AP Microeconomics Unit 2 ReviewSupply and Demand

Verified for the 2027 examCompiled by AP educators~20–25% of the exam
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AP Microeconomics Unit 2, Supply and Demand, covers the core market model that accounts for 20-25% of the AP exam across 9 topics, showing how prices and quantities get determined through buyer and seller interaction. You'll work through demand, supply, price elasticity of demand, and price elasticity of supply, then see how those forces meet at market equilibrium to create consumer surplus and producer surplus. AP Micro rounds this out with price controls, taxes, subsidies, and international trade policy.

unit 2 review

AP Microeconomics Unit 2, Supply and Demand, is the unit where you learn the market model that drives the entire course. The single biggest idea is that prices are not arbitrary; they emerge from the interaction of buyers and sellers, and they automatically push competitive markets toward an equilibrium where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded. Everything else in the unit (elasticity, surplus, price controls, taxes, tariffs) is a tool for measuring how that equilibrium behaves when conditions change. At 20-25% of the exam, this is the heaviest unit in AP Micro.

What this unit covers

The two laws and what shifts the curves

  • The law of demand says price and quantity demanded move in opposite directions. When a good's own price falls, buyers move down along the demand curve to a higher quantity demanded.
  • The law of supply says price and quantity supplied move in the same direction. Higher prices give producers an incentive to make more, so the supply curve slopes upward.
  • Market demand and market supply are just the horizontal sums of individual buyers' and sellers' curves. The market curve is the individuals added together at each price.
  • The single most-tested distinction in this unit is shift vs. movement. A change in the good's own price moves you along a curve. A change in anything else (income, tastes, input costs, technology, prices of related goods, expectations, number of buyers or sellers) shifts the whole curve.
  • Markets only work this way when property rights are well defined and people can respond to incentives within their constraints (income, time, laws).

Elasticity, the responsiveness toolkit

  • Price elasticity of demand is %ΔQd / %ΔP. If the magnitude is greater than 1, demand is elastic; less than 1, inelastic; exactly 1, unit elastic.
  • Slope is not elasticity. Along a straight-line demand curve, elasticity changes from elastic at high prices to inelastic at low prices, even though the slope never changes.
  • The total revenue test ties it together. If demand is elastic, a price increase lowers total revenue. If demand is inelastic, a price increase raises total revenue. At unit elasticity, revenue is maximized.
  • Price elasticity of supply is %ΔQs / %ΔP, with the same elastic/inelastic benchmark of 1. Supply tends to be more elastic when producers have more time to adjust.
  • Income elasticity of demand (%ΔQd / %Δincome) tells you whether a good is normal (positive) or inferior (negative). Cross-price elasticity (%ΔQd of good A / %ΔP of good B) tells you whether goods are substitutes (positive) or complements (negative).

Equilibrium, surplus, and what happens when markets get shocked

  • Equilibrium is where the demand and supply curves cross. The market clears, meaning buyers want to buy exactly the quantity sellers want to sell, with no shortage or surplus.
  • Consumer surplus is the area below the demand curve and above the price. Producer surplus is the area above the supply curve and below the price. Together they measure total economic surplus, the gains from trade in that market.
  • If price sits above equilibrium, a surplus appears and pushes price down. If price sits below equilibrium, a shortage appears and pulls price up. Market forces self-correct toward equilibrium.
  • When a determinant shifts demand or supply, price, quantity, consumer surplus, and producer surplus all change. How much price changes versus quantity depends on the elasticities of the two curves.

Government intervention and international trade

  • A price ceiling is a legal maximum price. A binding ceiling (set below equilibrium) creates a shortage. A price floor is a legal minimum price. A binding floor (set above equilibrium) creates a surplus.
  • Taxes shift behavior by driving a wedge between what buyers pay and what sellers receive. Subsidies do the opposite, encouraging more production and consumption. Both affect government revenue or spending.
  • Tax incidence (who actually bears the burden) depends on relative elasticities. The more inelastic side of the market pays more of the tax, regardless of who legally sends the check.
  • Any intervention in a market already producing the efficient quantity shrinks total surplus and creates deadweight loss, the value of mutually beneficial trades that no longer happen.
  • Opening to trade replaces the autarky (no-trade) price with the world price. If the world price is lower, the country imports, consumer surplus grows, producer surplus shrinks, and total surplus rises. A tariff raises the domestic price toward autarky, generates government revenue, and creates deadweight loss. Quotas restrict import quantity directly with similar effects but no tariff revenue for the government.

Unit 2, Supply and Demand at a glance

TopicCore ideaKey graph moveFormula or rule
DemandPrice up, quantity demanded downMovement along vs. shift of demandLaw of demand
SupplyPrice up, quantity supplied upMovement along vs. shift of supplyLaw of supply
Price elasticity of demandHow responsive buyers are to priceElasticity varies along a linear curvePED = %ΔQd / %ΔP; total revenue test
Price elasticity of supplyHow responsive sellers are to priceFlatter supply means more elasticPES = %ΔQs / %ΔP
Other elasticitiesResponsiveness to income and related pricesSign matters, not just sizeIncome elasticity sorts normal vs. inferior; cross-price sorts substitutes vs. complements
Market equilibrium and surplusMarkets clear where curves crossShade CS above price, PS below priceTriangle area = (1/2)(base)(height)
Disequilibrium and changesShortages and surpluses self-correctShift one curve, find new equilibriumImpact depends on elasticities
Government interventionPolicies change incentives and outcomesCeiling below, floor above equilibriumBinding controls create shortages or surpluses; taxes create deadweight loss
International trade policyWorld price replaces autarky priceImports fill the gap between Qd and QsTariffs raise domestic price, earn revenue, cause DWL

Why Unit 2, Supply and Demand matters in AP Micro

Supply and demand is the default model of the whole course. Almost every later question starts by setting up a market with these two curves, then adds a complication. If you can draw a correctly labeled market graph, shift a curve, and read off the new price and quantity, you have the core skill AP Micro tests over and over.

  • The efficiency standard built here (maximizing total surplus at equilibrium) is the benchmark every later unit measures against, from monopoly to externalities.
  • Elasticity is the course's measuring stick for responsiveness, and it returns when you analyze tax incidence, monopoly pricing, and wage outcomes.
  • The shift vs. movement distinction is the most common graphing error on the exam, and this unit is where you build that fluency.

How this unit connects across the course

  • Scarcity, incentives, and marginal decision making from Basic Economic Concepts (Unit 1) explain why demand slopes down and supply slopes up. Demand is really marginal benefit; supply is really marginal cost.
  • The supply curve you draw here gets a microfoundation in Production, Cost, and the Perfect Competition Model (Unit 3), where you learn that a competitive firm's supply curve is its marginal cost curve above average variable cost.
  • Imperfect Competition (Unit 4) uses elasticity constantly. A monopolist never produces on the inelastic part of its demand curve, and the total revenue test from Topic 2.3 explains why.
  • The deadweight loss and surplus analysis from government intervention returns in Market Failure and the Role of Government (Unit 6), where taxes and subsidies become tools to fix externalities instead of distortions. Factor Markets (Unit 5) reuses the whole model with labor, where a minimum wage is just a price floor in the labor market.

Key models and graphs to know

  • The supply and demand graph is the workhorse. Label price on the vertical axis, quantity on the horizontal, and find equilibrium where the curves cross.
  • Double-shift scenarios show what happens when both curves move at once. One of price or quantity changes for sure, and the other is indeterminate without knowing the sizes of the shifts.
  • Consumer and producer surplus areas, usually triangles you compute with (1/2)(base)(height) from a graph or table.
  • The total revenue test, linking PED to whether a price change raises or lowers TR = P × Q.
  • Price ceiling and price floor graphs, showing the resulting shortage or surplus, the transferred surplus, and the deadweight loss triangle.
  • Per-unit tax and subsidy graphs, with the tax wedge between buyer price and seller price, government revenue as a rectangle, and deadweight loss as a triangle.
  • The international trade graph, with a horizontal world price line, imports or exports as the gap between domestic quantity demanded and supplied, and a tariff raising the world price line.
  • Elasticity formulas: PED = %ΔQd / %ΔP, PES = %ΔQs / %ΔP, income elasticity = %ΔQd / %Δincome, cross-price elasticity = %ΔQd of A / %ΔP of B.

Unit 2, Supply and Demand on the AP exam

This unit carries 20-25% of the exam, the largest share of any unit, so expect it everywhere in the multiple-choice section and as a regular anchor for free-response questions. The skills tested map directly to the verbs in the unit. You define and identify (which curve shifts when income falls and the good is inferior), you explain using graphs (why a binding price ceiling causes a shortage and what happens to consumer surplus), and you calculate from a graph or table (elasticity values, surplus areas, tax revenue, deadweight loss).

Free-response questions in AP Micro typically ask you to draw a correctly labeled graph, shift a curve in response to a described shock, and show new equilibrium price and quantity with clear labels. Common setups include a market hit by a supply or demand shock, a per-unit tax where you identify buyer price, seller price, revenue, and deadweight loss, and a trade scenario where a tariff changes domestic price, imports, and surplus areas. Multiple-choice questions lean heavily on shift vs. movement, the total revenue test, interpreting elasticity values, and predicting indeterminate outcomes in double-shift problems. Practice drawing fast, fully labeled graphs; correct labels earn points even when the explanation is brief.

Essential questions

  • How do prices coordinate the decisions of millions of buyers and sellers without anyone being in charge?
  • Why do some price changes barely affect behavior while others change it dramatically, and how do we measure that?
  • When governments intervene in a market with price controls, taxes, or tariffs, who wins, who loses, and what value disappears entirely?
  • Why does opening a market to international trade raise total surplus even though it creates losers within the country?

Key terms to know

  • Law of demand: A rise in a good's own price reduces quantity demanded, moving you along the demand curve.
  • Law of supply: A rise in a good's own price increases quantity supplied, moving you along the supply curve.
  • Determinants of demand: Non-price factors (income, tastes, prices of related goods, expectations, number of buyers) that shift the entire demand curve.
  • Price elasticity of demand: The percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price, measuring buyer responsiveness.
  • Total revenue test: A quick check that uses how total revenue responds to a price change to classify demand as elastic, inelastic, or unit elastic.
  • Cross-price elasticity of demand: The percentage change in quantity demanded of one good divided by the percentage change in the price of another; positive means substitutes, negative means complements.
  • Income elasticity of demand: The percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in income; positive means normal good, negative means inferior good.
  • Consumer surplus: The difference between what buyers are willing to pay and what they actually pay, shown as the area below demand and above price.
  • Producer surplus: The difference between the price sellers receive and their minimum acceptable price, shown as the area above supply and below price.
  • Price ceiling: A legal maximum price that, when set below equilibrium, creates a persistent shortage.
  • Price floor: A legal minimum price that, when set above equilibrium, creates a persistent surplus.
  • Deadweight loss: Total surplus lost when a market produces more or less than the efficient quantity.
  • Tax incidence: How the burden of a tax is split between buyers and sellers, determined by relative elasticities, not by who writes the check.
  • Tariff: A tax on imports that raises the domestic price, generates government revenue, helps domestic producers, and hurts consumers.

Common mix-ups

  • A change in price never shifts that good's own demand or supply curve. Price changes cause movements along a curve; only the non-price determinants shift it.
  • Slope is not elasticity. A linear demand curve has constant slope but elasticity that falls from elastic to inelastic as you move down it.
  • "Surplus" means two different things in this unit. A market surplus is excess quantity supplied at a too-high price. Consumer and producer surplus are measures of benefit, the areas on the graph.
  • Price ceilings go below equilibrium to bind, and price floors go above. A ceiling set above equilibrium or a floor set below it does nothing to the market.

Frequently Asked Questions

What topics are covered in AP Micro Unit 2?

AP Micro Unit 2 covers 9 topics built around the supply and demand model: Demand (2.1), Supply (2.2), Price Elasticity of Demand (2.3), Price Elasticity of Supply (2.4), Other Elasticities (2.5), Market Equilibrium and Consumer and Producer Surplus (2.6), Market Disequilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium (2.7), The Effects of Government Intervention in Markets (2.8), and International Trade and Public Policy (2.9). These topics move from the basics of how supply and demand curves work, through elasticity, all the way to how government policies like taxes, subsidies, and trade restrictions shift market outcomes. See AP Micro Unit 2 for topic-by-topic breakdowns.

How much of the AP Micro exam is Unit 2?

AP Micro Unit 2 makes up 20-25% of the AP exam, making it one of the highest-weighted units on the test. The unit covers supply and demand, price elasticity of demand and supply, market equilibrium, consumer and producer surplus, and the effects of government intervention and international trade. Because this unit carries so much weight, a strong grasp of how supply and demand curves shift, how to calculate and interpret elasticity, and how to identify changes in surplus is essential for a high score.

What's on the AP Micro Unit 2 progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The AP Micro Unit 2 progress check includes both MCQ and FRQ parts that draw directly from this unit's 9 topics. The MCQ section tests your ability to read and shift supply and demand graphs, calculate price elasticity of demand and supply, identify market equilibrium, and analyze consumer surplus and producer surplus. The FRQ part typically asks you to draw a correctly labeled market diagram, show the effects of a shift in supply or demand, and explain changes in equilibrium price and quantity. Government intervention topics, like price ceilings, price floors, taxes, and subsidies from 2.8, are common FRQ targets on the progress check. Practice with these exact topic areas at AP Micro Unit 2 to get comfortable with the question formats before the real thing.

How do I practice AP Micro Unit 2 FRQs?

AP Micro Unit 2 FRQs almost always ask you to draw and label a supply and demand diagram, identify the market equilibrium, and explain how a specific change, like a tax, subsidy, price ceiling, or shift in demand, affects price, quantity, and surplus. The key skill is connecting a written scenario to a correctly labeled graph. To practice effectively, focus on these steps: - Draw supply and demand graphs from scratch for each topic in 2.6 through 2.9. - Practice showing consumer surplus and producer surplus as shaded areas on your diagram. - Work through government intervention scenarios (taxes, subsidies, price controls) from Topic 2.8 and explain deadweight loss. - For elasticity FRQs (Topics 2.3-2.5), practice writing out the formula and interpreting what the coefficient means. Find practice FRQs matched to these topics at AP Micro Unit 2.

Where can I find AP Micro Unit 2 practice questions?

The best place to find AP Micro Unit 2 practice questions, including multiple-choice and FRQ-style problems, is AP Micro Unit 2. That page has resources organized by topic, so you can target supply and demand, price elasticity of demand, market equilibrium, consumer surplus, and government intervention separately or run a full unit practice test. For MCQ practice, focus on questions that ask you to identify the direction of a curve shift, read off equilibrium price and quantity, or interpret an elasticity coefficient. Those formats show up most on the real exam and on the Unit 2 progress check.

How should I study AP Micro Unit 2?

Start with the supply and demand model in Topics 2.1 and 2.2 before moving on to anything else. Every other topic in this unit builds on your ability to draw, shift, and read those curves correctly. Here's a study plan that works: 1. **Build the graph habit first.** Practice drawing supply and demand diagrams from memory, labeling axes, equilibrium price, and equilibrium quantity every time. 2. **Nail elasticity formulas.** Price elasticity of demand (Topic 2.3) and price elasticity of supply (Topic 2.4) require you to calculate a coefficient and interpret it. Write out the formula and do several practice calculations. 3. **Add surplus to your diagrams.** Once you can draw equilibrium, shade in consumer surplus and producer surplus (Topic 2.6). This skill comes up in both MCQs and FRQs. 4. **Work through government interventions.** Taxes, subsidies, price ceilings, and price floors from Topic 2.8 are high-frequency exam topics. For each one, practice showing the before-and-after on a graph and identifying deadweight loss. 5. **Finish with international trade.** Topic 2.9 applies the same surplus analysis to trade scenarios with tariffs and quotas. Since this unit is 20-25% of the exam, time spent here pays off more than almost anywhere else. Use AP Micro Unit 2 to find topic-specific practice as you go.