Supply, Demand, Prices, and Economic Coordination
Supply, demand, prices, and coordination explain how decentralized economies organize exchange under scarcity, interdependence, and incomplete information. This article examines supply as productive capacity shaped by labor, energy, finance, logistics, infrastructure, market structure, and ecological limits; demand as need filtered through income, credit, expectations, public provision, and purchasing power; and prices as signals that both communicate scarcity and ration access. It moves beyond textbook equilibrium to examine elasticity, supply shocks, demand shifts, market power, public goods, externalities, missing prices, and the difference between monetized demand and social need. By connecting supply-demand theory with Python, R, Stata, SQL, and Julia workflows, the article frames economic coordination as an institutional, distributional, and ecological problem—not merely the meeting of curves.









