Objectives: Price Elasticity of Demand Determinants of Ed
Objectives: Price Elasticity of Demand Determinants of Ed
Objectives: Price Elasticity of Demand Determinants of Ed
Characteristics:
Ed approaches infinity, demand is perfectly elastic. Consumers are
very sensitive to price change.
Ed > 1, demand is elastic. Consumers are relatively responsive to price
changes.
Ed = 1, demand is unit elastic. Consumers response and price change
are in same proportion.
Ed < 1, demand is inelastic. Consumers are relatively unresponsive to
price changes.
Ed approaches 0, demand is perfectly inelastic. Consumers are very
insensitive to price change.
Ed is usually greater in the higher price range than in lower price
range. Demand is more elastic in upper left portion of the demand
curve than in the lower right portion of the curve. However, it is
impossible to judge elasticity of a demand curve by its flatness or
steepness. Along a linear demand curve, its elasticity changes. This
An Example
DEMAND FUNCTION FOR PRODUCT X: P = 2.50.01Q
P = PRICE; Q = QUANTITY, TR = TOTAL
REVENUE
Ed = PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
A B C D E F G
H I J
Q: 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
400 450
P: 4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1
0.5 0
Ed: 17 5 2.6 1.57 1 0.64 0.38
0.2 0.06
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND;
FROM A TO E Ed >1
FROM E TO F Ed =1
Total revenue (TR) is calculated by multiplying price (P) per unit and
quantity (Q) of the good sold.
TR = P x Q
The total revenue test is a method of estimating the price elasticity of
demand. As Ed will impact the total revenue, we can estimate the Ed by
looking at the movement of the total revenue.
Total Revenue Test
Ed > 1, total revenue will decrease as price increases. P and TR moves in
opposite directions. Producers can increase total revenue ( TR = Price x
Quantity) by lowering the price. Therefore, most department stores will
have sales to attract customers. Apparel's demand is elastic.
Ed < 1, total revenue will increase as price increases. P and TR moves in
the same direction. Producers can increase total revenue by raising the
price. Inelastic demand for agricultural products helps to explain why
bumper crops depress the prices and total revenues for farmers.
You may look at the movement of TR in the example below. It
demonstrated the relationship described above.
TR Test Example
DEMAND FUNCTION FOR PRODUCT X: P = 2.5-0.01Q
P = PRICE; Q = QUANTITY, TR = TOTAL REVENUE
Ed = PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
A B C D E F G
H I J
Q: 0 50 100 150 200 250 300
350 400 450
P: 4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5
1 0.5 0
TR: 0 200 350 450 500 500 450
350 200 0
Ed: 17 5
2.6 1.57 1 0.64
0.38 0.2 0.06
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND;
FROM A TO E Ed >1 TR increases
FROM E TO F Ed =1 TR remains same.
Characteristics &
Determinants
Characteristics:
Es approaches infinity, supply is perfectly elastic. Producers are very
sensitive to price change.
Es > 1, supply is elastic. Producers are relatively responsive to price
changes.
Es = 1, supply is unit elastic. Producers response and price change are in
same proportion.
Es < 1, supply is inelastic. Producers are relatively unresponsive to price
changes.
Es approaches 0, supply is perfectly inelastic. Producers are very insensitive
to price change.
It is impossible to judge elasticity of a supply curve by its flatness or
steepness. Along a linear supply curve, its elasticity changes.
Determinants:
1. Time lag: How soon the cost of increasing production rises and the time
elapsed since the price change influence the Es. The more rapidly the
production cost rises and the less time elapses since a price change, the
more inelastic the supply. The longer the time elapses, more adjustments
can be made to the production process, the more elastic the supply.
Definition:
Cross elasticity (Exy) tells us the relationship between two products. it measures the
sensitivity of quantity demand change of product X to a change in the price of product
Y.
Formula: Exy = percentage change in Quantity demanded of X / percentage change in
Price of Y.
If the percentage change is not given in a problem, it can be computed using the
following formula:
Percentage change in Qx = (Q1-Q2) / [1/2 (Q1+Q2)] where Q1 = initial Qd of X, and Q2
= new Qd of X.
Percentage change in Py = (P1-P2) / [1/2 (P1 + P2)] where P1 = initial Price of Y, and P2
= New Price of Y.
Putting the two above equations together:
Exy = {(Q1-Q2) / [1/2 (Q1+Q2)] } / {(P1-P2) / [1/2 (P1 + P2)]}
Characteristics:
Exy > 0, Qd of X and Price of Y are directly related. X and Y are substitutes.
Exy approaches 0, Qd of X stays the same as the Price of Y changes. X and Y are not
related.
Exy < 0, Qd of X and Price of Y are inversely related. X and Y are complements.
Examples:
1. If the price of Product A increased by 10%, the quantity demanded of B increases by
15 %. Then the coefficient for the cross elasticity of the A and B is :
Exy = percentage change in Qx / percentage change in Py = (15%) / (10%) = 1.5 > 0,
Characteristics:
Ey > 1, Qd and income are directly related. This is a normal good and it is income
elastic.
0< Ey<1, Qd and income are directly related. This is a normal good and it is income
inelastic.
Ey < 0, Qd and income are inversely related. This is an inferior good.
Ey approaches 0, Qd stays the same as income changes, indicating a necessity.