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Chapter 5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply © 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply © 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply © 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning

2 22 Price Elasticity of Demand Elasticity –Responsiveness Price elasticity of demand –Consumers’ responsiveness to a change in price –Percentage change in quantity demanded divided by percentage change in price

3 Price Elasticity of Demand Law of demand E D negative Absolute value of E D positive 3

4 Exhibit 1 Demand curve for tacos 4 D 10595 Thousands per day 0 0.90 Price per taco $1.10 b a If the price of tacos drops from $1.10 to $0.90, the quantity demanded increases from 95,000 to 105,000.

5 Categories of E D If %∆q < %∆p –E D between 0 and 1 –Inelastic D If %∆q > %∆p –E D greater than 1 –Elastic D If %∆q = %∆p –E D = 1 –Unit elastic D 5

6 Elasticity and Total Revenue Total revenue = price * quantity demanded at this price TR= p * q As p decreases –If D elastic, TR increases –If D inelastic, TR decreases –If D unit elastic, TR constant 6

7 Price Elasticity and the Linear D curve Linear D curve –Constant slope –Different elasticity –D becomes less elastic as we move downward D upper half: elastic D lower half: inelastic D midpoint: unit elastic 7

8 Exhibit 2 Demand, price elasticity and total revenue 8 D 90 60 10 70 Price per unit $100 80 50 40 30 20 b a d e 800500200100Quantity per period1,000 0900 Total revenue $25,000 500Quantity per period1,000 0 (a) Demand and price elasticity (b) Total revenue Total revenue Unit elastic, E D =1 Elastic, E D >1 Inelastic, E D <1 Where D is elastic, a lower P increases TR Where D is inelastic, a lower P decreases TR TR reaches a maximum at the rate of output where D is unit elastic c

9 Constant Elasticity Demand Curves Perfectly elastic D curve –Horizontal; E D = ∞ –Consumers don’t tolerate P increases Perfectly inelastic D curve –Vertical; E D = 0 –‘Price is no object’ Unit-elastic D curve – %∆p causes an exact opposite %∆q 9

10 Exhibit 3 Constant-elasticity demand curves 10 0 Quantity per period Price per unit p E D = ∞ (a) Perfectly elastic D Price per unit E D’ = 0 (b) Perfectly inelastic E D’’ = 1 (c) Unit elastic D’ 0 Quantity per period Q Price per unit $10 6 0 Quantity per period 60100 D’’ a Consumers demand all quantity offered for sale at p, but demand nothing at a price above p Consumers demand Q regardless of price Total revenue is the same for each p-q combination b

11 Exhibit 4 Summary of price elasticity of demand 11 Effects of a 10 percent increase in price Absolute value of price elasticityType of demand What happens to quantity demanded What happens to total revenue E D = 0Perfectly inelasticNo changeIncreases by 10 percent 0 < E D < 1InelasticDrops by less than 10 percent Increases by less than 10 percent E D = 1Unit elasticDrops by 10 percentNo change 1 < E D <∞ElasticDrops by more than 10 percent Decreases E D = ∞Perfectly elasticDrops to 0

12 Determinants of Price Elasticity of D E D is greater: –The greater the availability of substitutes, and the more similar the substitutes –The more important the good as a share of the consumer’s budget –The longer the period of adjustment (time) 12

13 Exhibit 5 Demand becomes more elastic over time 13 DwDw Price per unit $1.25 1.00 DmDm Quantity per day 9510075500 DyDy e D w : one week after the price increase D m : one month after the price increase D y : one year after the price increase D y is more elastic than D m, which is more elastic than D w

14 Elasticity Estimates Short run –Consumers have little time to adjust Long run –Consumers can fully adjust to a price change Demand is more elastic in the long run 14

15 Exhibit 6 Selected price elasticities of D (absolute values) 15 ProductShort runLong run Cigarettes (among adults) Electricity (residential) Air travel Medical care and hospitalization Gasoline Milk Fish (cod) Wine Movies Natural gas (residential) Automobiles Chevrolets - 0.1 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.7 0.9 1.4 1.9 - 0.4 1.9 2.4 0.9 1.5 - 1.2 3.7 2.1 2.2 4.0

16 Deterring Young Smokers Health hazard –Kills 440,000 Americans a year Lung cancer; Heart disease; Emphysema; Stroke Cost to society –$7.18 per pack sold –Higher health cost –Lost worker productivity –Total: $150 billion a year –$3,400 per smoker per year 16

17 Deterring Young Smokers Discouraging smoking –Prohibit the sale of cigarettes to minors –Higher cigarette tax E D is higher for teens –Big share of budget –Less peer pressure –Not an addiction yet Reduces teen smoking –Change consumer tastes 17

18 Price Elasticity of Supply Elasticity –Responsiveness Price elasticity of supply –Producers’ responsiveness to a change in price –Percentage change in quantity supplied divided by percentage change in price 18

19 Price Elasticity of Supply Law of supply E S positive 19

20 Exhibit 7 Price elasticity of supply 20 S Price per unit p p’ If the price increases from p to p’, the quantity supplied increases from q to q’. Price and quantity supplied move in the same direction, so the price elasticity of supply is a positive number. Quantity per periodqq’0

21 Categories of E S If %∆q < %∆p –E S between 0 and 1 –Inelastic S If %∆q > %∆p –E S greater than 1 –Elastic S If %∆q = %∆p –E S = 1 –Unit elastic S 21

22 Constant Elasticity Supply Curves Perfectly elastic S curve –Horizontal; E S = ∞ –Producers supply 0 at a price below P Perfectly inelastic S curve –Vertical; E S = 0 –Goods in fixed supply Unit-elastic S curve – %∆p causes an exact opposite %∆q –S curve is a ray from the origin 22

23 Exhibit 8 Constant-elasticity supply curves 23 0 Quantity per period Price per unit p E S = ∞ (a) Perfectly elastic S Price per unit E S’ = 0 (b) Perfectly inelastic E S’’ = 1 (c) Unit elastic S’ 0 Quantity per period Q Price per unit $10 5 0 Quantity per period 1020 Firms supply any amount of output demanded at p, but supply 0 at prices below p. Quantity supplied is independent of the price Any %∆p results in the same %∆q supplied. S’’

24 Determinants of Supply Elasticity E S is greater: –If the marginal cost rises slowly as output expands –The longer the period of adjustment (time) 24

25 Exhibit 9 Supply becomes more elastic over time 25 SwSw Price per unit 1.00 $1.25 Quantity per day1102000100140 SmSm SySy S w : one week after the price increase S m : one month after the price increase S y : one year after the price increase S w is less elastic than S m, which is less elastic than S y

26 Income Elasticity of Demand Demand responsiveness to a change in consumer income Percentage change in demand divided by the percentage change in income that caused it Inferior goods –Negative income elasticity Normal goods –Positive income elasticity 26

27 Income Elasticity of Demand Normal goods –Income inelastic Elasticity between 0 and 1 Necessities –Income elastic Elasticity > 1 Luxuries 27

28 Exhibit 10 Selected income elasticities of demand 28 Product Income ElasticityProduct Income Elasticity Wine Private education Automobiles Owner-occupied housing Furniture Dental service Restaurant meals Spirits (‘hard’ liquor) Shoes Chicken Clothing 5.03 2.46 2.45 1.49 1.48 1.42 1.40 1.21 1.10 1.06 0.92 Physicians’ services Coca-Cola Beef Food Coffee Cigarettes Gasoline and oil Rental housing Pork Beer Flour 0.75 0.68 0.62 0.51 0.50 0.48 0.43 0.18 -0.09 -0.36

29 The market for food and ‘The Farm Problem’ 1950: 10 millions family farms Today: less than 3 millions Demand –Price inelastic Total revenue falls when P falls –Income inelastic D increases Technological improvements S increases 29

30 Exhibit 11 The demand for grain 30 D 51011Billions of bushels per year0 Price per bushel $5 4 3 2 1 The D for grain tends to be inelastic. As the market P falls, so does TR.

31 S’ D’ Exhibit 12 The effect on increases in D and S on farm revenue 31 D 51014Billions of bushels per year 0 Price per bushel $8 4 S Technological advance - sharp increase in S Increase in consumer income - small increase in D Drop in P Drop in total revenue

32 Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand Responsiveness of D for one good to changes in P of another good %∆ in demand for one good divided by %∆ in price of another good –If positive: substitutes –If negative: complements –If zero: unrelated 32

33 Price Elasticity and Tax Incidence Tax –Decrease in S by the amount of tax Tax incidence –Consumers : high P –Producers: net-of-tax receipt 33

34 Price Elasticity and Tax Incidence The more price elastic the D: –The more tax producers pay –The less tax consumers pay The more elastic the S: –The less tax producers pay –The more tax consumers pay 34

35 StSt S D’ StSt S D Exhibit 13 Effects of price elasticity of D on tax incidence 35 $0.20 Tax Price per ounce $1.15 1.00 0.95 Millions of ounces per day1090 $0.20 Tax 107 Price per ounce $1.05 1.00 0.85 (a) Less elastic demand(b) More elastic demand The more elastic the D curve, the more tax is paid by producers (lower net-of-tax receipt)

36 Exhibit 14 Effects of price elasticity of S on tax incidence 36 St’St’ S’ D’’ $0.20 Tax Price per ounce $1.15 1.00 0.95 (a) More elastic supply St”St” S” D’’ $0.20 Tax 109 Price per ounce $1.05 1.00 0.85 (b) Less elastic supply Millions of ounces per day 1080 The more elastic the S curve, the more tax is paid by consumers as a higher price.


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