The Prize Puzzle — What Drives the Market — RBSE Class 9 (Social Science · NCF)
Why does a plate of tomatoes cost ₹20 one week and ₹80 the next, without anyone "deciding" it? No single person sets that price — yet it changes in a way that feels almost intelligent. The answer is the quiet, powerful dance of demand and supply in a market. This theme solves that everyday puzzle: what actually drives a price?
1. What is a market?
A market is any arrangement that brings buyers and sellers together to exchange goods and services. It need not be a physical place — a village mandi, a shop, and an online app are all markets. In a market, buyers want to pay as little as possible and sellers want to charge as much as possible; the price is where they meet.
Money — the medium of exchange
Long ago, people used the barter system — directly exchanging goods (grain for cloth). But barter needed a "double coincidence of wants" (each person must want exactly what the other offers), which was difficult. Money solved this: it is a common medium of exchange everyone accepts, making buying and selling — and measuring value — simple.
2. Demand — the buyers' side
Demand is the quantity of a good that buyers are willing and able to buy at a given price in a given time.
The law of demand: other things being equal, as the price of a good rises, its demand falls, and as the price falls, demand rises. People buy more of a thing when it is cheaper and less when it is dearer. (This is why sales and discounts increase how much people buy.)
Demand also depends on income, tastes, the price of related goods, and expectations.
3. Supply — the sellers' side
Supply is the quantity of a good that sellers are willing and able to offer for sale at a given price in a given time.
The law of supply: other things being equal, as the price of a good rises, its supply rises, and as the price falls, supply falls. Sellers offer more when the price (and profit) is higher. Supply also depends on the cost of production, technology and the number of sellers.
4. How price is determined — the market at work
Demand pulls one way (buyers want low prices) and supply pulls the other (sellers want high prices). The price settles where the two balance — where the quantity buyers want to buy equals the quantity sellers want to sell. This balancing point is called the market price or equilibrium price.
- If the price is too high, sellers offer a lot but few buy → a surplus → price is pushed down.
- If the price is too low, many want to buy but sellers offer little → a shortage → price is pushed up.
So the market keeps adjusting the price until demand and supply match. This is why tomato prices swing: a poor harvest cuts supply (prices rise); a bumper crop raises supply (prices fall); a festival raises demand (prices rise). No one commands it — demand and supply do.
5. The role of price — the market's signal
In a market economy, price is a signal that guides everyone:
- a high price tells producers "make more of this" and buyers "use it carefully";
- a low price tells producers "make less" and buyers "you can use more."
In this way, prices help answer the economy's central questions (what, how and for whom to produce) by coordinating the choices of millions of buyers and sellers — without any central command. But markets are not perfect: prices can leave the poor unable to afford essentials, so governments often step in (with support prices, rationing, or regulation) to protect people — which is why India has a mixed economy (market + government).
6. Closing thought
The "prize puzzle" — how a price is set — has an elegant answer: it is the meeting point of demand and supply. Buyers want low prices, sellers want high ones, and the market price is where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied. A shift in either side (a bad harvest, a festival rush) moves the price, and the price in turn signals everyone what to produce and how much to use. Money makes all this exchange possible, and government steps in where the market alone fails the vulnerable.
For the RBSE board (new NCF Class 9 SST), master what a market is and the role of money, the law of demand and the law of supply, how their interaction sets the market/equilibrium price, and the role of price as a signal (plus why governments intervene). Real examples (like tomato or onion prices) make strong answers.
