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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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Conclusions from the NYC Experiment Electric rates and conservation a natural experiment

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Conclusions from the NYC Experiment People use more electricity when it is “free,” in the sense that unlimited electricity is included in the rent, with no meter Some people use electricity very wastefully when it is not metered However, total electric use in non-metered apartments is only about 30 percent greater than use in unmetered apartments On balance, the hypothesis of a linear demand curve fits the observations better than zero or constant elasticity Metering electricity does provide an effective incentive for conservation Although some people do use electricity wastefully when it is “free,” demand is by no means unlimited. The demand curve does intersect the horizontal axis. Post P100817 from Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog http://dolanecon.blogspot.com/

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Conclusions from the NYC Experiment People use more electricity when it is “free,” in the sense that unlimited electricity is included in the rent, with no meter Some people use electricity very wastefully when it is not metered However, total electric use in non-metered apartments is only about 30 percent greater than use in unmetered apartments On balance, the hypothesis of a linear demand curve fits the observations better than zero or constant elasticity Metering electricity does provide an effective incentive for conservation Although some people do use electricity wastefully when it is “free,” demand is by no means unlimited. The demand curve does intersect the horizontal axis. Post P100817 from Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog http://dolanecon.blogspot.com/

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