supply side
(noun)
in a market trade, the side where the supply comes from
Examples of supply side in the following topics:
-
SIVA: Solution, Incentive/Information, Value, and Access
- Customer-focused marketing is known as SIVA which provides a demand-centric alternative to the four P's supply side of marketing management.
- The SIVA Model provides a demand and customer-centric alternative to the well-known four Ps supply side model (product, price, placement, promotion) of marketing management.
- Reconstruct the "Four "Ps" supply side model (product, price, placement and promotion ) to create "SIVA" (solution, information/incentives, value and access), a customer centric alternative
-
Defining Unemployment
- Demand side solutions: many countries aid unemployed workers through social welfare programs.
- An example of a demand side solution is government funded employment of the able-bodied poor.
- Supply side solutions: the labor market is not 100% efficient.
- Supply side solutions remove the minimum wage and reduce the power of unions.
- Examples of supply side solutions include cutting taxes on businesses, reducing regulation, and increasing education.
-
Supply Schedules and Supply Curves
- A supply schedule is a tabular depiction of the relationship between price and quantity supplied, represented graphically as a supply curve.
- The supply curve is a graphical depiction of the supply schedule that illustrates that relationship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied .
- The supply curves of individual suppliers can be summed to determine aggregate supply.
- One can use the supply schedule to do this: for a given price, find the corresponding quantity supplied for each individual supply schedule and then sum these quantities to provide a group or aggregate supply.
- The supply curve provides one side of the price-to-quantity relationship that ensures a functional market.
-
Blood Supply to the Lungs
- Pulmonary circulation refers to blood supply to the lungs for the purpose of gas exchange.
- Systemic circulation refers to blood supply to the rest of the body, for the purpose of supplying oxygen to the tissues.
- The right side of the heart deals with pulmonary circulation.
- Capillaries are the thinnest and smallest type of blood vessel, and they supply oxygen to individual tissues everywhere in the human body.
- As the veins of the leg are on their way to the right side of the heart, the clots are less likely to break up before they reach pulmonary circulation.
-
Supply of Blood and Nerves to Bone
- The blood and nerve supply to bones are carried in Haversian canals which run along the long axis of bones.
- The vascular supply of long bones depends on several points of inflow, which feed complex sinusoidal networks within the bone.
- Volkmann's canals are channels that assist with blood and nerve supply from the periosteum to the Haversian canal.
- Epiphyseal and metaphyseal arteries enter on both sides of the growth cartilage, with anastamoses between them being few or absent.
- Growth cartilage receives its blood supply from both sources and also from an anastamotic collar in the adjoining perichondrium.
-
Arch of the Aorta
- The arch of the aorta follows the ascending aorta and begins at the level of the second sternocostal articulation of the right side.
- The arch of the aorta, or the transverse aortic arch, is continuous with the upper border of the ascending aorta and begins at the level of the upper border of the second sternocostal articulation of the right side.
- The arch of the aorta runs at first upward, backward, and to the left in front of the trachea; it is then directed backward on the left side of the trachea, and it finally passes downward on the left side of the body of the fourth thoracic vertebra.
- These vessels supply blood to the head, neck, thorax and upper limbs.
-
Control of the Money Supply
- A nation's money supply is determined by the monetary policy actions of its central bank.
- A nation's money supply is determined by the monetary policy actions of its central bank.
- In determining a nation's money supply, its central bank first sets the supply of the monetary base and upholds certain restrictions on the value of assets and liabilities held by smaller commercial banks.
- The value of the money supply is determined by themoney multiplier and the monetary base.
- The Keynesian side points to a major example of ineffectiveness of open market operations encountered in 2008 in the United States, when short-term interest rates went as low as they could go in nominal terms, so that no more monetary stimulus could occur.
-
Lumbar Plexus
- Iliohypogastric nerve: Runs anterior to the psoas major on its proximal lateral border to run laterally and obliquely on the anterior side of quadratus lumborum.
- Genitofemoral nerve: It pierces the psoas major anteriorly, below the former two nerves to immediately split into two branches that run downward on the anterior side of the muscle.
- Lateral cutaneous femoral nerve: Pierces the psoas major on its lateral side and runs obliquely downward below the iliac fascia.
- In the thigh, it briefly passes under the fascia lata before it breaches the fascia and supplies the skin of the anterior thigh.
- These branches are separated by the adductor brevis and supply all thigh adductors with motor innervations.
-
Factors that Shift Demand and Supply Functions
- Many factors influence supply and demand functions for foreign exchange rates.
- On the other side of the border, the U.S. citizens buy more domestic goods, decreasing their demand for Mexican goods.
- Hence, the supply for U.S. dollars decreases and shifts leftward.
- Supply and demand analysis could be ambiguous in some cases.
- The Federal Reserve increases the supply of dollars on the exchange market
-
The Money Supply Multipliers
- Unfortunately, a contracting money supply could trigger a recession.
- Money multiplier equals the ratio between the money supply and the monetary base.
- First, we start with the equation M1 = M1 and on the righthand side, multiply and divide by the monetary base, shown as Equation 10.
- Banks can weaken the ratio between the monetary base and money supply.
- We derive the money supply multiplier for M2 similarly.