Supply & Demand Word Search

Find 10 essential supply and demand terms. Click any word to understand the fundamental forces that drive prices and markets in the US economy.

Economics 10 Terms Beginner
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You found all the supply and demand terms. Click any word to review its definition.

Supply and demand is the engine of every market economy. Equilibrium, elasticity, price floor, price ceiling, surplus, shortage: this vocabulary explains why prices rise and fall, why rent control can make housing less affordable, and why employers raise wages when unemployment is low.

The Law of Supply and Demand: Market Equilibrium

The law of demand states that as price rises, quantity demanded falls. The law of supply states that as price rises, quantity supplied increases. Market equilibrium is the price where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded — the market clears with no persistent surplus or shortage. When external factors shift supply or demand curves (a drought reducing crop supply, a recession reducing consumer demand), equilibrium prices and quantities change predictably.

Price Elasticity: How Sensitive Is Demand to Price Changes?

Price elasticity of demand measures how much quantity demanded changes when price changes. Elastic demand (elasticity over 1) means a price increase causes a proportionally larger quantity decrease — luxury goods, entertainment. Inelastic demand (elasticity under 1) means demand is relatively unresponsive — insulin, gasoline in the short run, tobacco. A tax on an inelastic good raises significant revenue with minimal demand reduction; a tax on an elastic good dramatically reduces sales.

Price Controls: Why Governments Intervene in Markets

A price ceiling (maximum price) below equilibrium — like rent control — creates a persistent shortage: quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied, leading to waiting lists, reduced quality, and black markets. A price floor (minimum price) above equilibrium — like the minimum wage — creates a surplus in simplified models. Most economists agree that price controls distort market signals and create inefficiencies, though distributional goals sometimes justify interventions.

Want to go deeper? Read our full guide: What Is Supply and Demand?

Frequently Asked Questions About Supply and Demand

What causes a shift in the demand curve?

The demand curve shifts when factors other than price change. Demand shifters include: income changes (higher incomes increase demand for normal goods), prices of related goods (a rise in coffee prices increases tea demand — substitutes; a rise in printer prices decreases ink demand — complements), consumer tastes and preferences, expectations, and population size. The 2020-2022 surge in home prices was driven by demand shifts from remote work, millennial demographics, and low mortgage rates.

What is consumer surplus and producer surplus?

Consumer surplus is the difference between what consumers are willing to pay and what they actually pay. If you would pay $50 for a concert ticket but buy it for $30, your consumer surplus is $20. Producer surplus is the difference between the market price and the minimum price sellers would accept. Free markets maximize total surplus. Price controls and taxes reduce total surplus, creating deadweight loss — economic value destroyed by the distortion.

What is the difference between a change in demand and a change in quantity demanded?

A change in quantity demanded is movement along the demand curve caused by a price change. A change in demand is a shift of the entire demand curve caused by a non-price factor. If oil prices rise, consumers buy less oil (movement along the curve). If more people buy electric vehicles, demand for gasoline falls at every price level (the curve shifts left). This distinction is one of the most important — and most confused — in economics.

What are substitute goods and complement goods?

Substitute goods compete with each other — an increase in the price of one increases demand for the other. Coffee and tea are substitutes; butter and margarine; Coke and Pepsi. When Uber raises prices, Lyft demand rises. Complement goods are consumed together — an increase in the price of one decreases demand for the other. Cars and gasoline are complements; printers and ink; smartphones and data plans.

How does supply and demand explain housing prices?

Housing prices are driven by supply-demand dynamics with distinctive features. Demand is driven by population growth, income growth, mortgage rates, and household formation. Supply is constrained by construction costs, land availability, and zoning regulations. In cities like San Francisco and New York, restrictive zoning severely limits supply response to rising demand — causing prices to rise. Cities with more permissive zoning (Houston, Tokyo) maintain more responsive supply and more stable prices.

Vocabulary Definitions

Study these terms before or after solving the puzzle. Each definition includes a real-world US example.

SUPPLY

Supply refers to the total amount of a product or service that producers are willing and able to offer for sale at various prices during a given period. The law of supply states that, all else being equal, as the price of a good increases, producers are willing to supply more of it.

Real example: During the COVID-19 pandemic, global semiconductor supply collapsed as factories shut down. This supply shock affected everything from PlayStation 5 consoles to new cars, with Ford and GM halting production due to chip shortages.

DEMAND

Demand refers to the quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at various prices during a given period. The law of demand states that, all else being equal, as the price of a good decreases, the quantity demanded increases.

Real example: During COVID-19, demand for home office equipment surged as millions worked remotely. Sales of webcams, monitors, and ergonomic furniture skyrocketed, causing prices to rise dramatically as demand outpaced supply.

EQUILIBRIUM

Market equilibrium is the point at which the quantity supplied equals the quantity demanded, resulting in a stable market price. At equilibrium, there is no tendency for prices to change unless external factors — called demand or supply shocks — disrupt the balance.

Real example: The US housing market was roughly in equilibrium through the 2010s with home price growth of 3-5% annually. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted this balance as demand for homes surged while supply remained constrained, sending prices up 40% between 2020 and 2022.

ELASTICITY

Price elasticity of demand measures how sensitive consumers are to price changes. If demand drops sharply when prices rise, it is elastic. If demand changes little despite price changes — such as for essential medications — it is inelastic. Understanding elasticity helps businesses set optimal prices.

Real example: Gasoline demand is notably inelastic in the US — when gas prices doubled in 2022, Americans reduced driving by only about 5–8%, because most people have no easy alternative to driving to work.

SHORTAGE

A shortage occurs when the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at the current market price. Shortages are often caused by prices being set below market equilibrium — through government price controls, for example — or by sudden demand surges or supply disruptions.

Real example: The 2020–2022 toilet paper and consumer goods shortage began when COVID-19 panic buying disrupted normal purchasing patterns. Retailers's shelves emptied faster than supply chains could restock, revealing the fragility of just-in-time inventory systems.

SURPLUS

A surplus occurs when the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded at the current market price. Surpluses cause prices to fall as producers compete to sell excess inventory. Government price floors — minimum prices set above equilibrium — commonly create surpluses.

Real example: In April 2020, oil prices briefly went negative — an extreme surplus situation — because storage facilities were full and there were more sellers than buyers. A barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude fell to -$37.63.

SCARCITY

Scarcity is the fundamental economic problem: human wants are unlimited, but the resources available to satisfy them are finite. Because of scarcity, individuals and societies must make choices about how to allocate limited resources — giving rise to all of economics as a field of study.

Real example: Organ donation illustrates scarcity clearly — there are about 100,000 Americans waiting for organ transplants at any given time, but only around 40,000 transplants are performed annually because organs are scarce.

MARKET

A market is any mechanism — physical or virtual — through which buyers and sellers interact to exchange goods, services, or financial instruments. Markets can be local (a farmers market), national (the US stock market), or global (the foreign exchange market). Competitive markets tend to allocate resources efficiently.

Real example: The New York Stock Exchange handles over $20 billion in daily trading volume, matching buyers and sellers of company shares through a combination of specialist traders and electronic systems — the world's largest equities market.

INFLATION

When demand consistently exceeds supply across the economy, prices rise — causing inflation. Demand-pull inflation occurs when consumers have more money to spend than there are goods and services to buy. This can happen when governments inject stimulus into the economy or when employment is very high.

Real example: The 2021–2022 inflation surge was partly demand-pull: $5 trillion in COVID stimulus boosted consumer spending dramatically, while supply chains couldn't keep up. This combination pushed inflation to a 40-year high of 9.1%.

COMPETITION

Market competition occurs when multiple sellers offer similar products or services, giving buyers choices. Competition drives innovation, lowers prices, and improves quality because businesses must constantly work to attract customers. The US antitrust laws — Sherman Act, Clayton Act — exist to protect competition.

Real example: The US airline industry deregulation in 1978 dramatically increased competition, causing average airfares to drop by more than 40% in real terms over the following decades as dozens of new carriers entered the market.

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