What Is Supply: Price and Supply Relation : What is Meaning of Supply Curve:
Supply: The total amount of a specific good or service
that is available to consumers. Supply can relate to the amount available at a
specific price or the amount available across a range of prices.
Stock:
A
supply curve shows how much of a good suppliers are willing and able to supply at different prices. As with the
demand curve, there's a supply curve for every good and service. And again the
ideas are the same.
so the
supply curve for oil. We see an
intuitive relationship between price and the quantity supplied. As the price
goes up, the quantity of oil that companies are willing to supply increases.
In
this example, in a low price, $5 per barrel, let's say 10 million barrels of
oil are supplied per day. At $20 per barrel, 25 million barrels are supplied, and
at $55 per barrel, 50 million barrels are supplied. So in general, a higher price means a
greater quantity supplied.
Oil
exists all over the world, but it's not equally easy to extract. In some places
like Saudi Arabia, it's really easy to get oil out of the ground. It's costs
about $2 a barrel to extract. Oil in the US, like from Alaska, is a lot deeper and
getting it out cost more, at least $10 per barrel.
And
producing oil from an oil rig, like the Atlantis rig in the Gulf Coast, is even
more expensive. That rig has to descend more than a mile underwater before
drilling even begins. When oil prices are relatively low, the only suppliers that
can turn a profit are those who can get to the oil cheaply, like Saudi Arabia. As
the price goes up, other suppliers in Nigeria, Russia, and Alaska, who have
higher extraction costs,
start
to become profitable so they can enter the market. As the price gets higher,
even
the most expensive extraction techniques become profitable. The supply curve
slopes upward because the only way the quantity of oil can be increased is to exploit
higher and higher cost sources of oil. As the price of oil goes up, the depth
of the oil wells goes down. With this simple line the supply curve summarizes the
way suppliers respond to a change in price including how suppliers will enter
and exit the market depending on the price.
So
far, we've said things like if the price goes down, buyers will want to buy
more or if the price rises, suppliers will want to sell more. But we haven't
said anything about how prices are determined.
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