By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain what a market is and the role of money as a medium of exchange
  • 2State the law of demand and the law of supply
  • 3Explain how the interaction of demand and supply determines the market price
  • 4Explain surplus and shortage and how the market corrects them
  • 5Explain the role of price as a signal and why governments intervene in markets
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Why this chapter matters
Demand, supply and price are the core mechanism of every market and explain real events students see (rising onion/tomato prices). This NCF economics theme reliably gives the RBSE board a law-of-demand/supply or price-determination question.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

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.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Market
Arrangement bringing buyers and sellers together to exchange
Need not be a physical place.
Money
A common medium of exchange (solves barter's double coincidence of wants)
Makes exchange and pricing easy.
Law of demand
Price ↑ → demand ↓; price ↓ → demand ↑ (other things equal)
Buyers' side.
Law of supply
Price ↑ → supply ↑; price ↓ → supply ↓ (other things equal)
Sellers' side.
Equilibrium price
Price where quantity demanded = quantity supplied
The market/equilibrium price.
Surplus / shortage
Price too high → surplus (price falls); too low → shortage (price rises)
Market self-corrects.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Swapping the law of demand and the law of supply
Demand moves OPPOSITE to price (price up → demand down). Supply moves WITH price (price up → supply up).
WATCH OUT
Saying a single seller or the government fixes the market price
In a market, no one person sets the price — it emerges where demand and supply balance (the equilibrium price).
WATCH OUT
Confusing a shortage with a surplus
A price that is too LOW creates a shortage (buyers want more than is supplied). A price that is too HIGH creates a surplus (more is supplied than bought).
WATCH OUT
Forgetting the role of money vs barter
Barter needed a double coincidence of wants; money is a common medium of exchange that removes this problem and makes trade easy.
WATCH OUT
Assuming markets always serve everyone well
Markets can leave the poor unable to afford essentials, so governments intervene (support prices, rationing, regulation) — India has a mixed economy.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Definition
What is a market in economics?
Show solution
Any arrangement that brings buyers and sellers together to exchange goods and services (not necessarily a physical place). ✦ Answer: an arrangement connecting buyers and sellers to exchange.
Q2EASY· Money
What problem of the barter system does money solve?
Show solution
The 'double coincidence of wants' — the need for each person to want exactly what the other offers. ✦ Answer: it removes the need for a double coincidence of wants.
Q3EASY· Law
State the law of demand.
Show solution
Other things being equal, as the price of a good rises its demand falls, and as the price falls its demand rises. ✦ Answer: demand falls when price rises and rises when price falls.
Q4MEDIUM· Laws
How do demand and supply respond differently to a rise in price?
Show solution
Step 1 — By the law of demand, a rise in price REDUCES the quantity demanded (buyers buy less). Step 2 — By the law of supply, a rise in price INCREASES the quantity supplied (sellers offer more). ✦ Answer: a price rise lowers demand but raises supply.
Q5MEDIUM· Equilibrium
What is the equilibrium (market) price?
Show solution
Step 1 — It is the price at which the quantity that buyers want to buy equals the quantity that sellers want to sell. Step 2 — At this price the market is balanced — there is neither a surplus nor a shortage. ✦ Answer: the price where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied.
Q6MEDIUM· Surplus/shortage
What happens if the price of a good is set too high?
Show solution
Step 1 — At a high price, sellers supply a lot but few buyers are willing to buy. Step 2 — This creates a surplus (unsold goods), which pushes the price back down towards equilibrium. ✦ Answer: a surplus forms, and the price falls towards equilibrium.
Q7HARD· Application
Using demand and supply, explain why tomato prices shoot up when there is a poor harvest.
Show solution
Step 1 — A poor harvest reduces the SUPPLY of tomatoes reaching the market. Step 2 — With demand roughly the same but fewer tomatoes available, buyers compete for the limited supply. Step 3 — This pushes the price up until the higher price reduces demand enough to match the smaller supply. ✦ Answer: reduced supply against steady demand raises the price until the two balance again.
Q8HARD· Role of price
How does price act as a signal in a market economy?
Show solution
Step 1 — A high price signals producers to make MORE of a good (it is profitable) and tells buyers to use it carefully. Step 2 — A low price signals producers to make LESS and tells buyers they can use more. Step 3 — In this way prices coordinate the decisions of countless buyers and sellers, helping decide what, how and for whom to produce — without central command. ✦ Answer: prices signal producers how much to make and buyers how much to use, coordinating the economy.
Q9HARD· Government
Why do governments sometimes interfere with market prices? Give examples.
Show solution
Step 1 — Markets driven purely by demand and supply can push essential goods out of the reach of the poor, or leave farmers with unfairly low prices. Step 2 — So governments intervene to protect people — e.g. minimum support prices for farmers' crops, subsidised food through the public distribution system (ration shops), and regulation of prices of essentials. Step 3 — This mix of market and government action is why India is called a mixed economy. ✦ Answer: to protect the poor and producers from unfair prices — via support prices, rationing and regulation (a mixed economy).

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • A market brings buyers and sellers together to exchange (not always a physical place).
  • Money is a common medium of exchange; it removes barter's double coincidence of wants.
  • Law of demand: price ↑ → demand ↓; price ↓ → demand ↑.
  • Law of supply: price ↑ → supply ↑; price ↓ → supply ↓.
  • Market/equilibrium price = where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied.
  • Price too high → surplus (falls); too low → shortage (rises); the market self-corrects.
  • Price is a signal: guides producers how much to make and buyers how much to use.
  • Governments intervene (support prices, rationing, regulation) → India is a mixed economy.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4–5 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / very short11–2Market, money, laws of demand/supply
Short answer2–31–2Demand vs supply; equilibrium; surplus/shortage
Long answer40–1Applying demand-supply to price changes; role of price/government
Prep strategy
  • Keep the law of demand (opposite to price) and law of supply (with price) clear
  • Understand equilibrium as demand = supply and how surplus/shortage self-correct
  • Practise explaining real price swings (tomatoes, onions) with demand and supply
  • Note the role of price as a signal and why governments intervene

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Everyday prices

Demand and supply explain why vegetable, fuel and gold prices rise and fall.

Farmers and MSP

Minimum Support Prices protect farmers from very low market prices — a real government intervention.

Shopping and sales

Discounts (lower prices) raise demand — the law of demand in action.

Business pricing

Firms set prices by reading demand and supply and the cost of production.

Public distribution

Ration shops supply subsidised food so essentials stay affordable for the poor.

Understanding inflation

Rising overall prices are demand-and-supply changes across many markets.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. State the laws of demand and supply precisely (opposite vs with price).
  2. Define equilibrium as demand = supply and explain surplus/shortage.
  3. Use a real example (tomato/onion prices) to explain price changes.
  4. Explain price as a signal to producers and buyers.
  5. For government-intervention answers, name concrete tools (MSP, ration shops).
  6. Mention India's mixed economy where relevant.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Drawing and reading demand and supply curves and their intersection.
  • Shifts in demand/supply vs movements along the curve.
  • Price elasticity — how strongly quantity responds to price.
  • Market failures and why governments regulate (public goods, externalities).

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

RBSE Class 9 Board/Annual (BSER Ajmer)High — demand, supply and price determination most years
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — economics MCQs
Commerce / CA FoundationHigh — micro-economics of demand and supply
UPSC / State PCSMedium — market economics and price policy

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

From 2026-27, RBSE Class 9 SST follows the new NCF-SE-2023 integrated book 'Understanding Society: India and Beyond'. 'The Prize Puzzle — What Drives the Market' is an economics theme in it. RBSE (BSER Ajmer) sets the exam pattern and marking.

The law of demand says demand moves opposite to price — when price rises, buyers demand less. The law of supply says supply moves with price — when price rises, sellers offer more. Their opposite pulls meet at the market price.

It is set where demand and supply balance — the price at which the quantity buyers want to buy equals the quantity sellers want to sell (the equilibrium price). No single person fixes it; it emerges from the interaction of many buyers and sellers.

Because their supply changes with the harvest and weather while demand stays fairly steady. A poor harvest cuts supply and raises prices; a bumper crop increases supply and lowers prices; festivals raise demand and prices. It is demand and supply at work.

Because pure market prices can make essentials unaffordable for the poor or leave farmers with unfairly low prices. So the government uses support prices, subsidised food through ration shops, and regulation to protect people — making India a mixed economy of market plus government.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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