 Welcome to our short course in economics where we learn how we make choices when unlimited human wants meet limited resources. Supply and demand shows how people coordinate their decisions by communicating through prices. Supply refers to the number of goods and services that sellers produce at a certain price. Demand refers to how many goods and services consumers are willing to buy at a certain price. Let's assume there is just one coffee shop on the market, but a hundred people who drink coffee. The price of coffee is $3 per cup and the people each drink one cup per day. We can illustrate this with a diagram showing the price per cup of coffee on the vertical axis and the number of cups of coffee consumed on the horizontal axis. At $3, 100 cups are demanded. What do you think? How many cups of coffee would these 100 people drink if the price of a cup were to increase to $8? While at $3, 100 people drink a cup of coffee, at $8 maybe just 30 do, and at $12 there could be as few as 10 people interested in purchasing a cup. However, at a dollar per cup, demand could go up to 150 cups a day because some of those original 100 customers are now drinking two or more cups. This is what economists call a demand curve. It shows how much quantity is in demand at each price. The curve usually slopes downwards because economists assume that the lower the price, the higher the quantity demanded. The supply curve shows the number of goods or services sellers are willing to provide at a given price. It curves upward because the higher the price, the more supply. As we already know, at $1, the people on the market demand 150 cups a day. However, the owner already pays $1.20 for the beans per cup, which means he can't sell a cup for just $1.00. If the price were to be $12 per cup, the owner could hire two additional staff while supplying up to 150 cups. Unfortunately, only 10 customers would buy at this price, and that's not enough to cover the costs of business. The sweet spot happens to be at $3.00. At this cost, the owner can hire one employee and happily supply the 100 cups a day that are demanded at that price. Supply and demand on one graph look like this. At $12, the owner can supply 150 cups, but only 10 people would buy a cup of coffee at that price. At $1, he can't supply any, but demand would be 150 cups of coffee. The two curves meet at $3.00 and 100 cups. Let's now assume circumstances change. The summer was very hot and there was only a little rain which left many coffee bean crops destroyed. The poor harvest yielded a low supply of beans. As a result, more traders bid for the limited amount of beans leading to an increase in the price. The shop owner now buys the beans from the farmer at $2.00 for the beans per cup. Can he still sell at $3.00? He tries and decides to let go of his employee and begins serving coffee all by himself. But he cannot meet the demand of all his customers. If the government were to force him to keep the price fixed through so-called price controls, queuing would be part of everyone's life. To reduce the wait times for his clients and make up for the increased cost of the beans, the owner decides to increase the price of the coffee to $4.50. The supply curve now shifts to the left, and at $4.50, the shop will sell 70 cups of coffee per day. Typically, the higher the selling price of a good, the greater number of people willing to supply it. This means that there will likely be more competition soon. In real life and within a free market, if you drink coffee at $4.50, it's not the basis of an economic calculation but the result of an endless dance of trial and error between sellers and buyers that lead them to reach an unspoken agreement about what works best for both. This phenomenon is referred to as emergent order. Before we summarize, please note that economists differentiate between quantity demanded and demand. A change in the quantity demanded happens due to a change in price, like we explored when the price dropped and the quantity demanded increased. A change in demand happens when the environment changes. Let's imagine that many people in the market become more health conscious and think that coffee is bad. If that happens, the entire demand curve shifts downward, and at $3, not $100 by coffee, but just $40. Let's summarize. Supply is the amount provided at each price. Demand is the amount purchased at each price. The final price is the result of an emergent order. If you are up for it, we will now ask you to help us understand today's price of coffee. Post your thoughts in the comments below. Search for a coffee price chart, and you'll find a graph showing the price of coffee in US dollars. Then tell us, what's the price of one kilogram of coffee today? What do you think are the reasons that have caused the price to fluctuate in the past five years? And today, thousands already do. To learn how it works and download this video without ads or background music, check out our website or read the description below. If you want to support our mission and help change education, visit our Patreon. That's patreon.com.