2 Price Elasticity of Demand
2 Price Elasticity of Demand
2 Price Elasticity of Demand
Degrees of elasticity
- There are different degrees of elasticity and these depend on the outcome of
calculations using the above formula.
1. Elastic Demand
- This basically means that demand is relatively responsive to price changes.
- When demand is elastic, PED is greater than 1.
- This means that the proportionate change in Qd is greater than the proportionate
change in P. E.g. if a 10% increase in price results in a 20% decrease in quantity
demanded.
- This means that an increase in price will reduce total revenue for a firm while a
decrease in price will increase total revenue for a firm.
- This also means that an increase in price will reduce total consumer expenditure and a
decrease in price will increase total consumer expenditure.
- The following diagram illustrates elastic demand:
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Price
$ D
P1 gentle slope
P0
0
Q1 Q0 Quantity of laptops demanded
- In the diagram above, a relatively small increase in price of laptops from P0 to P1 will
bring about a relatively large proportionate decrease in quantity demanded from Q0 to
Q1 the slope of the demand curve is gentle.
- This applies to goods like cars, refrigerators, sofas, washing machines, computers etc.
2. Inelastic Demand
- This means that demand is relatively unresponsive to changes in price.
- When demand is inelastic, PED is less than 1.
- Percentage change in Qd will be less than percentage change in price. E.g. a 10%
increase in price leads to a 4% decrease in quantity demanded.
- This means that an increase in price will increase total revenue of a firm and a fall in
price will reduce total revenue of a firm.
- This also means that a price increase increases total consumer expenditure and a price
reduction reduces total consumer expenditure.
- The following diagram shows inelastic demand.
D
Price
$
P1 steep slope
0
Q1 Q0 Quantity of laptops demanded
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- In the diagram above, a relatively small increase in price of laptops from P0 to P1 will
bring about a smaller proportionate decrease in quantity demanded from Q0 to Q1 the
slope of the demand curve is steep.
- This applies to goods like basic necessities, goods that take a small proportion of a
consumer’s income, habit forming goods (addictive goods), goods that have no close
substitutes and goods that have a number of uses. E.g. alcohol, cigarettes etc.
Unitary elasticity
- This occurs when a percentage change in price results in an equal percentage change
in quantity demanded.
- In this case PED is equal to 1.
- This is reflected on a graph by a rectangular hyperbola as shown below:
Price
0 Quantity demanded
Price
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0 Quantity demanded
- The graph shows that the amount demanded at the ruling price is infinite.
Price D
0 Quantity demanded
- The graph shows that quantity demanded does not change as price changes.
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4. Necessities and luxuries
- Necessities are those goods which people cannot do without and at the same time
cannot increase consumption even if price falls. For example, a family which eats
three loaves of bread every morning will have to get the same amount in both the
event of a price rise and a price fall.
- Luxuries are goods that people can do without and hence a rise in price may mean that
people cut consumption. E.g. furniture, cars etc.
- Demand for luxuries tends to be elastic while that for necessities tend to be inelastic.
- However whether a product is considered a luxury or a necessity depends on the
standards of living of a particular geographical area.
5. The time period involved
- When price rises, people may take time to adjust their consumption patterns and find
alternatives.
- The longer the time period after a price change, the greater the price elasticity of
demand.
6. Brand loyalty
- Some consumers are attached to certain brands and are loyal to them e.g. Nike,
Adidas, Puma etc.
- In such markets, demand tends to be inelastic.
- Some are attached to certain products due to their culture, e.g. Muslims have an
attachment to Halal meat (meat from an animal that has been slaughtered in a way
that is approved by Islamic law) and this makes demand inelastic in that particular
market.
1. Pricing decisions
- If a firm faces an inelastic demand curve, then pushing up price will always increase
total revenue.
- Total revenue (TR) or total sales is the amount of money received from the sale of an
output.
- It is given by price multiplied by quantity (TR = P x Q).
- If demand is elastic, total revenue increases as price falls.
- if demand is elastic, it is wise to reduce the price in order to maximise total revenue.
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2. Price discrimination
- A discriminating monopolist will maximise total revenue by charging high price in
the market where demand is inelastic and a low price in the market where demand is
elastic.
- For instance, ZESA tariffs in high and low density residential areas or cell phone peak
and off peak call charges.
3. Taxation policy by the government
- Government levies indirect taxes such as value added tax (VAT) and excise duty on
expenditure in order to raise revenue.
- To maximize on revenue collected the government should levy a low tax on goods
with elastic demand while laying a high tax on goods with inelastic demand such as
alcohol and cigarettes.
4. Shifting of tax burden
- The extent a producer can pass on the burden of indirect tax to the consumer by
increasing prices depends on the degree of elasticity of the goods being sold.
- If demand is inelastic, the greater part of the tax burden is passed on to the consumer.
- If demand is elastic, the producer bears the greater part of the tax burden.
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