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Changes in equilibrium price and quantity: the four-step processKey points There is a four-step process that allows us to predict how an event will affect the equilibrium price and quantity using the supply and demand framework. Step one: draw a market model (a supply curve and a demand curve) representing the situation before the economic event took place. Step two: determine whether the economic event being analyzed affects demand...0 Comments 0 Shares 25K Views 0 Reviews
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Changes in equilibrium price and quantity: the four-step processKey points There is a four-step process that allows us to predict how an event will affect the equilibrium price and quantity using the supply and demand framework. Step one: draw a market model (a supply curve and a demand curve) representing the situation before the economic event took place. Step two: determine whether the economic event being analyzed affects demand...0 Comments 0 Shares 23K Views 0 Reviews
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Market equilibriumKey points Supply and demand curves intersect at the equilibrium price. This is the price at which we would predict the market will operate. Where demand and supply intersect Because the graphs for demand and supply curves both have price on the vertical axis and quantity on the horizontal axis, the demand curve and supply curve for a particular good or service can...0 Comments 0 Shares 16K Views 0 Reviews
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Market equilibriumKey points Supply and demand curves intersect at the equilibrium price. This is the price at which we would predict the market will operate. Where demand and supply intersect Because the graphs for demand and supply curves both have price on the vertical axis and quantity on the horizontal axis, the demand curve and supply curve for a particular good or service can...0 Comments 0 Shares 15K Views 0 Reviews
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Market equilibrium, disequilibrium, and changes in equilibriumIn a competitive market, demand for and supply of a good or service determine the equilibrium price. Equilibrium MARKETS: Equilibrium is achieved at the price at which quantities demanded and supplied are equal. We can represent a market in equilibrium in a graph by showing the combined price and quantity at which the supply and demand curves intersect. For example, imagine...0 Comments 0 Shares 15K Views 0 Reviews
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What is equilibrium in economics?What Is Equilibrium in Economics? A fragile balance, a contested idea, and the quiet architecture of markets The Hook: A Market That Never Sleeps Walk into any marketplace—whether a vegetable bazaar in Yerevan or a high-frequency trading floor in New York—and you will notice something curious. Prices move. Quantities adjust. Buyers hesitate, sellers revise, inventory piles up or...0 Comments 0 Shares 1K Views 0 Reviews
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How to solve economic graphs and equations?The Quiet Power of Lines and Curves The first time I truly understood an economic graph, it was not in a classroom but in a moment of mild frustration. I was staring at two intersecting lines—supply and demand—wondering why something so visually simple seemed intellectually evasive. The algebra was manageable; the geometry, familiar. And yet the meaning resisted easy capture. What...0 Comments 0 Shares 1K Views 0 Reviews
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Interpreting the aggregate demand/aggregate supply modelKey points The aggregate demand/aggregate supply model is a model that shows what determines total supply or total demand for the economy and how total demand and total supply interact at the macroeconomic level. Aggregate supply is the total quantity of output firms will produce and sell—in other words, the real GDP. Aggregate demand is the...0 Comments 0 Shares 23K Views 0 Reviews
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Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics: Two Lenses, One Uneasy RealityMicroeconomics vs. Macroeconomics: Two Lenses, One Uneasy Reality There is a familiar temptation in economics: to believe that if we can understand the smallest unit—a household choosing between rent and groceries, a firm deciding whether to hire—we can scale that logic upward and decipher entire economies. It is a seductive idea. It is also, more often than not, incomplete. The...0 Comments 0 Shares 1K Views 0 Reviews
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Short-run vs long-run analysisShort-Run vs Long-Run Analysis Economists often pretend that time is merely a neutral backdrop. It is not. Time rearranges incentives, redistributes power, and alters what societies consider possible. A policy that appears efficient in the short run may slowly erode institutional trust. A painful adjustment today may generate extraordinary productivity gains twenty years later. And nowhere is...0 Comments 0 Shares 1K Views 0 Reviews
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