In AP Macro, a surplus is a disequilibrium condition where quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded because the price is above equilibrium; the excess equals Qs minus Qd, and market forces push the price down toward equilibrium (LO 1.6.B).
A surplus happens when the price in a market is set above the equilibrium price. At that high price, sellers want to supply a lot, but buyers don't want to buy that much. The gap between quantity supplied and quantity demanded is the surplus, and you calculate it as Qs minus Qd at the given price. On a graph, it's the horizontal distance between the supply and demand curves at that too-high price.
The AP-critical part is what happens next. A surplus is temporary because unsold inventory pressures sellers to cut prices. As the price falls, quantity demanded rises and quantity supplied falls until the two meet at equilibrium. That self-correcting story (per LO 1.6.B) is the heart of how markets work in this course. The same logic runs the loanable funds market in Unit 4. If the real interest rate sits above equilibrium, there's a surplus of loanable funds (more saving than borrowing), and the real interest rate falls to clear it (LO 4.7.D).
Surplus lives in Topic 1.6 (Market Equilibrium, Disequilibrium, and Changes in Equilibrium) under learning objective 1.6.B, which asks you to do three things: define a surplus, explain how prices adjust to fix it, and calculate its size from a graph or from supply and demand equations. It then reappears in Topic 4.7 (The Loanable Funds Market) under 4.7.D, where the 'price' is the real interest rate and the surplus is excess saving. If you understand surplus once in Unit 1, you've already learned the adjustment mechanism for the loanable funds market, the foreign exchange market, and basically every supply-and-demand graph the exam throws at you. The word also shows up in two other AP Macro contexts you have to keep separate: a budget surplus (government revenue exceeds spending, which counts as positive public savings) and a current account surplus (exports exceed imports, as in the 2021 FRQ on Sweden).
Keep studying AP® Macroeconomics Unit 1
Equilibrium Price (Unit 1)
A surplus only exists relative to equilibrium. It is what you get when the price is stuck above the equilibrium price, and the surplus is the market's signal to fall back to it.
Demand for Loanable Funds (Unit 4)
Swap 'price' for 'real interest rate' and 'goods' for 'funds,' and the surplus story repeats. A real interest rate above equilibrium creates a surplus of loanable funds, so the rate falls until borrowing and saving match (LO 4.7.D).
national savings (Unit 4)
When the government runs a budget surplus, public savings is positive, which adds to national savings and shifts the supply of loanable funds right. Same word, totally different graph move, so read the question carefully.
Quantity Demanded (Unit 1)
Calculating a surplus is just subtraction. Plug the given price into both curves and take quantity supplied minus quantity demanded. If you mix up which one is bigger, you'll label it a shortage by mistake.
Multiple-choice questions test surplus in two ways. First, identification: a stem gives you a price with Qs and Qd (like a smartphone market at 30 minimum wage, you plug in to get Qs = 50 and Qd = 40, a surplus of 10 workers. Price floors like minimum wages are the classic surplus setup because they legally prevent the price from falling. Some MCQs also ask which disequilibrium appears temporarily when both curves shift (if supply increases more than demand, a surplus emerges before price adjusts down). On FRQs, watch for the other meanings of the word. The 2021 exam opened with Sweden running a 'surplus in its current account,' which is about trade, not a goods-market surplus. Always identify which market the surplus is in before you draw anything.
They're mirror images. A surplus means quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded because the price is too HIGH, and the price falls to fix it. A shortage means quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied because the price is too LOW, and the price rises to fix it. Quick check: price floors (like a minimum wage) cause surpluses; price ceilings (like rent control) cause shortages.
A surplus occurs when quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded at a price above the equilibrium price.
Calculate a surplus as Qs minus Qd at the given price, either by reading the horizontal gap on a graph or by plugging the price into the supply and demand equations.
Surpluses are self-correcting in free markets because excess inventory pushes the price down until quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal again.
A binding price floor, like a minimum wage set above equilibrium, creates a persistent surplus because the price is not allowed to fall.
In the loanable funds market, a real interest rate above equilibrium creates a surplus of funds, and the real interest rate falls to restore equilibrium.
A budget surplus (government revenue exceeds spending) and a current account surplus (exports exceed imports) are different concepts from a market surplus, so identify the context before answering.
A surplus is a disequilibrium condition where quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded because the price is above the equilibrium price. Its size equals Qs minus Qd at that price, and market forces push the price down until the surplus disappears (LO 1.6.B).
A surplus means too much supply because the price is above equilibrium, and price falls to fix it. A shortage means too much demand because the price is below equilibrium, and price rises to fix it. Floors cause surpluses; ceilings cause shortages.
No. In Topic 1.6, a surplus is a sign of disequilibrium, meaning goods are sitting unsold because the price is too high. Don't confuse it with a budget surplus or a current account surplus, which are separate concepts that can be good or bad depending on context.
Plug the given price into both equations and subtract. For example, with Qs = 2w - 10 and Qd = 70 - w at a $30 minimum wage, Qs = 50 and Qd = 40, so the surplus is 10 units of labor.
No. A market surplus is excess quantity supplied at a too-high price (Topic 1.6). A budget surplus means government revenue exceeds spending, which counts as positive public savings and shifts the supply of loanable funds right in Topic 4.7.
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