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Chapter Elasticity and Its Application 5. Types of Elasticities Generally 3 categories we are concerned about – Price elasticity Own-price: – How quantity.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter Elasticity and Its Application 5. Types of Elasticities Generally 3 categories we are concerned about – Price elasticity Own-price: – How quantity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter Elasticity and Its Application 5

2 Types of Elasticities Generally 3 categories we are concerned about – Price elasticity Own-price: – How quantity demanded changes with the (own) price Cross-price – How quantity demanded changes with another (cross) good’s price changes – Income How quantity demanded changes with a change in your income – Supply elasticity How quantity supplied changes with a change in (own/market) price

3 Table 4.1 Factors That Shift the Demand Curve

4 Own-Price (Demand) Elasiticity Economist use the (own) price elasticity of demand to summarize how responsive quantity demanded is to price Demand curves are not always linear; and responsiveness can change with price

5 The own-price elasticity of demand (d, e) 1 5 (d) Elastic demand: Elasticity > 1 1. an Price Quantity 0 $5 4 1.A 22% increase in price… 2. … leads to a 67% decrease in quantity demanded Demand 100 50 The price elasticity of demand determines whether the demand curve is steep or flat. Note that all percentage changes are calculated using the midpoint method. (e) Perfectly elastic demand: Elasticity equals infinity 1. an Price Quantity 0 Demand $4 1. At any price above $4, quantity demanded is zero 2. At exactly $4, consumers will buy any quantity 3. At any price below $4, quantity demanded is infinite

6 The (own-price) Elasticity of Demand Determinants of (own) price elasticity of demand – Availability of close substitutes Goods with close substitutes – More elastic demand – Necessities vs. luxuries Necessities – inelastic demand Luxuries – elastic demand – Definition of the market Narrowly defined markets – more elastic demand – Time horizon – More elastic over longer time horizons 6

7 The (own-price) Elasticity of Demand Variety of demand curves: own-price (absolute value) – Demand is elastic Elasticity > 1 => ΔQ/Q > ΔP/P raise price => ΔTot Rev < 0 – Demand is inelastic Elasticity ΔQ/Q < ΔP/P raise price => ΔTot Rev > 0 – Demand has unit elasticity Elasticity = 1 => ΔQ/Q = ΔP/P => ΔTot Rev = 0 7

8 The Elasticity of Demand Cigarettes (US) [41] [41] – -0.3 to -0.6 (General) – -0.6 to -0.7 (Youth) – proportion of income? Soft drinks – -0.8 to -1.0 (general) [51] (broadly defined) [51] – -3.8 (Coca-Cola) [52] (narrow)Coca-Cola [52] – -4.4 (Mountain Dew) [52] (narrow)Mountain Dew [52] Car fuel [45] [45] – -0.25 (Short run) (same car – reduce trips) – -0.64 (Long run) (new car?) 8

9 The Elasticity of Demand Total revenue – Amount paid by buyers – Received by sellers of a good – Computed as: price of the good times the quantity sold (P ˣ Q) 9

10 Figure Total revenue 2 10 1. an P Q P ˣ Q=$400 (revenue) Quantity 0 Demand Price The total amount paid by buyers, and received as revenue by sellers, equals the area of the box under the demand curve, P × Q. Here, at a price of $4, the quantity demanded is 100, and total revenue is $400. 100 $4

11 The Elasticity of Demand When demand is inelastic – Price and total revenue move in the same direction When demand is elastic – Price and total revenue move in opposite directions If demand is unit elastic – Total revenue remains constant when the price changes 11

12 The Elasticity of Demand Elasticity and total revenue along a linear demand curve Linear demand curve – Constant slope – Different elasticities Points with low price & high quantity – Inelastic Points with high price & low quantity – Elastic 12

13 Figure Elasticity of a linear demand curve (graph) 4 13 1. an Quantity 0 Price Demand $7 14 6 5 4 3 2 1 2 4 6 8 10 12 Elasticity is larger than 1 Elasticity is smaller than 1 The slope of a linear demand curve is constant, but its elasticity is not. The demand schedule in the table was used to calculate the price elasticity of demand by the midpoint method. At points with a low price and high quantity, the demand curve is inelastic. At points with a high price and low quantity, the demand curve is elastic.

14 Figure Elasticity of a linear demand curve (schedule) 4 14 The slope of a linear demand curve is constant, but its elasticity is not. The demand schedule in the table was used to calculate the price elasticity of demand by the midpoint method. At points with a low price and high quantity, the demand curve is inelastic. At points with a high price and low quantity, the demand curve is elastic. PriceQuantity Total revenue (Price ˣ Quantity) Percentage Change in Price Percentage Change in QuantityElasticityDescription $7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 O 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 $0 12 20 24 20 12 0 15 18 22 29 40 67 200 67 40 29 22 18 15 13.0 3.7 1.8 1.0 0.6 0.3 0.1 Elastic Unit elastic Inelastic

15 Figure The Elasticity of Demand Income elasticity of demand – Measure of how much the quantity demanded of a good responds To a change in consumers’ income – Percentage change in quantity demanded Divided by the percentage change in income – Normal goods: positive income elasticity Necessities: smaller income elasticities (~0, <1) Luxuries: large income elasticities ( > 1) – Inferior goods: negative income elasticities (<0) 15

16 Figure The Elasticity of Demand Cross-price elasticity of demand – Measure of how much the quantity demanded of one good responds To a change in the price of another/different good – [∆Qx/Qx] / [∆Py/Py ] – Sign matters -> tells whether substitute or complement Magnitude ( 1) -> how “good” a substitute/essential a complement – Substitutes: Positive cross-price elasticity >1 -> “close” or good substitute as big shift with small price change – Complements: Negative cross-price elasticity >1 -> “essential” to be used/consumed together (cars and gas) 16

17 Figure Table 4.2 Factors That Shift the Supply Curve


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