Demand and Elasticity Worksheet
Demand and Elasticity Worksheet
Demand and Elasticity Worksheet
NAME: _____________________________
1. The elasticity of demand is ___________ in the ___________ run because consumers have MORE time to adjust. 2. An Elasticity of 1.0 of greater 3. An Elasticity of exactly 1.0 4. An Elasticity of between 0 and 1.0 = _________________ demand (page 110 in book) = _________________ demand = _________________ demand
5. Use the Elasticity formula to calculate values of Elasticity for all the situations below. Change negatives to positives. STEP 1: The formula used to calculate the percentage change in quantity demanded is: [QDemand(NEW) - QDemand(OLD)] / QDemand(OLD) STEP 2: The formula used to calculate the percentage change in price is: [Price(NEW) - Price(OLD)] / Price(OLD) STEP 3: (STEP 1) / (STEP 2)
Price Quantity STEP 1 % change in quantity Initial New Initial New 25 40 200 50 30 70 220 75 100 120 80 150 40 90 64 135 demanded STEP 2 % change in price STEP 3 Price Elasticity of Demand 1. ___________ 2. ___________ 3. ___________ 4. ___________
In each case identify whether you would describe it as elastic / unit elastic / inelastic
1. _________________________ 2. _________________________ 3. _________________________ 4. _________________________
Sharrock 2009
Revised 9/10
6. What happens to the Elasticity of Demand if there are many substitutes for a good? Is it elastic or inelastic? Why?
7. Given the data below, calculate the price elasticity of demand when the price changes from $9.00 to $10.00. ANSWER: _________________ CHANGE ALL NEGATIVE NUMBERS TO POSITIVES Data for Good X Price ($) 7.00 8.00 9.00 10.00 11.00 Quantity Demanded 200 180 150 110 60
8. Is the demand for Good X Elastic or Inelastic between $9 and $10? Use the above demand schedule to answer this.
10. What type of demand would there be for a good that had NO substitutes? Circle One Elastic Inelastic
11. Which way would the demand curve of Good X shift if the price of Good Y (a complementary good) increased? Circle One Left Right
12. What happens to the Demand Curve of a Good X if the price of Good Y (a substitute good) increases? Explain why the demand curve for Good X changed? Left Right
Sharrock 2009
Revised 9/10
13. Kobes favorite drink is cola. He buys a 12 pack from his local supermarket and has noticed that the price often varies. His monthly demand for cola is shown below: From the information provided in the demand schedule, draw a labeled demand curve below. Use the graph space to draw the curve. Label the demand curve D1. Kobes Weekly Demand for Cola Price ($) 5.00 4.50 4.00 3.50 2.50 Quantity Demanded 2 3 4 5 6
14. Kobes drinks cola drinks to give him energy - he loves Dr. Pepper, but sometimes Mr. Pibb (a substitute good for Dr. Pepper) is on special sale. Given the lower price for Mr. Pibb, a new demand schedule had to be created for Dr. Pepper. Use the graph space above you created in Question 13 to draw the new demand curve. Label the new demand curve D2. DEMAND SCHEDULE PRICE FOR DR. OLD DEMAND NEW DEMAND PEPPER $5.00 2 1 $4.50 $4.00 $3.50 $2.50 3 4 5 6 2 3 4 5
Sharrock 2009
Revised 9/10
15. From the information shown on figure 1 below, construct a demand schedule showing Kobe's monthly demand for Dr. Pepper.
16. Which way would the demand curve for Good X (an inferior good) shift if your income increased? Circle One Left Right 17. In the following scenarios describe if there is a shift to a demand curve for Good X (a superior good) and state which way the curve will shift (Left, Right, or Stays the Same) a) an increase in price for Good X b) a fall in customers income c) an increase in the price of a substitute good d) a decrease in the price of a complement good A. ___________________________________ B. ___________________________________ C. ___________________________________ D. ___________________________________
18. Why do suppliers want to create more inelastic demand relationships in the products that they sell?
Sharrock 2009
Revised 9/10