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Elasticity: Measures impact of changes in:

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1 Elasticity: Measures impact of changes in:
Chapter 5: Elasticity Elasticity: Measures impact of changes in: Price (own & related goods) Income Supply (factors)

2 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

3 Movement along the Demand Curve
Variables that affect quantity demanded/movement of the demand curve Own-Price of the Good (movement along D) Price of Related Goods and Future Price of the Good Income For now: Focus only movement along the D curve Due to a change in the good’s price (its own price)

4 Movement along the Demand Curve
First: measuring how much quantity demanded changes when price changes Why use the percentage change, rather than just the slope: What if the demand curve is non-linear (curved) - > slope is not constant What if the way price is measured changes? Measuring in cents rather than $ -> slope will be 100 x greater in cents $ or Euros -> slope will be different by exchange ratio

5 A Better Measure: Percentage Change
Price Elasticity of Demand = - 50% / + 20%   = (-) 2.5

6 The Elasticity of Demand (Own-Price)
What does the demand elasticity tell us Demand is elastic Elasticity > |1| (< -1) % Change in Qty Demanded is very price responsive Small increases -> large decreases in Qd and Revenues Small decreases -> large increases in Qd and Revenues Demand is unit elastic Elasticity = |1| (=-1) % change in Qd = % change in price -> no change in Revenues with price increases or decreases Demand is inelastic Elasticity < |1| (-1 < έ < 0) % Change in Qty Demanded is not very price responsive Increases in price -> little change in Qd and larger increases in Revenu Decreases -> little change in Qd and decreases in Revenues

7 Demand Elasticity Own-Price (price of the good)
Always negative First law of demand Talk about it in absolute terms Less than |1| -> inelastic Not very price responsive Equal to |1| -> unit elastic % change in Qd = % change in price More than |1| -> (highly) elastic Very price responsive

8 Elasticity of Demand – Econometric Studies Own-price
Cigarettes (US)[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) -3.8 (Coca-Cola)[52] (narrow) -4.4 (Mountain Dew)[52] (narrow) Car fuel[45] -0.25 (Short run) (same car – reduce trips) -0.64 (Long run) (new car?)

9 The price elasticity of demand – steep or flat D curve?
1 The price elasticity of demand – steep or flat D curve? (d) Elastic demand: Elasticity > 1 (e) Perfectly elastic demand: Elasticity equals infinity 1. an Price 1. an Price A 22% increase in price… 1. At any price above $4, quantity demanded is zero Demand 2. At exactly $4, consumers will buy any quantity $5 50 4 Demand $4 100 3. At any price below $4, quantity demanded is infinite 2. … leads to a 67% decrease in quantity demanded Quantity Quantity 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.

10 What Determines Demand Elasticity?
Own-price demand elasticity Elastic Demand: > |1| (% ΔQd > %ΔP) FLATTER! Lots of substitutes available - > more price responsive Good/close substitutes More time to adjust to the price change (find substitutes) Elasticity in the long-run > elasticity in the short-run Inelastic Demand: < |1| (% ΔQd > %ΔP) No close/good substitutes STEEPER!!

11 What Affects the Magnitude of the (Own-Pirce) Demand Elasticity
Availability and closeness of substitutes “better/closer” substitute makes switching easier Results in either Greater movement along the demand curve (own) Greater shift of the demand curve (cross) Time More time to adjust, more options you can find Long-run elasticity > short-run Proportion of Income spent on the good Larger proportion -> more sensitive to changes in Income

12 2 Total revenue Price 1. an $4 P ˣ Q=$400 (revenue) Demand P 100
Quantity Q 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.

13 Elasticity of a linear demand curve (graph)
4 Elasticity of a linear demand curve (graph) Price Elasticity is larger than 1 1. an Demand $7 14 6 2 5 4 4 Elasticity is smaller than 1 6 3 8 2 10 1 12 Quantity 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 Elasticity and Total Revenue
Unit elastic

15 The Elasticity of Demand
Total revenue and price elasticity of demand Inelastic demand Increase in price Increase in total revenue Elastic demand Decrease in total revenue

16 Other 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

17 The Elasticity of Demand
Cross-price elasticity of demand Measure of how much the Demand Curve shifts when the price of a related good (subst or complement) changes [∆Qx/Qx] / [∆Py/Py ] Sign matters -> tells whether substitute or complement Magnitude (<1 or >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)

18 Elasticity Measures 3 Major Types for Demand Elasticities Own-price
Measures the change in quantity demanded with a change in the (own) good’s price Always negative (F.L.O.D) Always expressed in absolute value (as it’s always negative) Cross-price Measures the change in quantity demanded with a change in the price of a related good (e.g. complement or substitute) Complement (-) Substitute (+) Income Measures the change in quantity demanded with a change in income Normal/superiors goods (+) Inferior goods (-)

19 What Does the Magnitude of the Elasticity Tell Us?
Own-price Larger absolute value (|e| > 1) Large changes in Qd with small changes in price Close substitutes exist (pepsi/coke) Or much consumption is discretionary (micro-brews) Cross-price Large value (e >1) Close (or good) substitute for good exists Complements Large absolute value (|e| > 1) Consumption in fixed proportions Income >1 superior (luxury?) good >0 normal < 0 inferior (Animal beer)


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