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Substitutes and Complements: How Related Goods Move Together

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 10, 20263 min read
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When Netflix raises its monthly subscription price, some subscribers cancel and sign up for Hulu — a substitute. When the price of gaming consoles rises sharply, demand for video games falls even if game prices are unchanged — because consoles and games are complements. The price change happened in a different product, but demand shifted in yours. This is the substitutes-and-complements relationship, and every firm competing in a multi-product market navigates it constantly.

The quick distinction

Substitutes are goods that satisfy similar needs and can replace each other. When the price of one rises, consumers shift toward the other — demand for the substitute increases. Examples: Coke and Pepsi, butter and margarine, cable TV and streaming services, gasoline and electric vehicle charging.

Complements are goods typically consumed together. When the price of one rises, consumption of both tends to fall because the pair is less affordable or attractive in combination. Examples: cars and gasoline, printers and ink cartridges, smartphones and phone cases, coffee and cream.

Substitutes Complements
Consumed Alternatively Together
Cross-price effect Price of A rises → demand for B rises Price of A rises → demand for B falls
Cross-price elasticity Positive Negative

Substitutes, explained

The closer two goods are in function, the stronger the substitution effect. Branded and generic pharmaceuticals are near-perfect substitutes once a drug goes off-patent — demand shifts sharply toward generics when the branded version is more expensive. The FDA's data on generic drug market share shows that generic drugs rapidly capture 80–90 percent of prescription volume once they enter — a direct expression of strong substitution.

Complements, explained

Complement relationships define entire industry structures. The Bureau of Economic Analysis industry accounts show that vehicle and petroleum product demand move together across economic cycles — both are complements to mobility, and a shock to either affects the other. When gasoline prices spiked in 2008, demand for large vehicles fell sharply — not just because SUVs were expensive, but because the operating cost of the car-gasoline complement bundle made large vehicles less attractive overall.

How to keep them straight

Ask: if the price of Good A rises, what happens to demand for Good B?

  • Demand for B rises → B is a substitute for A
  • Demand for B falls → B is a complement to A
  • Demand for B is unchanged → the goods are unrelated

Cross-price elasticity (the formal measure) gives a positive number for substitutes and a negative number for complements, making the classification precise and measurable.

◆ Sources

  1. Generic Drug Facts — U.S. Food and Drug Administration
  2. Industry Economic Accounts — Bureau of Economic Analysis
  3. Substitute Good — Investopedia
  4. Complementary Good — Investopedia
  5. Demand — Library of Economics and Liberty
Microeconomics GlossaryPart 14 of 129
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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