Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDylan McBride Modified over 8 years ago
1
Chapter 3, Section 3
2
Understand the concepts of elastic, inelastic, and unit-elastic demand Be able to make elasticity calculations Know the factors that affect the elasticity of demand for a given product Learn how to maximize revenue using elasticity calculations
3
Elasticity of demand shows the relationship between a change in price and quantity demanded (Q d ) Elastic Demand—percentage change in Q d is greater than the percentage change in price Inelastic—percentage change in Q d is less than the percentage change in price Unit-Elastic—percentages are equal Formula: Elasticity = % change in Q d divided by % change in price
4
(1) Bill raises the price of lettuce 20%, and the quantity demanded falls by 40%. What is the elasticity of demand? .40 divided by.20 = 2 Because the result is >1, demand is elastic Joe raises the price of CDs from $5 to $10, and the quantity demanded falls from 200 units to 50 units. What is the elasticity of demand? % change in Qd = New quantity – old quantity/old quantity … 50 -200/200 = /200 = (75% reduction in Q d ) % change in price = new price – old price/old price … $10-5/5 = 5/5 = 1 (100% increase in price) Elasticity = /1 =.75 (demand is inelastic)
5
(1) Number of Substitutes—if there are more close substitutes for a product … would quantity demanded for that product tend to be more elastic or inelastic? More close substitutes = more elastic Patented medication (no competition) vs. soft drinks—for which is demand likely to be more elastic? (2) Luxuries vs. Necessities—which tends to be more elastic? Luxuries!
6
(3) Percentage of Income Spent—the bigger percentage a given product takes from your income, the more sensitive you are to changes in its price Example: if you spend $2 a month on gum and $200 a month on music, a change in the price of which one would have a greater impact on your behavior? (4) Time—the longer the time frame, the more elastic quantity demanded tends to be (people adapt over time) Example: Price of electricity goes up 20%. You might not make immediate changes, but over the course of the winter, you might make more
7
Why is it important for sellers to understand elasticity of demand? Because it tells them whether to raise or lower prices to maximize revenues! If demand is elastic and price increases … what happens to revenue? It decreases! If demand is elastic and price decreases … what happens to revenue? It increases! The opposite is true for inelastic demand. See examples on p. 105
8
Butch currently sells 100 turkeys a day at $5 each. When he raises the price to $6 each, he only sells 60 turkeys. What is the total revenue for each price/Q d combination? Is demand elastic or inelastic? Should Butch keep selling turkeys at the higher price, or go back to selling at the lower price?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.