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Today Income elasticity of demand. Price elasticity of supply. Excise taxes and tax incidence Income Elasticity of Demand How responsive QD is to changes in income. Often use “Y” to repr. income. Y = % QD/ %Y Y may be positive or negative, depending on whether this good is normal or inferior. Normal if Y > 0. Inferior if Y < 0. What determines income elasticity? How “basic” the item is. What the current level of income is. Categories of income elasticity, normal goods 0 < Y <1 Income inelastic, “necessity” % QD < % Y As income rises, QD rises but a smaller percentage of income is spent on these goods. Categories of income elasticity, cont’d. Y > 1 Income elastic, “luxury” % QD > % Y As income rises, QD rises and a larger percentage of income is spent on these goods. The terms necessity and luxury shouldn’t be taken literally. A good’s income elasticity of demand depends on current income. Example: Meat At very low levels of income, meat is a luxury good and Y > 1. At moderate levels of income, meat is a necessity and Y < 1. At high levels of income, people don’t want more meat, and Y is near zero. Conclusion: The income elasticity of meat depends on the initial level of income. Price Elasticity of Supply How responsive QS is to a change in price. S = % QS %P Generally expected to be a positive number. (Why?) Used when demand is changing while S is fixed. Evaluating Price Elasticity of Supply Inelastic supply: When 0 < S < 1. Quantity supplied is not particularly responsive to changes in price. Unit elastic supply: When S = 1. Quantity supplied and price change by equal percentages. Elastic supply: When 1 < S . Quantity supplied responds more than proportionately to changes in price. Perfectly Inelastic Supply P S = 0. QS is fixed, will not increase with rising demand. Level of D determines price. When applicable? S Q Perfectly Elastic Supply P S Q S = . Suppliers will supply whatever Q is demanded at this price. Increases in D do not increase price. (Applies to LR for some markets.) Elasticity of Supply: SR & LR P SSR SSR SSR SLR Q Supply is more elastic in the LR than in the SR. Why? Application: Tax incidence Excise tax: Tax on the sale of a particular good. Commonly used on gasoline, cigarettes, alcoholic beverages. Tax incidence: refers to how much the tax affects buyers versus sellers. Excise tax on Gasoline-50¢ S’ Price/Gal. 0.50 S 1.50 1.25 1.00 0.75 D 4 5 6 S shifts up by 50¢ b/c sellers need 50¢ more to sell each quantity. Why doesn’t P rise by 50¢? 1,000 Gal. of gas Basic results of excise tax The price of the taxed good will go up, but not by the full amount of the tax. When sales of a good are taxed, less is sold. General result: When the government taxes an activity, people do less of it. Excise tax on Gasoline-50¢ S’ Price/Gal. 0.50 S 1.25 Price paid by consumers is $1.25 Price kept by producers is $0.75. 1.00 0.75 D 4 5 6 1,000 Gal. of gas What happens to the rest? Tax Incidence The gov’t collects $0.50(4,000) =$2,000 in tax revenue. Producers lose $0.25(4,000) = $1,000 in revenue. Consumers pay $0.25(4,000) = $1,000 extra. Question In our example, the consumers and the producers “split” the cost of the tax 5050. Will that always be true? Inelastic Demand S’ Price/Gal. 0.50 S 1.40 0.90 Price paid by consumers rises 40¢ Price kept by producers falls 10¢ 1.00 D 5 4.6 1,000 Gal. of gas QD doesn’t fall as much. Tax Incidence & Demand Elasticity The tax incidence falls more on consumers (& less on producers) when demand is inelastic relative to supply. Check for yourself what happens when you change the price elasticity of supply, leaving D the same. Coming Up Next Time: Review for exam. One week from today: First midterm exam. Group Work Problems on income elasticity of demand Problem on the relationship between tax incidence on the price elasticity of demand. Income elasticity of demand for soda Income 1999 2000 $26,000 $30,000 QD of Soda per Year 50 gallons 63 gallons • Calculate the income elasticity of demand for soda. • Is this good normal or inferior? A necessity or a luxury good? Income elast of demand for restaurant meals Income $ spent on restaurant meals $30,000 $1,000 $45,000 $1,700 % of inc. spent on rest. meals • Calculate the % of income spent on restaurant meals at each income level. • Is this good normal or inferior? A necessity or a luxury good? Elastic Demand & Gas Tax Incidence S’ Price/Gal. 0.50 Use this graph & the 2 earlier ones from lecture to fill in the table on the next slide. S 1.15 1.00 0.65 Hint: To get price elasticity of D, use numbers along D curve. 1,000 Gal. D 2.3 5 of gas Table for Gas Tax Price Consumers’ Gov’t Producers’ Elasticity extra Revenue lost revenue of D payment Inelastic D (2nd ex.) First Ex. Elastic D (3rd ex.) $2,300 1.0 $2,000 $1,000 $1,000 $805 $345 Questions about Tax Incidence Does your table confirm or refute the statement made in lecture about the relationship between price elasticity of D and tax incidence? What is the relationship between price elasticity of D and gov’t revenue from the gas tax?