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PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
Lesson Objectives

All students will understand
 Price
Elasticity of Demand
 The determinants of PED


Most students will understand the importance od
PED
Some students will link PED to potential profits for
business
Discussion points pg 25
Elasticity – the concept
Elasticity measures the extent to which quantity
demanded will change
– The responsiveness of quantity demanded to
changes in price
– Where % change in quantity demanded is greater
than % change in price – elastic
– Where % change in quantity demanded is less than
% change in price - inelastic
Elasticity – the concept
When price rises what happens to quantity demanded?
It falls BUT how much does it fall?
If the price of oil rises by 10% what happens to quantity
demanded?
• We know it will fall
• By more than 10%?
• By less than 10%?
What if we were talking about the price of a new Ford
Focus rising by 10%?
How is the value calculated?
Ped =
If answer is between 0 and -1: the relationship is
inelastic
If the answer is between -1 and infinity: the relationship
is elastic
Note: PED has – sign in front of it; because as price rises
quantity demanded falls and vice-versa
(inverse relationship between price and quantity
demanded)
Worked Example
Suppose that quantity demanded falls from 60 to 40 when the price
rises from £3 to £5. The elasticity measure is given by:
First we calculate % change in Q demanded (60-40)/60=-33%
Then we calculate % change in P (5-3)/3=66%
-33/66=-0.5 remember the – sign!
Is this elastic or inelastic?
Task – calculate the PeD for the
following


Price goes from £9 to £8, demand increases from
100 to 200 units
Price goes down from £2 to £1, demand increases
from 800 to 900 units
answers
Determinants of Elasticity
Time period – the longer the time then the more price
elastic a good is likely to be
 Number and closeness of substitutes – the more
substitutes the more price elastic [you’ll hear me going
on about this when we look at how competitive markets
are]
 The proportion of income taken up by the product –
the smaller the proportion the more price inelastic
 Luxury or Necessity - for example, addictive drugs like
cigarettes….necessity….price inelastic

Elasticity shown on the demand curve
Perfectly Elastic/Inelastic
Perfectly elastic demand
Perfectly inelastic demand
Plenary

Show your understanding pg 29