jalen said:
-demand decrease, supply increase
Why does demand decrease? Declining population?
-price decrease, quantity/supply increase, demand increase (shifts right)
Why does demand shift right? Does population suddenly start to increase?
You need to look at the supply-demand diagram carefully. The axes are price and quantity. If anything happens to either of these variables you can see it on the diagram. And, as far as this diagram is concerned, the only way in which the equilibrium price or quantity can change is through a change in the positioning of the demand curve, or a change in the positioning of the supply curve, or both. Can you see why? (Where does the equilibrium occur? Fix your eye on that point on the diagram. Now try to imagine that point "moving around." How can you get that point move around? [Answer: by moving either the demand curve, or by moving the supply curve, or by moving by both curves.])
That doesn't mean that demand and supply are determined by price only. There may be 1,000 other factors influencing demand (population, income, income distribution, etc.) and 2,000 other factors influencing supply (technology, land, entrepreneurship, etc.). Each of these additional factors determine the positioning of the D curve and the S curve on the diagram. We cannot see those factors on the diagram, except indirectly through the placement (positioning) of the D and the S curves on the diagram. Although we cannot see these factors, we can represent the effect of a CHANGE in any of these factors on the D and/or the S curve, depending on whether the factor that is changing is a D factor or an S factor.
For example, if population increases, it is likely that the D curve will shift to the right. (What happens to equilibrium price and quantity?) If there are technological improvements then it is likely that the S curve will shift to the right. (What happens to equilibrium price and quantity?)
Given these right-shifts in both of the D and the S curves, how do you interpret the statement "grain production methods and increased acreage have more that offset population increases"? What does this statement imply in terms of the shift in the D curve and the shift in the S curve? Which one was greater (more of a shift)? What is the net effect on price after both shifts? Why?