supply?. Supply- anyone who provides goods & services is a producer manufacturers, farmers, airlines, utility comp., pet sitter Key words – if prices to low – some not willing to take on expense of growing and transport - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ch. 5: Supply

Ch. 5: Supply

Page 2: Ch. 5: Supply

Sec. 1: What Is Supply?

Supply- anyone who provides goods & services is a

producer manufacturers, farmers, airlines, utility

comp., pet sitter Key words –

if prices to low – some not willing to take on expense of growing and transport

bad weather – not able to supply a farmers market

Page 3: Ch. 5: Supply

The Law of Supply

The law of supply – producers want to earn a profit when prices rises – when price falls –

Page 4: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Price and Supply

Smith family – sell at Montclair farmers market – lots of f & v, special – tomato how to price the tomatoes▪ @ $1 per lbs. – supply 24 lbs to market▪ @ $2 per lbs – supply 50 lbs to market▪ @ $.50 pr lbs – supply 10 lbs or even none

Page 5: Ch. 5: Supply

Supply Schedule

Supply schedule – shows law of supply in table form

Market supply schedule –

Page 6: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Individual Supply Schedule

2 column table similar to a demand schedule left hand column –

various prices of a good or service

right hand column – quantity supplied at each price

Figure 5.2 – Smith’s supply schedule

Price per Pound

Quantity Supplied in

pounds2.00 501.75 401.50 341.25 301.00 240.75 200.50 10

Page 7: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Market Supply Schedule

Several stands sell tomatoes at the market want to know the quantity of tomatoes

available for sale at different prices for the entire farmers market – need a market supply schedule

shows quantity supplied by all the producers who are willing and able

Page 8: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Market Supply Schedule

Figure 5.3 – similar to supply schedule only quantities are larger market quantity supplied

depends on price market research can be

used to create a market supply schedule

Producers use research done by govt. or trade organizations

Price per Pound ($)

Quantity Supplied in

Pounds2.00 3501.75 3001.50 2501.25 2001.00 1500.75 1000.50 50

Page 9: Ch. 5: Supply

Supply Curves

Supply curve – Market supply curve –

shows how much of a good or service all of the producers in a market are willing or able to offer for sale at each price

Page 10: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Individual Supply Curve

10 24 34 500

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5Tomatoes

Tomatoes

Figure 5.4 – Smith’s supply schedule when price increases

– when price

decreases – created using the

assumption that all other economic factors except price remain the same

Page 11: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Market Supply Curve

Figure 5.5 Shows the quantity of tomatoes that all the producers (the

market as a whole) are willing and able to offer for sale at each price differs in scope, but is made the same way direct relationship between price and quantity supplied▪ if price increases among all suppliers then quantity supplied increases▪ if price decreases, then quantity supplied decreases

constructed on assumption that all other economic factors remain the same

Supply curves for all producers follow the law of supply does not matter what is produced why spend more when prices are higher higher prices signal potential for higher profits

Page 12: Ch. 5: Supply

Market Supply Schedule

50 100 150 200 250 300 3500

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5Tomatoes

Tomatoes

Page 13: Ch. 5: Supply

Sec. 2: What Are the Costs of Production?

Page 14: Ch. 5: Supply

Labor Affects Production

Marginal product – Janine’s jean factory – 3 workers produce

12 pairs each day increase the # of workers and output

increases adding a 5th worker allows for

specialization Specialization –

Page 15: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Marginal Product Schedule

Shows relationship between labor and marginal product

Figure 5.7 1 or 2 workers produce very little, but it is bigger with

each one between 3 & 6 workers allows for specialization, higher

production Increasing returns – Diminishing returns –

workers 7,8,9,10 work overlaps with 1st 6 workers with worker 11, total output decreases employees crowded, operations disorganized this is rare, but it can happen

Page 16: Ch. 5: Supply

Production Costs

Goal is to make a profit – Fixed costs – are expenses that the

owners of a business must incur whether they produce nothing, a little , or a lot

Variable costs – Total cost – adding fixed and variable

costs together Marginal costs –

Page 17: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Fixed and Variable Costs

Janine fixed costs – the same whether producing or not salaries of managers who run the company,

but not involved directly in production Variable costs –

increase production and variable cost go up decrease production (cut back hours,

vacation for a week), variable cost decrease To determine total cost of a pair of jeans

Page 18: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Production Costs Schedule

Figure 5.8 – see costs and how they change as quantity of jeans produced changes # of workers added is a major factor fixed costs stay the same no matter what

the total product amounts to Marginal cost is determined by

marginal cost decline b/c of specialization but then increases b/c of diminishing returns

Page 19: Ch. 5: Supply

Production Costs Schedule

# of workers

Total Product

Fixed Costs($)

Variable Costs ($)

Total Costs($)

Marginal Costs($)

0 0 40 0 40 -1 3 40 30 70 102 7 40 62 102 83 12 40 97 137 74 19 40 132 172 55 29 40 172 212 46 42 40 211 251 37 53 40 277 317 68 61 40 373 413 129 66 40 473 513 2010 67 40 503 543 3011 65 40 539 579 -

Page 20: Ch. 5: Supply

Earning the Highest Profit

Marginal revenue – it is the price

Total revenue –

Formula –

Total Revenue= P x Q

P= price of the product

Q= quantity purchased at that price

Page 21: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Production Costs and Revenue Schedules

Janine & figure 5.9 finds total revenue by multiplying marginal revenue by total product determine profit by subtracting total costs from total revenue

▪ wants to know how many workers to hire and how many pairs of jeans to make to get most profit

need to perform a marginal analysis – a comparison of added costs and benefits

Examine figure 5.9 with 1 worker – does not make a profit at 2 workers – earns a profit and passes break-even point – total costs and

total ▪ revenue are exactly the same

profits continue to rise up to and including the 9th worker Profit-maximizing output – reached a level where it has achieved the

highest level of profit marginal revenue and marginal cost are equal then profits begin to decline at 10th worker – increase in marginal cost is greater than increase in marginal

revenue

Page 22: Ch. 5: Supply

Production Costs & Revenue Schedule

# of Worker

s

Total Produ

ct

Total Cost($

)

Marginal

Cost($)

Marginal Revenue

($)

Total Revenue

($)

Profit($)

0 0 40 - - 0 -401 3 70 10 20 60 -102 7 102 8 20 140 383 12 137 7 20 240 1034 19 172 5 20 380 2085 29 212 4 20 580 3686 42 251 3 20 840 5897 53 317 6 20 1060 7438 61 413 12 20 1220 8079 66 513 20 20 1320 80710 67 543 30 20 1340 79711 65 579 - 20 1300 721

Page 23: Ch. 5: Supply

Sec. 3 What Factors Affect Supply?

Page 24: Ch. 5: Supply

Changes in Quantity Supplied

Early curves created using the assumption that all other economic factors except price remain the same

The only thing influence how much producers will offer for sale is price Supply curve shows that pattern different points on supply curve show

change in quantity supplied Change in quantity supplied –

Page 25: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Changes Along a Supply Curve

Each new point shows a change in quantity supplied a change in quantity supplied - change is shown by the direction of movement

along the curve▪ to the right – ▪ to the left –

Figure 5.10 shows individual information market supply curve show similar info for an

entire market they just have large quantities supplied

Page 26: Ch. 5: Supply

Changes in Supply

Change in supply – production costs increase – production costs decrease –

6 factors can cause a change in supply: input costs, labor productivity, technology, govt. action, producer expectations, number of producers

Page 27: Ch. 5: Supply

Decrease Increase

0 10 20 30 40 500

1

2

3

4

5

6

S2S1

15 25 35 45 55 650

1

2

3

4

5

6

S1S2

Page 28: Ch. 5: Supply

Factor 1: Input Costs

Input costs – Anna and nutrition

bars made with peanuts

price of peanuts increases – cannot afford to produce as many bars

supply curve shifts to the left - & vice versa

Page 29: Ch. 5: Supply

Factor 2: Labor Productivity

Labor productivity – increased productivity

decreases the costs of production – increases supply

specialized division of labor allows for making more goods at a lower cost

better trained and more skilled workers can usually produce more goods in less time and lower costs then less educated and less skilled

Page 30: Ch. 5: Supply

Factor 3: Technology

Technology – technology used to

make goods more efficiently

increased automation leads to increased supplies

allows workers to be more productive and helps business to increase the supply of their services

Page 31: Ch. 5: Supply

Factor 4: Government Action

Excise tax – often placed on alcohol & tobacco (govt. interested in

discouraging use) increases producer cost, decreases supply

Taxes tend to decrease supply, subsidy do the opposite

Regulation – can affect supply banning a pesticide can decrease the supply of the crops

that depend on it worker safety can decrease supply by increasing

production costs or increase supply by reducing labor lost to on the job injuries

Page 32: Ch. 5: Supply

Factor 5: Producer Expectations

If producers expect price of their product to rise or fall, producers each

react differently if farmer expects

corn prices to rise –

Page 33: Ch. 5: Supply

Factor 6: Number of Producer

When one company develops a new idea, other producers will enter the market and increase the supply of the good or service supply curve shifts to the right – figure 5.13 increase in # of producers means

increased competition may drive less efficient producers out of

the market – decreasing supply

Page 34: Ch. 5: Supply

50 150 200 3000

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

S1S2

Figure 5.13 – ice cream stores one starts – is a

success – 6 months later – 3 more stores

supply of ice cream cones increased all price levels

within 1 yr., one forced out of the market

Page 35: Ch. 5: Supply

Economic Pacesetter: Robert Johnson: Supplying African –American Entertainment

Media entrepreneur – b. April 8, 1946 1970s – Washington lobbyist

for National Cable Television Association

recognized void of African American TV market

Conceived idea for Black Entertainment Television (BET) took $15,000 loan and

secured a $500,000 investor picked up a space on cable TV started on Jan. 8, 1980 started with 2 hours of

programming a week

Page 36: Ch. 5: Supply

Today – 5 separate channels – operators in US, Canada, Caribbean at 1st – shows similar to MTV later – more diverse

programming BET.com - #1 internet portal

for African-Americans 2001 – sold BET to Viacom

International for $3 Billion became 1st black billionaire continued to run company

for 5 yrs. companies began to copy

Johnson’s ideas for programming for the African-American community

Page 37: Ch. 5: Supply

Sec. 4: What Is Elasticity of Supply?

Page 38: Ch. 5: Supply

Elasticity of Supply

Toyota introduces hybrid Prius in 2000 instant success – not able to increase supply at same pace

that consumer demand and prices rose 5 yrs. Later – not meet growing demand inability to meet increased demand suggests the supply is

inelastic Elasticity of supply –

if a change is price leads to a relatively larger change in quantity supplied -

a 10% increase in price causes a greater than 10% increase in quantity supplied▪ if a change in price leads to a relatively smaller change in quantity

supplied – ▪ if the price and quantity supplied change by the exact same % -

Page 39: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Elastic Supply

Figure 5.15 shows quantity supplied of

new leather boots – gained popularity, shortage developed

is elastic price was raised – and

quantity supplied kept up producer able to keep up

because raw materials are inexpensive & easy to get

manufacturing process is also fairly uncomplicated and easy to increase

0 102538500

20406080

100120140160

Series 1

Series 1

Page 40: Ch. 5: Supply

Example: Inelastic Supply

0 20 28 400

0.51

1.52

2.53

3.54

4.5Series 1

Series 1

Figure 5.16 – olive oil supply of olive oil is

inelastic price rose by a

factor of 4, supply could not keep pace

oil comes from previous seasons olives

Page 41: Ch. 5: Supply

What Affects Elasticity of Supply?

Ease of changing production to respond to price change is the main factor in determining elasticity of supply supply is more elastic over time – a year or several years

Industries that are able to respond quickly to changes in price by either increasing or decreasing production are those that don’t require a lot of capital, skilled labor or difficult to obtain resources dog-walkers a business that sells small crafts industries that would have trouble – auto & oil refiners takes time to respond to price changes