ECON 10010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Overproduction, Root Mean Square, Economic Equilibrium

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The quantity supplied is the amount that sellers are willing and able to sell. If the price goes up, you are willing to sell more. As you produce more and more, costs go up. As we make more and more, we need more resources like workers, so costs go up. All else equal, as the price increases, sellers are willing and able to sell more. In perfect competition, the supply curve is the marginal cost of production. At a price p, the cost of producing q units is exactly. Marginal= at a particular place, how the next one costs. Marginal cost example: goes up as you make more. Determiners of what supply looks like/ shifters: costs of factors of production (input, cost of labor (input) 3. takes on inputs: new technology, number of rms. 1. for a given quantity, price goes down. The equilibrium price is the price at which quantity supplies equals quantity demanded.

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