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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 4: Elasticity of Demand and Supply Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
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Price Elasticity of Demand According to the law of demand, when price increases, quantity demanded falls. By how much? To answer this question, economists use the concept of price elasticity of demand. LO: 4-1 Price elasticity of demand is a measure of the responsiveness of the quantity of a product demanded by consumers when the product price changes. 4-2
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Elastic and Inelastic Demand For some products, consumers are highly responsive to price changes. Demand for such products is relatively elastic or simply elastic. For other products, consumers’ responsiveness is only slight or in rare cases non-existent. Demand is said to be relatively inelastic, or simply inelastic. LO: 4-1 4-3
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Price Elasticity Coefficient The degree of price elasticity is measured with price elasticity coefficient E d LO: 4-1 Percentage Change in Quantity Demanded of Product X Percentage Change in Price of Product X E d = 4-4
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Interpretations of Price Elasticity of Demand Elastic Demand: price changes cause relatively large changes in quantity demanded: E d > 1. Inelastic Demand: price changes cause relatively small changes in quantity demanded: E d < 1. Unit Elasticity: price changes cause equal changes in quantity demanded (in percentage terms): E d = 1. Perfectly Elastic Demand: quantity demanded can be any amount at a given price: E d = ∞. Perfectly Inelastic Demand: quantity demanded does not depend on price: E d = 0. LO: 4-1 4-5
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Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand Substitutability the larger the number of substitute goods that are available, the higher the elasticity Proportion of Income the higher the price of a product relative to one’s income, the higher the elasticity Luxuries versus Necessities the more that a good is considered to be a “luxury” rather than a “necessity,” the higher the elasticity Time the longer the time period under consideration, the higher the elasticity LO: 4-1 4-6
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The Total Revenue Test Total Revenue = TR = P×Q Inelastic demand P and TR change in the same direction Elastic demand P and TR change in opposite directions LO: 4-2 4-7
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Inelastic Demand and TR Price falls from c to d Gold loss is larger than blue gain TR falls when price falls Therefore, demand is inelastic (E d < 1) LO: 4-2 $4 3 2 1 0 10 20 Q P c d D2D2 4-8
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Elastic Demand and TR Price falls from a to b Gold loss is smaller than blue gain TR rises when price falls Therefore, demand is elastic (E d > 1) LO: 4-2 $3 2 1 0 10 20 30 40 Q P a b D1D1 4-9
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Price Elasticity of Demand: College Tuition Share of education in total income is higher for low- income families. Therefore, elasticity of demand for college education is higher for low-income families. Colleges charge different net prices (tuition minus financial aid) to low- and high-income families. Tuition increases are frequently accompanied by increases in financial aid, so that tuition hikes are smaller for low-income families. Such pricing strategy increases revenue while maintaining income diversity of a student body. LO: 4-4 4-10
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Price Elasticity of Supply The concept of price elasticity can be applied to supply: price elasticity of supply. LO: 4-3 Price elasticity of supply is a measure of the responsiveness of the quantity of a product supplied by sellers when the product price changes. Percentage Change in Quantity Supplied of Product X Percentage Change in Price of Product X E s = 4-11
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Price Elasticity of Supply and Time Periods Market period Perfectly inelastic supply Short run Fixed plant size, but can vary production Supply somewhat elastic Long run Adjustable plant size Firms can enter or exit Supply more elastic LO: 4-3 4-12
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Price Elasticity of Supply: Gold Prices Price of gold is very volatile. Why? Supply of gold is very inelastic due to limited availability and high cost of exploration, mining, and refining. As a result, demand shifts reflect in large swings in prices with little effect on quantities bought and sold. Demand shifts for gold are common because it is used as speculative financial investment, not only as a commodity. LO: 4-4 4-13
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Income Elasticity of Demand The concept of elasticity can be applied to income: income elasticity of demand. LO: 4-5 Income elasticity of demand is a measure of the responsiveness of the quantity of a product demanded by consumers to changes in consumer income. Percentage Change in Quantity Demanded Percentage Change in Income E i = 4-14
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Cross Elasticity of Demand Cross elasticity of demand reflects relationship between products LO: 4-5 Cross elasticity of demand is a measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of one product to a change in the price of another product. Percentage Change in Quantity Demanded of product X Percentage Change in Price of product Y E xy = 4-15
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