A measure of how much buyers and sellers respond to changes in market conditions: Changes in : Price; Income; Price of Related Goods
S + D discussion has been qualitative so far…. …now we begin quantitative How much does S + D change in response = A measure of the responsiveness of quantity demanded or quantity supplied to one of its determinants
=measure of how much the quantity demanded of a good responds to a change in the price of that good = % change in Qd % change in P D for a good is ELASTIC if…. Qd responds more than P D for a good is INELASTIC if….Qd responds less than P
Ex: If P of ice cream rises 10% and it causes you to buy 20% less ice cream % change Qd 20% = 2 % change P 10% ………the PEd for ice cream = 2 Less 1 = inelastic 1 = unit elastic Greater 1 = elastic 0 = perfectly inelastic Infinite = perfectly elastic
Economic, social, psychological forces shape consumer behavior 1. Necessities vs. Luxuries 2. Availability of Close Substitutes 3. Definition of the Market (broad or narrow) 4. Time Horizon (long or short)
0 = perfectly inelastic infinite = perfectly elastic
Less than one = inelastic One = unit elastic Greater than one = elastic
Steeper the slope, ………. The more inelastic
Linear D curve Slope is constant What about Elasticity? Elasticity changes How/Why?
Negatives do not matter for PED Mid point method p. 96 Total Revenue (PxQ) Inelastic : P increase ; then TR ….. increases - why ? P decrease; then TR ….. Decreases – why? So the rule is…….
Elastic: P increases; TR….? TR decreases - why P decreases; TR …..? increases - why So the rule is……..
Elastic: as P falls, TR rises Inelastic: as P falls TR falls what about TR when it’s Unit Elastic?
What if it is Unit Elastic over a range…? As P falls, TR would not change