Elasticity Measures Part 2

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Principles of Micro Chapter 5: “Elasticity and Its Application ” by Tanya Molodtsova, Fall 2005.
Advertisements

Elasticity Let Hampton introduce you. Then he will go to the next slide.
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND & SUPPLY
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
Demand and Supply Chapter 6 (McConnell and Brue) Chapter 2 (Pindyck) Lecture 4.
Chapter 5 Part 1 Elasticity. Elasticity of Demand Elasticity – a measure of the responsiveness of Qd or Qs to changes in market conditions Elasticity.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
Elasticity and its Applications. Learn the meaning of the elasticity of demand. Examine what determines the elasticity of demand. Learn the meaning of.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western Elasticity and Its Applications.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
1 Demand and Supply Elasticities. 2 Price Elasticity of Demand Price elasticity of demand: the percentage change in the quantity demanded that results.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western/Thomson Learning Elasticity = Responsiveness Allow us to analyze S & D with greater precision. Are measures of how much.
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.
© 2013 Cengage Learning ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 5.
Elasticity and its Application How much do buyers and sellers respond to a change in price.
Elasticity and Its Applications
Demand Analysis. Elasticity... … allows us to analyze supply and demand with greater precision. … is a measure of how much buyers and sellers respond.
Elasticity Measures Part 1 Dr. Jennifer P. Wissink ©2011 John M. Abowd and Jennifer P. Wissink, all rights reserved.
Copyright © 2017 Pearson Education, Inc Principles of Economics Twelfth Edition Chapter 5 Elasticity.
Elasticity.
Elasticity shows how sensitive quantity is to a change in price.
Elasticity and Its Application
Elasticity of Demand and Supply
THE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
DEMAND ANALYSIS Demand Relationships Demand Elasticities
Elasticity and Its Applications
Elasticity shows how sensitive quantity is to a change in price.
©2011 John M. Abowd and Jennifer P. Wissink, all rights reserved.
Chapter 4 Elasticities of Demand and Supply
ECON 100 Lecture 13 Monday, November 3.
Elasticity and Its Applications
Elasticity Dianna DaSilva-Glasgow Department of Economics
Elasticity of Demand.
As the Price of X increases…
Elasticity and Its Uses
Chapter 5 Price Elasticity of Demand
Elasticity 1. A definition & determinants of elasticity
Elasticity and Its Applications
Or the Price Elasticity of Demand
Elasticity and Its Uses
Elasticity and Its Application
Elasticity of Demand March 3, 2014.
Chapter 5 Price Elasticity of Demand and Supply
4 Elasticity McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Elasticity … allows us to analyze supply and demand with greater precision. … is a measure of how much buyers and sellers respond to changes in market.
More On Elasticity Measures Lecture 11
Elasticity and Its Application
Elasticity.
Elasticity and Its Application
Interpreting Price Elasticity of Demand
Elasticity and Its Application
Chapter 6 Elasticity Both the elasticity coefficient and the total revenue test for measuring price elasticity of demand are presented in this chapter.
Demand.
Elasticity Measures Lecture 10
Elasticity and Its Application
Lecture 4 Elasticity (continue…)
Elasticity A measure of the responsiveness of one variable (usually quantity demanded or supplied) to a change in another variable Most commonly used elasticity:
Elasticity of Demand & Supply
Chapter 6: Elasticity.
Individual and Market Demand
Consumer Theory-1 Lecture 12
Elasticity and Its Application
04 Elasticity Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Elasticity – the concept If price rises by 10% - what happens to demand? We know demand will fall By more than 10%? By less than 10%? Elasticity measures.
Presentation transcript:

Elasticity Measures Part 2 Dr. Jennifer P. Wissink ©2011 John M. Abowd and Jennifer P. Wissink, all rights reserved.

Recall: Own Price Supply Elasticities When the price of DaVinci paintings increases by 1% the quantity supplied doesn’t change at all, so the quantity supplied of DaVinci paintings is completely insensitive to the price. Own price elasticity of supply is 0. When the price of beef increases by 1% the quantity supplied increases by 5%, so beef supply is very price sensitive. Own price elasticity of supply is 5. I am trying to give supply and demand about equal billing here. My text does elasticities before the detailed demand and supply discussions.

Supply Elasticity Extremely similar formulas are used to calculate the own price elasticity of supply Arc midpoint formula Large delta style or small delta style Point formula Just need to substitute in Quantity supplied and change in quantity supplied where appropriate

Supply Elasticity Definition: Arc Formula: Point formula:

Example: Arc Calculation of Own Price Elasticity of Supply Want supply elasticity at A Use B: QS=9 and P=5 Use C: QS=16 and P=7 % change in QS = (16-9)/((16+9)/2)*100 = 56% % change in P = (7-5)/((7+5)/2)*100 = 33.33% Supply elasticity at A = 56/33.33 = 1.68 Nonlinear Supply Curve 12 10 8 C Price 6 B A 4 2 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 Quantity

Example: Point Calculation of Own Price Elasticity of Supply Suppose you are given: QS = -10 + 4P Note, that’s the same as: PS = 2.50 +.25Q Suppose you want the exact own price elasticity of supply at P = $12 At P = $12, QS = -10 + 48 = 38 Note: (dQS/dP) = 4 (Slope of drawn supply curve = .25, so.... 1/slope = 4) So supply elasticity at P=$12 is... (4)•(12/38) = 48/38 = 1.26

Some Technical Definitions For Extreme Elasticity Values Perfectly elastic means the quantity demanded or supplied is as price sensitive as possible. a.k.a. completely elastic a.k.a. infinitely elastic Perfectly inelastic means that the quantity demanded or supplied has no price sensitivity at all. a.k.a. completely inelastic

Perfectly Elastic Demand Price Quantity Perfectly Elastic Demand (elasticity = -¥) Demand is perfectly elastic when a 1% change in the price would result in an infinite change in quantity demanded. Example: Your discussion from your lecture 6

Perfectly Inelastic Demand Price Quantity Perfectly Inelastic Demand (elasticity = 0) Demand is perfectly inelastic when a 1% change in the price would result in no change in quantity demanded. Example: ditto.

Perfectly Inelastic Supply Supply is perfectly inelastic when a 1% change in the price would result in no change in quantity supplied. Example: wheat? At harvest? Yes. Across planting seasons? No. Price Quantity Perfectly Inelastic Supply (elasticity = 0) ditto.

Perfectly Elastic Supply Supply is perfectly elastic when a 1% change in the price would result in an infinite change in quantity supplied. Example: wheat? Across planting seasons? Yes. Price Quantity Perfectly Elastic Supply (elasticity = ¥) Your discussion from your lecture 6

Determinants of Elasticity What is a major determinant of the own price elasticity of demand? Availability of substitutes in consumption. What is a major determinant of the own price elasticity of supply? Availability of alternatives in production.

Real World Example – Getting It Wrong Gas taxes in Washington DC, 1980 Extra 6% tax imposed Aug 16, 1980 to raise much needed revenue for D.C. Increased price at pump by 8¢ (a nearly 6% increase). By end of first month, QD down by 27.5%.  elasticity = 27.5÷6 = 4.5  pretty darn elastic! Way off on expected revenue, too. By October, sales had dropped by 40% and 242 gas station workers were laid off. Tax lifted by Mayor Marion Barry on November 24, 1980. What went wrong? What didn’t they account for?

Real World Example – Getting It Wrong

Own Price Elasticity of Demand & Total Expenditures Question: What happens to total expenditures made by buyers (TE) in a market when market price increases? Note: TE = P•QD P↑ tends to increase TE, but it also decreases QD. QD↓ tends to decreases TE. So what happens to TE? Knowing own price elasticity will help! If demand is price ELASTIC, then TE ↓ Why? If demand is price INELASTIC, then TE ↑ On you own: reverse this argument to determine the relationship between total expenditure and elasticity when you consider a price decrease! Set-up slide

Bridge Toll Example Suppose: Current toll for the George Washington Bridge is $6.00/trip. Suppose: The quantity demanded at $6.00/trip is 100,000 trips/hour. So: TE on trips per hour = $600,000 If the own price elasticity of demand for bridge trips is known to be -2.0, then what is the effect of a 10% toll increase? Note: since demand is price ELASTIC  TE↓ A 10% toll increase means the price is now $6.60 per trip. If η=-2, a toll increase of 10% implies a 20% decline in the quantity demanded. If there is a 20% decline in trip, number of trips falls to 80,000/hour. Total expenditure falls to $528,000/hour (= 80,000 x $6.60). $528,000 < $600,000 Your example.

Own Price Elasticity of Demand & Total Expenditure with Linear Demand $TE Price Price elastic Demand Price inelastic Quantity Quantity Starting at the “top” of the demand curve, where demand is price elastic, as price falls, and quantity demanded rises, total expenditures rise, but increase at a decreasing rate. At the midpoint, where demand is unit elastic, total expenditures will be at their maximum value. As you continue down the demand curve, where demand is now price inelastic, as price falls, and quantity demanded rises, total expenditures fall. your graph

Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand Elasticity of demand with respect to the price of a complementary good (cross-price elasticity) This elasticity is negative because as the price of a complementary good rises, the quantity demanded of the good itself falls. Example: software is complementary with computers. When the price of software rises the quantity demanded of computers falls. Elasticity of demand with respect to the price of a substitute good (also a cross-price elasticity) This elasticity is positive because as the price of a substitute good rises, the quantity demanded of the good itself rises. Example: hockey is substitute for basketball. When the price of hockey tickets rises the quantity demanded of basketball tickets rises. Cross-price elasticities quantify effects like these. If you don’t like my example, which they have seen before, use your own.

Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand Definition: Arc Formula: Point Formula: If you don’t like my example, which they have seen before, use your own.

Income Elasticity of Demand The elasticity of demand with respect to a consumer’s income is called the income elasticity. When the income elasticity of demand is positive (normal good), consumers increase their purchases of the good as their incomes rise (e.g. automobiles, food). When the income elasticity of demand is greater than 1 (luxury good), consumers increase their purchases of the good more than proportionate to the income increase (e.g. ski vacations, haute cuisine). When the income elasticity of demand is positive but less than 1 (a necessity), consumers increase their purchases of the good less than proportionate to the income increase (e.g. socks, bread). When the income elasticity of demand is negative (inferior good), consumers reduce their purchases of the good as their incomes rise (e.g. spam, potatoes).

Income Elasticity of Demand Definition: Arc Formula: Point Formula: If you don’t like my example, which they have seen before, use your own.

All Four Elasticities You Need to Know Own Price Elasticity of Demand Cross Price Elasticity of Demand Income Elasticity of Demand Own Price Elasticity of Supply