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Macroeconomics, 15/e
Campbell R. McConnell, University of Nebraska, Emeritus
Stanley L. Brue, Pacific Lutheran University
Chapter 3 Individual Markets: Demand and Supply
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 Analogies, Anecodotes, and Insights
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Analogies, Anecdotes, and Insights
3.1 Supply and demand button
3.1 Supply and demand button
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In viewing demand and supply curves such as those shown in Figure 3-5,
beginning economics students often wonder if demand is more important
than supply in determining equilibrium price and quantity or if supply
is more important than demand. The answer is that demand and supply are
equally important.
Economist
Alfred Marshall (1842-1924) used a vivid analogy to make this point. He
likened demand and supply to two blades of a scissors. Which blade of
the scissors cuts the paper? To be sure, if the lower blade is held in
place and the upper blade is closed down upon it, one could argue that
the upper blade has cut the paper. But, would the paper have been cut
without the lower blade? And if the upper blade is held in place and the
lower blade is closed up against it, would the paper have been cut without
the upper blade?
The answer to these questions is that it is the interaction of the
two blades of the scissors that cuts the paper. Both are necessary and
both are important. So it is with demand and supply in competitive markets.
Demand (which reflects utility) and supply (which reflects costs) jointly
determine equilibrium price and quantity. Without a demand curve, there
is no equilibrium price and quantity. But the same is true for supply.
Without it, no equilibrium price and quantity exist. Equilibrium price
and quantity result from the interaction of demand and supply,
and each is equally important.
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Photograph courtesy of: (c)Corbis # OOF2073;
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