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Free Slides from Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog http://dolanecon.blogspot.com/ A Natural Experiment in Demand Elasticity: Metered vs...
NYC Electric Rates as a Natural Experiment <ul><li>Economists can’t always conduct controlled experiments, but sometimes e...
Three Hypotheses about Demand Elasticity <ul><li>Three hypotheses to consider: </li></ul><ul><li>Demand for electricity is...
Perfectly Inelastic Demand? <ul><li>Hypothesis 1:  Demand for electricity is  perfectly inelastic </li></ul><ul><li>Quanti...
Constant Elasticity of Demand? <ul><li>Hypothesis 2:  Electricity demand has constant elasticity for all P and Q </li></ul...
Linear Demand? <ul><li>Hypothesis 3:  The demand curve for electricity is a straight line </li></ul><ul><li>Elasticity of ...
Observations from the NYC Experiment <ul><li>People use more electricity when unlimited use is included in the rent and th...
Conclusions from the NYC Experiment <ul><li>People use more electricity when it is “free,” in the sense that unlimited ele...
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Perfectly Inelastic Demand? <ul><li>Hypothesis 1: Electric rates and conservation a natural experiment

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Perfectly Inelastic Demand? Hypothesis 1: Demand for electricity is perfectly inelastic Quantity does not vary when price changes Value of elasticity = 0 Demand curve is a vertical line A price increase would not be an effective incentive for conservation This hypothesis is rarely favored by economists but it is implicit in many popular discussions of economic policy Have you ever heard someone say something like this? “ Increasing the price of electricity wouldn’t do any good for promoting conservation. Rich people can afford to use as much as they want no matter what it costs. And poor people would still need electricity for daily needs. Raising the price would just make them even poorer.” Post P100817 from Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog http://dolanecon.blogspot.com/

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Perfectly Inelastic Demand? Hypothesis 1: Demand for electricity is perfectly inelastic Quantity does not vary when price changes Value of elasticity = 0 Demand curve is a vertical line A price increase would not be an effective incentive for conservation This hypothesis is rarely favored by economists but it is implicit in many popular discussions of economic policy Have you ever heard someone say something like this? “ Increasing the price of electricity wouldn’t do any good for promoting conservation. Rich people can afford to use as much as they want no matter what it costs. And poor people would still need electricity for daily needs. Raising the price would just make them even poorer.” Post P100817 from Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog http://dolanecon.blogspot.com/

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