Chapter 6 Elasticity and Demand.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 6 Elasticity and Demand.
Advertisements

1 CHAPTER.
4 CHAPTER Elasticity.
Chapter 6: Elasticity.
4 Elasticity Notes and teaching tips: 9, 27, 42, 43, 49, and 63.
The Concept of Elasticity. Elasticity What is the concept and why do we need it? Elasticity is used to measure the effects of changes in economic variables.
Chapter 19: Demand and Supply Elasticity
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Demand, Supply, & Market Equilibrium
Elasticity of Demand and Supply
Elasticity and Its Application
4 ELASTICITY CHAPTER.
Ch. 4: Elasticity. Define, calculate, and explain the factors that influence the price elasticity of demand the cross elasticity of demand the income.
Ch. 4: Elasticity. Define, calculate, and explain the factors that influence the price elasticity of demand the cross elasticity of demand the income.
© 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley CHAPTER 1. © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
Learning Objectives Define and measure elasticity
Elasticity and Its Application
Chapter 2 Supply and Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy
Demand Analysis (Cont.)
Learning Objectives Define and measure elasticity
Managerial Decisions for Firms with Market Power
ELASTICITY 4 CHAPTER. Objectives After studying this chapter, you will be able to  Define, calculate, and explain the factors that influence the price.
Chapter 6 Elasticity Responsiveness of Demand and Supply to Price and Other Influences (Slides with Figures are adopted from Pearson Education, Inc.)
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 3 Quantitative Demand Analysis.
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand
Michael R. Baye, Managerial Economics and Business Strategy, 3e. ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Theory of Consumer Behavior
4 ELASTICITY © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley In Figure 4.1(a), an increase in supply brings  A large fall in price  A small increase in the quantity.
MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS 11th Edition
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Describing Demand Elasticities Chapter 3.
1 Elasticity Chapter 5. 2 ELASTICITY elasticity A general concept used to quantify the response in one variable when another variable changes.
Elasticity of demand.  What elasticity measures?  How the price elasticity formula is applied to measure the elasticity of demand?  The difference.
4 ELASTICITY © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley In Figure 4.1(a), an increase in supply brings  A large fall in price  A small increase in the quantity.
Section 1 Understanding Demand
Lecture two © copyright : qinwang 2013 SHUFE school of international business.
Lecture notes Prepared by Anton Ljutic. © 2004 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited Elasticity CHAPTER FOUR.
ELASTICITY RESPONSIVENESS measures the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good or service to a change in its price. Price Elasticity of Demand.
Demand Elasticity The responsiveness of demand to changes in price E = (%ΔQ)/(%ΔP)=(ΔQ/ΔP)(P/Q) (ΔQ/ΔP) is the inverse of the slope of the demand curve,
1 Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 3 goes with unit 2 Elasticities.
Price Elasticity of Demand and Supply Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary ©2005 South-Western College Publishing.
Elasticity and Demand  Elasticity concept is very important to business decisions.  It measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded to changes in.
1 Elasticity of Demand and Supply CHAPTER 5 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Demand Elasticity The Economic Concept of Elasticity The Price Elasticity of Demand The Cross-Elasticity of Demand Income Elasticity Other Elasticity Measures.
Chapter 4 Elasticities McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
1 Describing Supply and Demand: Elasticities Price Elasticity: Demand  Price elasticity of demand is the percentage change in quantity demanded.
Elasticity and Demand. Price Elasticity of Demand (E) P & Q are inversely related by the law of demand so E is always negative – The larger the absolute.
Chapter 4 Demand Elasticity Managerial Economics: Economic Tools for Today’s Decision Makers, 4/e By Paul Keat and Philip Young Lecturer: KEM REAT Viseth,
3-1 Quantitative Demand Analysis. Overview I. The Elasticity Concept n Own Price Elasticity n Elasticity and Total Revenue n Cross-Price Elasticity n.
Elasticity and its Application CHAPTER 5. In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions: What is elasticity? What kinds of issues can elasticity.
ELASTICITY 4 CHAPTER. Objectives After studying this chapter, you will be able to  Define, calculate, and explain the factors that influence the price.
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply © 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning.
4 Elasticity After studying this chapter you will be able to  Define, calculate, and explain the factors that influence the price elasticity of demand.
Chapter 6 Elasticity and Demand
Chapter 6 Elasticity and Demand
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand
Lecture 6: Elasticity and Demand
Consumer Choice and Elasticity
Chapter 5 Price Elasticity of Demand
Quantitative Demand Analysis
Chapter 6 Elasticity and Demand.
Elasticity and Its Application
Elasticity A measure of the responsiveness of one variable (usually quantity demanded or supplied) to a change in another variable Most commonly used elasticity:
Chapter 6: Elasticity.
EQUATION 3.1 – 3.2 Price elasticity of demand(eP)
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 6 Elasticity and Demand

Price Elasticity of Demand (E) • • P & Q are inversely related by the law of demand so E is always negative The larger the absolute value of E, the more sensitive buyers are to a change in price

Price Elasticity of Demand (E) Table 6.1 Elasticity Responsiveness E Elastic Unitary Elastic Inelastic

Price Elasticity of Demand (E) Percentage change in quantity demanded can be predicted for a given percentage change in price as: %Qd = %P x E Percentage change in price required for a given change in quantity demanded can be predicted as: %P = %Qd ÷ E

Price Elasticity & Total Revenue Table 6.2 Elastic Q-effect dominates Unitary elastic No dominant effect Inelastic P-effect dominates Price rises Price falls TR falls No change in TR TR rises TR rises No change in TR TR falls

Factors Affecting Price Elasticity of Demand Availability of substitutes The better & more numerous the substitutes for a good, the more elastic is demand Percentage of consumer’s budget The greater the percentage of the consumer’s budget spent on the good, the more elastic is demand Time period of adjustment The longer the time period consumers have to adjust to price changes, the more elastic is demand

Calculating Price Elasticity of Demand Price elasticity can be calculated by multiplying the slope of demand (Q/P) times the ratio of price to quantity (P/Q)

Calculating Price Elasticity of Demand Price elasticity can be measured at an interval (or arc) along demand, or at a specific point on the demand curve If the price change is relatively small, a point calculation is suitable If the price change spans a sizable arc along the demand curve, the interval calculation provides a better measure

Computation of Elasticity Over an Interval When calculating price elasticity of demand over an interval of demand, use the interval or arc elasticity formula

Computation of Elasticity at a Point When calculating price elasticity at a point on demand, multiply the slope of demand (Q/P), computed at the point of measure, times the ratio P/Q, using the values of P and Q at the point of measure Method of measuring point elasticity depends on whether demand is linear or curvilinear

Point Elasticity When Demand is Linear  

Point Elasticity When Demand is Linear Compute elasticity using either of the two formulas below which give the same value for E

Point Elasticity When Demand is Curvilinear Compute elasticity using either of two equivalent formulas below

Elasticity (Generally) Varies Along a Demand Curve For linear demand, price and Evary directly The higher the price, the more elastic is demand The lower the price, the less elastic is demand For curvilinear demand, no general rule about the relation between price and quantity

Constant Elasticity of Demand (Figure 6.3)

Computation of Elasticity Over an Interval Marginal revenue (MR) is the change in total revenue per unit change in output Since MR measures the rate of change in total revenue as quantity changes, MR is the slope of the total revenue (TR) curve

Demand & Marginal Revenue (Table 6.3) Unit sales (Q) Price TR = P  Q MR = TR/Q $4.50 1 4.00 2 3.50 3 3.10 4 2.80 5 2.40 6 2.00 7 1.50 $ 0 -- $4.00 $4.00 $7.00 $3.00 $9.30 $2.30 $11.20 $1.90 $12.00 $0.80 $12.00 $0 $10.50 $-1.50

Demand, MR, & TR (Figure 6.4) Panel A Panel B

Demand & Marginal Revenue When inverse demand is linear, P = A + BQ Marginal revenue is also linear, intersects the vertical (price) axis at the same point as demand, & is twice as steep as demand MR = A + 2BQ

Linear Demand, MR, & Elasticity (Figure 6.5)

MR, TR, & Price Elasticity Table 6.4 Marginal revenue Total revenue Price elasticity of demand MR > 0 Elastic (E> 1) MR = 0 Unit elastic (E= 1) MR < 0 Inelastic (E< 1) TR increases as Q increases Elastic (E> 1) TR is maximized Unit elastic (E= 1) TR decreases as Q increases Inelastic (E< 1)

Marginal Revenue & Price Elasticity For all demand & marginal revenue curves, the relation between marginal revenue, price, & elasticity can be expressed as

Income Elasticity Income elasticity (EM) measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded to changes in income, holding the price of the good & all other demand determinants constant Positive for a normal good Negative for an inferior good

Cross-Price Elasticity Cross-price elasticity (EXY) measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded of good X to changes in the price of related good Y, holding the price of good X & all other demand determinants for good X constant Positive when the two goods are substitutes Negative when the two goods are complements

Interval Elasticity Measures To calculate interval measures of income & cross-price elasticities, the following formulas can be employed

Point Elasticity Measures 