Alright. Let's check out this example. After Clutchtopia introduced its free pizza for everybody policy, immigration to the awesome country skyrocketed, doubling its population. What happens to the demand for bar soap in Clutchtopia? So it seems kind of random, but the idea here is there are more consumers. The population of Clutchtopia doubled, so you can imagine that people are going to be buying more bar soap just because there are more people there. So, you're seeing the number of consumers increasing; therefore, the demand is increasing. So there are more consumers, and the demand is going to increase. Alright, so this was d1 right here, our price and quantity axes in alphabetical order, and let's go ahead and shift this demand curve to the right. So which way are we going to shift? This was a good thing for bar soap, right? The number of consumers increased for bar soap, so it's a good thing for bar soap. Let's go ahead and draw this graph to the right. So we have shifted to the right here to demand d2, and you can see that we've moved to the right.
Cool. Pretty easy, right? This one is easy. It's straightforward. The number of consumers goes up, the demand is going to go up. Alright. Cool. Let's move on.