Title: Chapter Four: Demand or Knowing Your Customer
1Chapter Four Demandor Knowing Your Customer
- Demand Function The relation between demand and
factors influencing its level. - Quantity of product X demanded Qx
- f(Price of X, Prices of Related Goods, Consumer
Income, Advertising Expenditure, etc.)
2The Market Demand Function, cont.
- The model
- Qx a0 a1Px a2Pz a3Y a4POP a5i a6AD
e - The terms a0 , a1 , etc. are the parameters of
the model. - This is what we need to estimate.
- Estimation of the model
- Q 100 -.002Px .001Pz .00008Y .22POP
-800i .002A - Interpretation of the model
- If the average price increases by 1, the demand
for the product falls by .002 units
3The Demand Curve
- Demand Curve The relation between price and the
quantity demanded, holding all else constant. - General Form P a bQ
- Why is this the general form?
- Moving from the Demand Function to the Demand
Curve.
4Connecting the Curve to the Function
- Changes in quantity demanded movement along a
given demand curve reflecting a change in price
and quantity. - Shift in demand Switch from one demand curve to
another following a change in a non-price
determinant of demand - IF AN INDEPENDENT VARIABLE CHANGES, OTHER THAN
PRICE OF THE GOOD, YOU MUST DRAW A NEW DEMAND
CURVE!!!
5Demand Analysis and Estimation
- Demand Sensitivity Analysis Elasticity
- Price Elasticity of Demand
- Cross Price Elasticity of Demand
- Income Elasticity of Demand
- Additional Demand Elasticity Concepts
6Demand Sensitivity Analysis Elasticity
- Elasticity The percentage change in a dependent
variable resulting from a 1 change in an
independent variable. - Elasticity change in Y / change in X
- ELASTICITY IS A RATIO!!!
7Price Elasticity of Demand
- Price Elasticity of Demand (Own-Price)
- Measure of the magnitude by which consumers alter
the quantity of some product they purchase in
response to a change in the price of that
product. - Responsiveness of the quantity demanded to
changes in the price of the product, holding
constant the values of all other variables in the
demand function. - Estimating from the Demand Function.
- Estimating from the Demand Curve.
8Own Price Elasticity and the Demand Curve
- Own-price elasticity
- ?Q / ?P
- How does elasticity vary along a linear demand
curve? - The upper half of a linear demand curve is
elastic. - The lower half of a linear demand curve is
inelastic. - BE ABLE TO EXPLAIN WHY!!!
- The search for substitutes as price increases
- Big number, small number explanation
- Calculating elasticity at the midpoint.
9Elasticity and Total Revenue
- Connecting Elasticity to Total Revenue
- If change in Q gt change in P
- decreasing the price will increase TR
- and marginal revenue must be positive.
- If change in Q lt change in P
- increasing the price will increase TR
- and marginal revenue must be negative.
- BE ABLE TO ILLUSTRATE THE RELATIONSHIP
10Optimal Pricing Policy
- MR P 1 1/EP
- Be able to show why this relationship exists.
- To maximize profits MR MC
- MC P 11/EP
- P MC / 1 1/EP
- LI P-MC /P
- Allows us to see the market power of the firm, or
the ability of the firm to influence the price of
the product. - LI 1/EP
- Be able to show why this relationship exists.
- PUNCHLINE If elasticity increases, mark-up will
decline. If the product becomes less elastic,
mark-up will increase.
11Determinants of Price Elasticity
- The extent the good is considered a necessity.
- Proportion of income spent on the product
- Time
- Availability of substitutes
- HINT The fourth determinant encompasses the
first three.
12Cross Price Elasticity of DemandSubstitutes vs.
Complements
- Substitutes products for which a price increase
for one leads to an increase in demand for the
other. - NOTE Two goods are substitutes only if the
consumer behavior indicates this relationship. - Complements products for which a price increase
for one leads to a decrease in demand for the
other.
13Cross- Price Elasticity
- Responsiveness of demand for one product to
changes in the price of another. - Calculating from the Demand Function
- Note We already know if two goods are
substitutes or complements from the demand
function. We do not know the magnitude of the
relationship without calculating elasticity.
14Income ElasticityNormal vs. Inferior Goods
- Normal Goods products for which demand is
positively related to income. - Inferior Goods products for which demand is
negatively related to income. - Note What is normal or inferior can vary across
time and geographic distance.
15Income Elasticity
- Responsiveness of demand to changes in income.
- Calculating from the Demand Function
- Note We already know if two goods are normal or
inferior from the demand function. We do not
know the magnitude of the relationship without
calculating elasticity.
16Income Elasticity and the Business Cycle
- Counter-cyclical goods inferior goods
- During recessions demand will increase.
- During expansion demand will decrease.
- Non-cyclical normal goods income elasticity is
less than 1. - Cyclical normal goods superior goods luxury
goods income elasticity is greater than 1.
17Additional Demand Elasticity Concepts
- Advertising Elasticity
- Interest Rate Elasticity
- Weather Elasticity
- Any factor that can be included in a demand
function can be analyzed in terms of elasticity.
18Rationality and Consumer Behavior
- Rationality economic actors choose efficiently
the means that advance the actors objectives. - Milton Friedman hypothesized that a researcher
could explain the shots of an expert billiard
player by assuming the player understood the
complex physical relationships underlying his/her
actions. However, one would not expect that
billiard players to be experts at physics, rather
a researcher would be successful in his/her
predictions simply because it would not be
possible for billiard players to excel in this
sport if the shots taken were not consistent with
said physical relationships Friedman 21 A
similar analogy, according to Friedman, can be
offered with respect to economic agents.
Although one may not expect the average economic
actor to understand complex economic
relationships, a successful player in the
economic world cannot obtain his/her status
without behaving in a fashion consistent with the
dictates of economic data. In other words,
economic agents must process information
efficiently if the agent is to survive Friedman
21-22.
19How rational are we?
- A Simple Example
- Choose a value between 0 and 100 that is one-half
the average values chosen by everyone else in a
class.
20Framing
- Framing evaluating information in terms of a
point of reference. - Example The Ultimate Game
- Example In five pages of text, how many words
finish ...ing.? How many words have an n as
the second to last letter? - Which is more common, murder or suicide?
21Anchoring and Adjustment
- People tend to be overly tied to initial
estimates and are slow to adjust. - Example Calculate each very quickly
- 1 X 2 X 3 X 4 X 5 X 6 X 7 X 8
- 8 X 7 X 6 X 5 X 4 X 3 X 2 X 1
- Example Drafting NBA players
- Colin Camerer and Roberto Weber examined the
relationship between draft position and minutes
played (holding productivity constant). Several
years into a players career draft position still
impacted how many minutes a player played. In
other words, years of less productive play did
not convince coaches that the initial assessment
was flawed.
22Market Research
- Primary Data Data generated from surveys.
- Focus Groups, Surveys, Experiments
- Secondary Data Data gathered for one purpose
yet used for another. - Sales, Price, Income, etc..
- The problem with primary data is that it only
captures what people say, not what they do.