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Managerial Economics Session 1 Demand Analysis Professor Changqi Wu Topics to Be Discussed Concept of consumer demand Elasticity of demand Demand estimation and application Demand Slide 2 1. Consumer Demand Consumer is ... the God? Demand Slide 3 Individual Demand Quantity demanded: Amount of goods or services that a consumer plans to buy in a given period Quantity demanded and wants Demand reflects not only a consumer’s preference, but also her constraints. Demand Slide 4 Demand Curve Price ($ per unit) The demand curve slopes downward demonstrating that consumers are willing to buy more at a lower price. D Quantity Demand Slide 5 Understand the Demand Curve The height of the demand curve: the highest price that a consumer is willing to pay for the last unit of product the value that a consumer attaches to that particular unit of product diminishes. Demand curve slopes downward, consumers are willing to buy more when price falls the good becomes relatively cheaper the consumer’s real income increases Demand Slide 6 Income: A Non-Price Factor Demand changes along with income at any given price Changes in income shift the entire demand curve Normal goods: A consumer buys more when her income increases Inferior goods: A consumer buys less when her income increases Inferior goods are not low-quality goods Demand Slide 7 Changes in Demand P Income Increases At P1, produce Q2 At P2, produce Q1 Demand Curve shifts right More purchased at any price on D’ than on D D’ D P2 P1 Q0 Demand Q1 Q2 Slide 8 Q Other Non-Price Factors Prices of related products substitutes complements Advertising Consumer’s tastes Buyer’s expectation Demand Slide 9 Market Demand Definition: Sum of all buyers’ demand in a well defined market Horizontal sum of demand curves of all individuals Demand Slide 10 Determining the Market Demand Curve Price ($) Alan (units) Betty (units) Cindy (units) Market (units) 1 6 10 16 32 2 4 8 13 25 3 2 6 10 18 4 0 4 7 11 5 0 2 4 6 Demand Slide 11 Summing to Obtain a Market Demand Curve Price 5 The market demand curve is obtained by summing the consumer’s demand curves 4 3 Market Demand 2 1 0 Demand DA 5 DB 10 DC 15 20 25 30 Quantity Slide 12 Determinants of Market Demand Population Impact of baby boomers Demographic distribution Income level and distribution Market saturation Demand Slide 13 Population Paramid of China (1995) Age Range >=85 80-84 75-79 70-74 65-69 60-64 55-59 50-54 45-49 40-44 35-39 30-34 25-29 20-24 15-19 10-14 5-9 0-4 800 600 400 200 Female Male 0 200 Number of persons Demand 400 600 800 (in 100,000) Slide 14 Business Demand Demand for productive input Demand for labor services Market demand and firm-specific demand curve Demand An individual firm may not face the entire market demand curve Slide 15 Market versus Industry Industry = collection of businesses using similar technology or input to produce goods or services Market = collection of products that are close substitutes aluminum cans and glass bottles Substitutability Demand Slide 16 Buyer Surplus Difference between the benefit a consumer gets from a product and the price she has paid for Business applications “The Demand more you buy, the more you save”?! Slide 17 Buyer Surplus Price ($ per ticket) The buyer surplus of purchasing 6 concert tickets is the sum of the surplus derived from each one individually. 20 19 18 17 16 15 Consumer Surplus 6 + 5 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 1 = 21 Market Price 14 13 0 Demand 1 2 3 4 5 6 Concert Tickets Slide 18 2. Demand Elasticities Price elasticity of demand Other elasticities Time factor Demand Slide 19 2.1 Price Elasticity Price elasticity of demand is... responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good to a small change in its price It measures the percentage change in the quantity demanded for a good or service that results from a one percent change in the price. ep = (DQ/Q)/(DP/P) = (DQ/DP) (P/Q) Because of the inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded, the price elasticity of demand is a negative number. Slide 20 Calculating Elasticity Price ep = (-2/3)/(4/12) = -2 14 10 0 2 4 Quantity Slide 21 Properties of Price Elasticity Price elasticity is free from unit of measurement It falls between 0 and negative infinity Elastic Unit demand: ep < -1 elastic demand:ep = -1 Inelastic demand: ep > -1 Slide 22 Price Elasticity in Action Price elasticity of telephone services is estimated as ep = -0.1 Price elasticity of demand for electricity is estimated as -0.7 Price elasticity of demand for CDs is estimated as –1.83 What’s about price elasticity of drugs to treat AIDS? Slide 23 Factors Influencing Elasticity Importance of the product to the buyer Share in the total expenditure Availability of a close substitute Buyer’s prior commitment Search costs for better prices Separation of buyer and payee Slide 24 Special Cases of Price Elasticity Infinitely elastic demand Completely inelastic demand Unit-elastic demand Linear demand Slide 25 An Infinitely Elastic Demand Price ep = - 0 Quantity Slide 26 A Complete Inelastic Demand Price eP = 0 0 Quantity Slide 27 A Unit-Elastic Demand Price eP = -1 0 Quantity Slide 28 Linear Demand Curve The steeper the slope of a demand curve, the less elastic the demand, all other things constant; the flatter the slope of a demand curve, the more elastic the demand curve, all other things constant Price elasticity changes along the linear demand curve Slide 29 Linear Demand Curve Price ep = - Elastic portion of demand curve ep = -1 Inelastic portion of demand curve ep = 0 0 Quantity Slide 30 Price Elasticity and Consumer Expenditure Demand Inelastic (ep >-1) If Price Increases, Expenditures: Increase If Price Decreases, Expenditures: Decrease Unit Elastic (ep = - 1) Are unchanged Are unchanged Elastic (ep < -1) Increase Demand Decrease Slide 31 2.2 Other Elasticities Income elasticity Cross-price elasticity Advertising elasticity Slide 32 Income Elasticity Income Elasticity Is ... responsiveness of demand of a good to income changes of consumers % change of the demand for an item if the income changes by 1% Properties luxury goods eI > 1 necessity inferior goods eI < 0 0 < eI < 1 Slide 33 Cross-Price Elasticity Cross-price elasticity is ... responsiveness of demand of a good to changes in another good’s price Cross elasticity of demand measures the percentage change in the quantity demanded of one good that results from a one percent change in the price of another good. Slide 34 Cross-Price Elasticity Properties ec > 0: substitute ec = 0: independent ec < 0: complement Demand Slide 35 Advertising Elasticity Advertising elasticity is... responsiveness of demand of a good to changes in a seller’s advertising expenditure % change of the demand for an item if seller’s advertising expenditure rises by 1% Advertising elasticity of a firm is larger than that of the market Advertising sales ratio depends on the ratio of adverting elasticity and price elasticity Slide 36 2.3 Time Factor Price elasticity of demand varies with the amount of time consumers have in response to a price change. short-run long-run elasticity elasticity Durable and non-durable goods Slide 37 Short-Run Versus Long-Run Elasticities Most goods and services: Short-run elasticity is less than long-run elasticity. (e.g. gasoline) Durables goods: Demand Short-run elasticity is greater than long-run elasticity (e.g. automobiles) Slide 38 Gasoline: Short-Run and Long-Run Demand Curves Price DSR People tend to drive smaller and more fuel efficient cars in the long-run Gasoline DLR Quantity Demand Slide 39 Automobiles: Short-Run and Long-Run Demand Curves Price DLR People may put off immediate consumption, but eventually older cars must be replaced. Automobiles DSR Quantity Demand Slide 40 3. Demand Estimation Where can we find data? How to estimate the value of elasticity? How can we use the elasticity estimates? Slide 41 Data Sources Data type Time series data Cross-sectional data Data generating methods variables measured actual purchases (scanner data) versus purchase intentions (survey) conditions of data gathering uncontrolled (store data) versus controlled experiments conjoint analysis Slide 42 Estimation Procedure Choice of a functional form Decision on which variables to be included in the estimation function Estimation method Regression analysis Slide 44 Demand Data Year Quantity (Q) 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 Demand 4 7 8 13 16 15 19 20 22 Price (P) 24 20 17 17 10 15 12 9 5 Income(I) 10 10 10 17 17 17 20 20 20 Slide 45 Estimating Demand Price 25 D represents demand if only P determines demand and then from the data: Q=28.2-1.00P 20 15 10 D 5 0 Demand 5 10 15 20 25 Quantity Slide 46 Estimating Demand Adjusting for changes in income Price 25 d1, d2, d3 represent the demand for each income level. Including income in the demand equation: Q = a - bP + cI or Q = 8.08 - .49P + .81I 20 15 d1 10 d2 5 D d3 0 Demand 5 10 15 20 25 Quantity Slide 47 Key Learning Points Consumer’s demand for goods and services is influenced by many factors, among them, price, income, advertising, availability of alternatives, etc. Demand curve shows the relationship between price and quantity demanded when non-price factors are assumed constant; changes of non-price factors shift the entire demand curve. Demand Slide 48 Key Learning Points Elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of consumers’ demand toward changes in price or in non-price factors such as incomes of buyers. Elasticity estimates are useful in forecasting changes in total revenue of a firm or changes in the quantity demanded caused by changes of multiple factors. Elasticity of demand can be estimated by econometric methods. Slide 49