Title: Elasticity of Supply and Demand
1Elasticity of Supply and Demand
2Elasticity
- Elasticity shows us how responsive the amount we
want to buy to a change in price level. - Sensitivity.
3Price Elasticity of Demand
- A measure that indicates the degree of consumer
response to a price change. - percentage change in quantity demanded divided by
percentage change in price
4Percentage change
- So if the initial Quantity demanded is 95, and
new Quantity demanded is 105, how should we
calculate the percentage change here? - If the initial price is 55 and the new price is
45, how should we calculate the percentage change
here?
54.1.2 Elasticity Calculation
Ed is typically negative for goods that follow
the law of demand
6How to interpret the elasticity coefficient
- if ?E? 1, demand (supply) is elastic
- if ?E?
- if ?E? 1, demand (supply is unitary elastic
-
7Figure 4 Elasticity and Straight-Line Demand
Curves
3
2
1
D
8Question Which is more elastic, the demand for
cigarettes or the demand for potato chips?
(b)
D
D
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10Determinants of price elasticity
- The availability of substitutes
- Narrowness of Market
- The Time Horizon
- Importance in the Buyers Budget
114.3 Elasticity and total revenue
- Total revenue (TR) of all firms in the market is
defined as - TR P x QD
- As P and QD change, TR changes
- Change in TR Change in Price Change in
Quantity Demanded
12Elasticity and total revenue
- if ?ED? 1, demand is elastic
- ??Q? ??P?
- Change in TR Change in Price Change in
Quantity Demanded - as P increases TR decreases, as P falls, TR
increases. - e.g. When JC-Penny has a sale, they hope that
demand is elastic
13Elasticity and total revenue
- if ?ED?
- ??Q?
- Change in TR Change in Price Change in
Quantity Demanded - as P increases TR increases, as P falls, TR
decreases. - e.g. Industry of laptop, drugs
14Figure 6 Elasticity and Total Revenue
B
A
D
15Elasticity and total revenue
- if ?ED? 1, demand is unitary elastic
- ??Q? ??P?
- Change in TR Change in Price Change in
Quantity Demanded - So the change in price is offset by the
- change in quantity.
16How Total Revenue Changes Along a Demand Curve
Elastic range ED 1
ED 1
Inelastic range ED Q0
Q0
(b)
(a)
174.4 Price Elasticity of Supply
- Percentage change in quantity of a good supplied
that is caused by a 1 change in the price of the
good - With all other influences on supply held constant
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19Price Elasticity of Supply
- Similarly, we say
- if ?ES? 1, supply is elastic
- if ?ES?
- if ?ES? 1, supply is unitary elastic
Be careful, ES is always be positive. That is,
as P increases, quantity supplied increases
20Income Elasticity of Demand
- Percentage change in quantity demanded divided by
the percentage change in income - With all other influences on demandincluding the
price of the goodremaining constant
Interpret this number as percentage increase
in quantity demanded for each 1 rise in income
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22Normal v.s. inferior
- EY 0 As Y increases, Q increases (NORMAL
GOOD) - EY GOOD)
23Income Elasticity of Demand
- Economic necessity
- Good with an income elasticity of demand between
0 and 1 - Economic luxury
- Good with an income elasticity of demand greater
than 1
24MATCHING packet p111
- Tobacco Products 2.6
- New Furniture -.6
- Macaroni Noodles 3.4
- Mink Coats .21
25- An implication follows from these definitions
- As income rises, proportion of income spent on
economic necessities will fall - While proportion of income spent on economic
luxuries will rise - But, it is important to remember that economic
necessities and luxuries are categorized by
actual consumer behavior - Not by our judgment of a goods importance to
human survival
26Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand
- Cross-price elasticity of demand
- Percentage change in quantity demanded of one
good caused by a 1 change in price of another
good - While all other influences on demand remain
unchanged
- the sign of the cross-price elasticity helps us
distinguish substitutes and complements among
related goods
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28Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand
- If EXZ0, as the price of the related good
increases, the demand of X increases - Substitutes in consumption
- If EXZ increases, the demand of X decreases
- Complements in consumption
- Its size tells us how closely the two goods are
related - A large absolute value for EXZ suggests that the
two goods are close substitutes or complements - While a small value suggests a weaker
relationship
29Guess it!
- EXZ between heroin and cocaine
- (EXZ 0 substitutes)
- EXZ between heroin and marijuana
- (almost 0 no relationship)
- EXZ between cigarettes and marijuana
- (EXZ
- EXZ between cigarettes and alcohol
- (EXZ
30Example for cross-price elasticity of supply p112
- The price of apple juice increases from 2.50
to 5.00 and the demand of apple Sauce rises from
500 to 600 units. What is EXZ?
- Since EXZ0, the goods are substitutes in
- consumption. Since EXZ
- inelastic
31Comparison of Elasticity