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Chapter 4 Application on Demand and Supply 1 Elasticity Elasticity is a general concept that can be used to quantify the response in one variable when another variable changes. 2 How to measure elasticity % A elasticity of A with respect to B % B 3 Price Elasticity of Demand A popular measure of elasticity is price elasticity of demand measures how responsive consumers are to changes in the price of a product. 4 How to measure P.E.D % change in quantity demanded price elasticity of demand % change in price 5 The absolute term • The value of demand elasticity is always negative, but it is stated in absolute terms. 6 Slope and Elasticity 7 The value of the slope of the demand curve and the value of elasticity are not the same. Unlike the value of the slope, the value of elasticity is a useful measure of responsiveness. Slope and Elasticity 8 continue Changing the units of measure yields a very different value of the slope, yet the behavior of buyers in both diagrams is identical. 9 Types of Elasticity Hypothetical Demand Elasticities for Four Products 10 Hypothetical Demand Elasticities for Four Products PRODUCT 11 % % CHANGE IN CHANGE QUANTITY IN PRICE DEMANDED (%QD) (%P) ELASTICITY (%QD d %P) Insulin +10% 0% 0.0 Perfectly inelastic Basic telephone service +10% -1% -0.1 Inelastic Beef +10% -10% -1.0 Unitarily elastic Bananas +10% -30% -3.0 Elastic Perfectly Elastic and Perfectly Inelastic Demand Curves 12 Perfect elasticity When demand does not respond at all to a change in price, demand is perfectly inelastic. Demand is perfectly elastic when quantity demanded drops to zero at the slightest increase in price. 13 Calculating Elasticities P2 P1 % change in price x 100% P1 14 % change in Quantity Q2 Q1 % change in quantity demanded x 100% Q1 15 Calculating Elasticities 16 Elasticity 17 Elasticity is a ratio of percentages. Using the values on the graph to compute elasticity, using percentage changes yields the following result: Price Elasticity 100% price elasticity of demand 3.0 33.3% 18 Calculating Elasticities 19 The midpoint formula A more accurate way of computing elasticity than percentage changes is the midpoint formula: 20 The midpoint formula Q2 Q1 x 100% % Qd (Q1 Q2 ) / 2 P2 P1 % P x 100% ( P1 P2 ) / 2 21 The midpoint formula 10 5 x 100% % Qd (5 10) / 2 2 3 % P x 100% ( 3 2) / 2 22 5 x 100% 66.7% 7.5 = 167 . -1 -40.0% x 100% 2.5 Interpret Elasticities Here is how to interpret two different values of elasticity: 23 When e = 0.2, a 10% increase in price leads to a 2% decrease in quantity demanded. When e = 2.0, a 10% increase in price leads to a 20% decrease in quantity demanded. Elasticity Changes along a Straight-Line Demand Curve 24 Elasticity along a Straight-Line Price elasticity of demand decreases as we move downward along a straight line demand curve. Demand is elastic in the upper range and inelastic in the lower range of the line. 25 26 Elasticity 27 Along the elastic range, elasticity values are greater than one. Along the inelastic range, elasticity values are less than one. Elasticity and Total Revenue TR P Q 28 Value of Ed Change in quantity versus change in price Effect of an increase in price on total revenue Effect of a decrease in price on total revenue Elastic Greater than 1.0 Larger percentage change in quantity Total revenue decreases Total revenue increases Inelastic Less than 1.0 Smaller percentage change in quantity Total revenue increases Total revenue decreases Unitary elastic Equal to 1.0 Same percentage change in quantity and price Total revenue does not change Total revenue does not change Type of demand 29 Elasticity and Total Revenue When demand is inelastic, price and total revenues are directly related. Price increases generate higher revenues. When demand is elastic, price and total revenues are indirectly related. Price increases generate lower revenues. 30 The Determinants of Demand Elasticity 31 Availability of substitutes -- demand is more elastic when there are more substitutes for the product. Time dimension -- demand becomes more elastic over time. continue 32 Importance of the item in the budget -demand is more elastic when the item is a more significant portion of the consumer’s budget. Home Exam 33 Define economics and it main branches. What is elasticity, and what is its application? Give example to calculate price elasticity of demand & explain its importance. Explain the relation between elasticity & revenue? How to use the relation in decision making? Give numerical examples. What are factors determines the elasticity? Use Graphs and numerical examples as much as you can in answers. Other Important Elasticities elasticity of demand – measures the responsiveness of demand to changes in income. Income 34 The form % change in quantity demanded income elasticity of demand % change in income 35 Other Important Elasticities 36 Cross-price elasticity of demand: A measure of the response of the quantity of one good demanded to a change in the price of another good. The form % change in quantity of Y demanded cross-price elasticity of demand % change in price of X 37 Other Important Elasticities Elasticity of supply: A measure of the response of quantity of a good supplied to a change in price of that good. Likely to be positive in output markets. 38 The form % change in quantity supplied elasticity of supply % change in price 39 Other Important Elasticities Elasticity of labor supply: A measure of the response of labor supplied to a change in the price of labor. 40 The form % change in quantity of labor supplied elasticity of labor supply % change in the wage rate 41 The Price System: Rationing and Allocating Resources 42 The market system The market system, performs two important and closely related functions: 43 The first 1. 44 Resource allocation: the market system determines the allocation of resources among produces and the final mix of outputs. The second 2. Price rationing: the market system distributes goods and services on the basis of willingness and ability to pay. 45 Price Rationing A decrease in supply creates a shortage at the original price. The lower supply is rationed to those who are willing and able to pay the higher price. 46 47 Price Rationing There is some price that will clear any market. • The price of a rare painting will eliminate excess demand until there is only one bidder willing to buy the single available painting. 48 49 Constraints on the Market A price ceiling is a maximum price that sellers may charge for a good, usually set by government. 50 In 1974, the government set a price ceiling to distribute the available supply of gasoline. At an imposed price of 57 cents per gallon, the result was excess demand. 51 52 Prices and the Allocation of Resources Price changes resulting from shifts of demand cause profits to rise or fall. Profits attract capital; losses lead to disinvestment. 53 54 Higher wages attract labor and encourage workers to acquire skills. At the core of the system, supply, demand, and prices in input and output markets determine the allocation of resources and the ultimate combinations of things produced. Price Floors A price floor is a minimum price below which exchange is not permitted. – 55 The most common example of a price floor is the minimum wage, which is a floor set under the price of labor. The result of setting a price floor will be excess supply, or higher quantity supplied than quantity demanded. 56 Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus is the difference between the maximum amount a person is willing to pay for a good and its current market price. 57 Consumer Surplus Some consumers are willing to pay as much as $5 each for hamburgers. Since the price is only $2.50, they receive a consumer surplus of $2.50. 58 59 Consumer Surplus Others are willing to pay something less than $5.00 but more than $2.50. Consumer surplus is the area below the demand curve and above the price level 60 61