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Chapter 5
Price Elasticity of
Demand and Supply
• Key Concepts
• Summary
• Practice Quiz
• Internet Exercises
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
2
In this chapter, you will
learn to solve these
economic puzzles:
Can total revenue from a Steel
Porcupines concert remain
unchanged, regardless of
changes in the ticket price?
How sensitive is the
quantity of cigarettes
demanded to changes in
the price of cigarettes?
What happens to the sales of
Mercedes, BMW’s and Jaguars
in the U.S. if Congress prevents
sales of luxury Japanese cars in
this country?
3
How is the percent
increase or decrease of
two numbers calculated?
Percent change is the
difference between the
two numbers divided by
the original number
4
Suppose the price of a
rock concert increases
by 10%, what effect will
this have on sales?
That all depends on the
price elasticity of demand
for this rock concert
5
What is Elasticity?
A term economists use to
describe responsiveness,
or sensitivity, to a
change in price
6
What is Price
Elasticity of Demand?
The ratio of the percentage
change in the quantity
demanded of a product to a
percentage change in its
price
7
% ∆ in Q demanded
% ∆ in price
Ed =
Price Elasticity of Demand
8
Supposing a university’s
enrollment drops by 20%
because tuition rises by
10%, what is the Price
Elasticity of Demand?
9
Ed=
-20%
+10%
=
-.20
+.10
= 2
10
Why is Elasticity 2 in
the previous example
and not -2?
Economists drop the negative
sign because we know from
the law of demand that
quantity demanded and
price are inversely related
11
If there is an increase
from 3 units to 5, what is
the percentage increase?
2/3 = 66%
12
If there is a decrease
from 5 units to 3, what is
the percentage decrease?
2/5 = 40%
13
Problem - When we
move along a demand curve
between two points, we get
different answers to elasticity
depending on whether we are
moving up or down the
demand curve
14
A
B
2
3
P
Q
D
15
Economists can solve this
problem of different base points
by using the midpoints as the
base points of changes in prices
and quantity demanded
16
∆ in quantity demanded
sum of quantities/2
divided by
∆ in price
sum of prices/2
Price elasticity equals the
17
What is Elastic Demand?
A condition in which the
percentage change in
quantity demanded is
greater than the percentage
change in price
18
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
A
B
Elastic Demand Ed > 1
P
Q
19
Why is the Demand
curve in the previous
slide Elastic?
The percentage change in
the quantity demanded is
greater than the
percentage change in price
20
Price decrease
Increase in total
revenue
Elastic Demand
21
10
15
= .66% change in Q =
% change in P = 10
25
= .40
Ed = % change in Q
% change in P
=
.66
.40
Ed = 1.65
22
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
A
B
Inelastic Demand Ed < 1
23
Why is the Demand
curve in the previous
slide Inelastic?
The percentage change in
the quantity demanded is
less than the percentage
change in price
24
Price decrease
Decrease in
total revenue
Inelastic Demand
25
5
13
= .38% change in Q =
% change in P =
10
25
= .40
Ed =
% change in Q
% change in P =
.38
.40
26
What is a Unitary
Elastic Demand Curve?
The percentage change in
the quantity demanded is
equal to the percentage
change in price
27
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
E
F
Unitary Elastic Demand Ed = 1
D
28
Price decrease
No change in
total revenue
Unitary Elastic Demand
29
What is a Perfectly
Elastic Demand Curve?
A condition in which a
small percentage
change in price brings
about an infinite
percentage change in
the quantity demanded
30
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Perfectly Elastic Demand Ed =
8
31
Price change
Infinite change in
quantity demanded
Perfectly Elastic Demand
32
What is a Perfectly
Inelastic Demand Curve?
A condition in which the
quantity demanded
does not change as the
price changes
33
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Perfectly Inelastic Demand Ed = 0
34
Price change
Zero change in
quantity demanded
Perfectly Inelastic Demand
35
If demand is elastic -
total revenue goes down
If demand is inelastic -
total revenue goes up
If a college raises tuition,
what happens to revenue?
36
If price increases and the
revenue gained is greater
than the revenue lost, the
demand curve is price
inelastic, < 1
37
If price increases and
the revenue gained is
less than the revenue
lost, the demand curve
is price elastic, > 1
38
If total revenue does
not change when
price increases, the
demand curve is
unitary elastic,
value equals 1
39
$20
$15
$10
$5
5 10 15 20
$25
$30
$35
$40
25 30 35 40 45
Price Elasticity of
Demand RangesElastic
Inelastic
Unitary
elastic
40
$200
$150
$100
$50
5 10 15 20
$250
$300
$350
$400
25 30 35 40 45
Total Revenue Curve
Elastic
Inelastic
Unitary
Elastic
41
What factors influence
Demand sensitivity?
•Availability of substitutes
•Share of budget on the
product
•Adjustment to a price
change over time
42
What do Substitutes have
to do with a price change?
The more substitutes a
product has, the more
sensitive consumers are to a
price change, and the more
elastic the demand curve
43
P
Q0
P
Q0
A B
D D
Which demand curve is for a vital
medicine and which is for candy?
44
Why is A the Demand
Curve for medicine?
Because medicine is a
necessity with few
substitutes, and the
price can change with
little effect on the
quantity demanded
45
Why is B the Demand
curve for candy?
Because candy has many
substitutes, a price
change can bring about a
big change in the
quantity demanded
46
What does the Share of
One’s Budget have to do
with a price change?
The larger the purchase is to
one’s budget, the more
sensitive consumers are to a
price change, and the more
elastic the demand curve
47
What does Time have to
do with sensitivity?
The longer consumers have
to adjust, the more
sensitive they are to a
price change, and the more
elastic the demand curve
48
What are other
Elasticity measures?
Income elasticity of demand
Cross-elasticity of demand
49
What is Income
Elasticity of Demand?
The ratio of the percentage
change in the quantity
demanded of a good to a
given percentage change
in income
50
% ∆ in Q demanded
% ∆ in incomeEd =
Income Elasticity of Demand
51
What is Cross-elasticity
of Demand?
The ratio of the percentage
change in quantity
demanded of a good to a
given percentage change
in price of another good
52
% ∆ Q demanded of good A
% ∆ price of good BEc =
Cross-elasticity of Demand
53
What is the Price
Elasticity of Supply?
The ratio of the percentage
change in the quantity
supplied of a product to
the percentage change in
its price
54
% ∆ in Q supplied
% ∆ in priceEs =
Price Elasticity of Supply
55
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Perfectly Elastic Supply =
8
56
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Perfectly Inelastic Supply Es = 0
57
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Unit Elastic Supply Es = 1
S
.5%
.5%
58
Who pays the tax levied
on sellers of goods such
as gasoline, cigarettes,
and alcoholic beverages?
It all depends; the
corporation pays all, some,
or very little of the tax
59
What decides who
pays what part of the
tax increase?
The more elastic the
demand, the more the
corporation pays; the less
elastic the demand, the
more the consumer pays
60
$1.00
$.75
$.50
$.25
5 10 15 20
$1.25
$1.50
$1.75
$2.00
25 30 35 40 45
s1
s2
D
Buyers
Sellers
Partially shifted tax to buyers
61
Increase in
gasoline tax
Decrease in
supply
Consumers and
suppliers share
burden of tax
62
$1.00
$.75
$.50
$.25
5 10 15 20
$1.25
$1.50
$1.75
$2.00
25 3035 40 45
s1
s2
D
Buyers
Fully shifted tax to buyers
63
Increase in
gasoline tax
Decrease in
supply
Consumers bear
full burden of tax
64
Key Concepts
65
Key Concepts
• What is Elasticity?
• What is Price Elasticity of Demand?
• What is Elastic Demand?
• What is a Unitary Elastic Demand Curve?
• What is a Perfectly Elastic Demand
Curve?
• What is a Perfectly Inelastic Demand
Curve?
66
Key Concepts cont.
• What factors influence Demand
sensitivity?
• What are other Elasticity measures?
• What is Income Elasticity of Demand?
• What is Cross-elasticity of Demand?
• What is the Price Elasticity of Supply?
67
Summary
68
Price elasticity of demand is a
measure of the responsiveness of the
quantity demanded to a change in price.
Specifically, price elasticity of demand
is the ratio of the percentage change in
quantity demanded to the percentage
change in price.
69
% ∆ in Q demanded
% ∆ in price
Ed =
Price Elasticity of Demand
70
What is the midpoint formula for
the price elasticity of demand?
71
∆ in quantity demanded
sum of quantities/2
divided by
∆ in price
sum of prices/2
Price elasticity equals the
72
Elastic demand is a change of
more than one percent in quantity
demanded in response to a one percent
change in price. Demand is elastic
when the elasticity coefficient is greater
than one and total revenue (price time
quantity) varies inversely with the
direction of the price change.
73
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Elastic Demand
74
Inelastic demand is a change of
less than one percent in quantity
demanded in response to a one
percent change in price. Demand is
inelastic when the elasticity
coefficient is less than one and total
revenue varies directly with the
direction of the price change.
75
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Inelastic Demand
76
Unitary elastic demand is a one
percent change in quantity demanded in
response to a one percent change in
price. Demand is unitary elastic when
the elasticity coefficient equals one and
total revenue remains constant as the
price changes.
77
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Unitary elastic Demand
78
Perfectly elastic demand is a
decline in quantity demanded to zero
for even the slightest rise or fall in
price. This is an extreme case in which
the demand curve is horizontal and the
elasticity coefficient equals infinity.
79
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Perfectly Elastic Supply =
8
80
Perfectly inelastic demand is no
change quantity demanded in response
to price changes. This is an extreme
case in which the the demand curve is
vertical and the elasticity coefficient
equals zero.
81
$40
$30
$20
$10
10 20 30 40
Perfectly Inelastic Supply Es = 0
82
Determinants of price elasticity of
demand include (a) the availability of
substitutes, (b) the percentage of
budget spent on the product, and (c) the
length of time allowed for adjustment.
Each of these factors is directly related
to the elasticity coefficient.
83
Income elasticity of demand is the
percentage change in quantity
demanded divided by the percentage
change in income. For a normal good
or service, income elasticity of demand
is positive. For an inferior good or
service, income elasticity of demand is
negative.
84
Cross elasticity of demand is the
percentage change in the quantity
demanded of one product caused by a
change in the price of another product.
When the cross-elasticity of demand is
negative, the two products are
complements.
85
Price elasticity of supply is a
measure of the responsiveness of the
quantity demanded to a change in
price. Price elasticity of supply is the
ratio of the percentage change in
quantity supplied to the percentage
change in price.
86
Tax incidence is the share of a
tax ultimately paid by buyers and
sellers. Facing a downward-sloping
demand curve and an upward-
sloping supply curve, sellers cannot
raise the price by the full amount of
the tax. If the demand curve is
vertical, sellers will raise the price
by the full amount of a tax.
87
$1.00
$.75
$.50
$.25
5 10 15 20
$1.25
$1.50
$1.75
$2.00
25 3035 40 45
s1
s2
D
Buyers
Fully shifted tax to buyers
88
$1.00
$.75
$.50
$.25
5 10 15 20
$1.25
$1.50
$1.75
$2.00
25 30 35 40 45
s1
s2
D
Buyers
Sellers
Partially shifted tax to buyers
89
Chapter 5 Quiz
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
90
1. If an increase in bus fares in Charlotte, North
Carolina reduces total revenue of the public
transit system, this is evidence that demand is
a. price elastic.
b. price inelastic
c. unitary elastic
d. perfectly elastic
A. When price increases and the total revenue
decreases, by definition, this represents an
elastic demand curve. The revenue lost from
selling fewer units is not offset by the revenue
gained by charging a higher price.
91
2. Which of the following is the result of an
increase in total revenue?
a. Price increases when demand is elastic.
b. Price decreases when demand is elastic.
c. Price increases when demand is unitary
elastic.
d. Price decreases when demand is inelastic.
B. When price decreases and the total
revenue increases, the revenue gained by
the increase in sales more than offsets the
revenue lost from the lower price. By
definition, this represents an elastic
demand curve.
92
3. You are on a committee that is considering
ways to raise money for your city’s
symphony program. You would recommend
increasing the price of symphony tickets only
if you thought the demand curve for these
tickets was
a. inelastic.
b. elastic.
c. unitary elastic.
d. perfectly elastic.
A. When the demand curve is inelastic, the
revenue gained from the higher price more
than offsets the revenue lost from the decline
in sales.
93
4. The price elasticity of demand for a
horizontal demand curve is
a. perfectly elastic.
b. perfectly inelastic.
c. unitary elastic.
d. inelastic.
e. elastic.A. A perfectly elastic demand curve exists
when any increase in price leads to zero
sales. The only curve that would illustrate
this would be a horizontal line at the
beginning price.
94
5. Suppose the quantity of steak purchased by
the Jones family is 110 pounds per year
when the price is $2.10 per pound and 90
pounds per year when the price is $3.90 per
pound. The price elasticity of demand
coefficient for this family is
a. 0.33.
b. 0.50.
c. 1.00.
d. 2.00.
A. 20/100 divided by $1.80/$6.00 = .33
95
6. If a 5 percent reduction in the price of a
good produces a 3 percent increase in the
quantity demanded, the price elasticity of
demand over this range of the demand
curve is
a. elastic.
b. perfectly elastic.
c. unitary elastic.
d. inelastic.
e. perfectly inelastic.
D. Since the percentage change in quantity
demanded is less than the percentage change
in price, this range is defined inelastic
96
7. A manufacturer of Beanie Babies hires an
economist to study the price elasticity of
demand for this product. The economist
estimates that the price elasticity of demand
coefficient for a range of prices close to the
selling price is greater than 1. The
relationship between changes in price and
quantity demanded for this segment of the
demand curve is
a. elastic. e. unitary elastic.
b. inelastic.
c. perfectly elastic.
d. perfectly inelastic.
A. Elasticity > 1 = elastic demand
97
8. A downward-sloping demand curve will have a
a. higher price elasticity of demand coefficient
along the top of the demand curve.
b. lower price elasticity coefficient along the
top of the demand curve.
c. constant price elasticity of demand
coefficient throughout the length of the
demand curve.
d. positive slope.
A. The quantity demanded by consumers is
more sensitive to a price change at higher
prices than at lower prices.
98
9. The price elasticity of demand coefficient for
a good will be less
a. if there are few or no substitutes available.
b. if a small portion of the budget will be
spent on it.
c. in the short run than in the long run.
d. all of the above are true.
D. A low elasticity of demand means that
there is a low sensitivity to a change in
price. When the good has few substitutes,
or the purchase represents a small portion
of one’s budget, or they do not have much
time to adjust to the price change, price
elasticity of demand is inelastic.
99
10. The income elasticity of demand for shoes is
estimated to be 1.50. We can conclude that
shoes
a. have a relatively steep demand curve.
b. have a relatively flat demand curve.
c. are a normal good.
d. are an inferior good.
C. If the income elasticity coefficient is a
positive number, then the good or service
is a normal good.
100
11. To determine whether two goods are
substitutes or complements, an economist
would estimate the
a. price elasticity of demand.
b. income elasticity of demand.
c. cross-elasticity of demand.
d. price elasticity of supply.
C. Cross-elasticity of demand shows what
will happen to the demand for one good if
the price of a complementary good, or a
good that is a substitute, changes.
101
12. If the government wanted to raise tax revenue
and shift most of the tax burden to the sellers, it
would impose a tax on a good with a
a. steep (inelastic) demand curve and a steep
(inelastic) supply curve.
b. steep (inelastic) demand curve and a flat
(elastic) supply curve.
c. flat (elastic) demand curve and a steep
(inelastic) supply curve.
d. flat (elastic) demand curve and a flat (elastic)
supply curve.
C. An elastic demand curve would mean that a
leftward shift in the supply curve would lead
to a big decrease in quantity demanded and
little change in price, so the business would
lose total revenue.
102
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Elasticity

  • 1. Chapter 5 Price Elasticity of Demand and Supply • Key Concepts • Summary • Practice Quiz • Internet Exercises ©2000 South-Western College Publishing
  • 2. 2 In this chapter, you will learn to solve these economic puzzles: Can total revenue from a Steel Porcupines concert remain unchanged, regardless of changes in the ticket price? How sensitive is the quantity of cigarettes demanded to changes in the price of cigarettes? What happens to the sales of Mercedes, BMW’s and Jaguars in the U.S. if Congress prevents sales of luxury Japanese cars in this country?
  • 3. 3 How is the percent increase or decrease of two numbers calculated? Percent change is the difference between the two numbers divided by the original number
  • 4. 4 Suppose the price of a rock concert increases by 10%, what effect will this have on sales? That all depends on the price elasticity of demand for this rock concert
  • 5. 5 What is Elasticity? A term economists use to describe responsiveness, or sensitivity, to a change in price
  • 6. 6 What is Price Elasticity of Demand? The ratio of the percentage change in the quantity demanded of a product to a percentage change in its price
  • 7. 7 % ∆ in Q demanded % ∆ in price Ed = Price Elasticity of Demand
  • 8. 8 Supposing a university’s enrollment drops by 20% because tuition rises by 10%, what is the Price Elasticity of Demand?
  • 10. 10 Why is Elasticity 2 in the previous example and not -2? Economists drop the negative sign because we know from the law of demand that quantity demanded and price are inversely related
  • 11. 11 If there is an increase from 3 units to 5, what is the percentage increase? 2/3 = 66%
  • 12. 12 If there is a decrease from 5 units to 3, what is the percentage decrease? 2/5 = 40%
  • 13. 13 Problem - When we move along a demand curve between two points, we get different answers to elasticity depending on whether we are moving up or down the demand curve
  • 15. 15 Economists can solve this problem of different base points by using the midpoints as the base points of changes in prices and quantity demanded
  • 16. 16 ∆ in quantity demanded sum of quantities/2 divided by ∆ in price sum of prices/2 Price elasticity equals the
  • 17. 17 What is Elastic Demand? A condition in which the percentage change in quantity demanded is greater than the percentage change in price
  • 18. 18 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 A B Elastic Demand Ed > 1 P Q
  • 19. 19 Why is the Demand curve in the previous slide Elastic? The percentage change in the quantity demanded is greater than the percentage change in price
  • 20. 20 Price decrease Increase in total revenue Elastic Demand
  • 21. 21 10 15 = .66% change in Q = % change in P = 10 25 = .40 Ed = % change in Q % change in P = .66 .40 Ed = 1.65
  • 22. 22 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 A B Inelastic Demand Ed < 1
  • 23. 23 Why is the Demand curve in the previous slide Inelastic? The percentage change in the quantity demanded is less than the percentage change in price
  • 24. 24 Price decrease Decrease in total revenue Inelastic Demand
  • 25. 25 5 13 = .38% change in Q = % change in P = 10 25 = .40 Ed = % change in Q % change in P = .38 .40
  • 26. 26 What is a Unitary Elastic Demand Curve? The percentage change in the quantity demanded is equal to the percentage change in price
  • 27. 27 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 E F Unitary Elastic Demand Ed = 1 D
  • 28. 28 Price decrease No change in total revenue Unitary Elastic Demand
  • 29. 29 What is a Perfectly Elastic Demand Curve? A condition in which a small percentage change in price brings about an infinite percentage change in the quantity demanded
  • 30. 30 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Perfectly Elastic Demand Ed = 8
  • 31. 31 Price change Infinite change in quantity demanded Perfectly Elastic Demand
  • 32. 32 What is a Perfectly Inelastic Demand Curve? A condition in which the quantity demanded does not change as the price changes
  • 33. 33 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Perfectly Inelastic Demand Ed = 0
  • 34. 34 Price change Zero change in quantity demanded Perfectly Inelastic Demand
  • 35. 35 If demand is elastic - total revenue goes down If demand is inelastic - total revenue goes up If a college raises tuition, what happens to revenue?
  • 36. 36 If price increases and the revenue gained is greater than the revenue lost, the demand curve is price inelastic, < 1
  • 37. 37 If price increases and the revenue gained is less than the revenue lost, the demand curve is price elastic, > 1
  • 38. 38 If total revenue does not change when price increases, the demand curve is unitary elastic, value equals 1
  • 39. 39 $20 $15 $10 $5 5 10 15 20 $25 $30 $35 $40 25 30 35 40 45 Price Elasticity of Demand RangesElastic Inelastic Unitary elastic
  • 40. 40 $200 $150 $100 $50 5 10 15 20 $250 $300 $350 $400 25 30 35 40 45 Total Revenue Curve Elastic Inelastic Unitary Elastic
  • 41. 41 What factors influence Demand sensitivity? •Availability of substitutes •Share of budget on the product •Adjustment to a price change over time
  • 42. 42 What do Substitutes have to do with a price change? The more substitutes a product has, the more sensitive consumers are to a price change, and the more elastic the demand curve
  • 43. 43 P Q0 P Q0 A B D D Which demand curve is for a vital medicine and which is for candy?
  • 44. 44 Why is A the Demand Curve for medicine? Because medicine is a necessity with few substitutes, and the price can change with little effect on the quantity demanded
  • 45. 45 Why is B the Demand curve for candy? Because candy has many substitutes, a price change can bring about a big change in the quantity demanded
  • 46. 46 What does the Share of One’s Budget have to do with a price change? The larger the purchase is to one’s budget, the more sensitive consumers are to a price change, and the more elastic the demand curve
  • 47. 47 What does Time have to do with sensitivity? The longer consumers have to adjust, the more sensitive they are to a price change, and the more elastic the demand curve
  • 48. 48 What are other Elasticity measures? Income elasticity of demand Cross-elasticity of demand
  • 49. 49 What is Income Elasticity of Demand? The ratio of the percentage change in the quantity demanded of a good to a given percentage change in income
  • 50. 50 % ∆ in Q demanded % ∆ in incomeEd = Income Elasticity of Demand
  • 51. 51 What is Cross-elasticity of Demand? The ratio of the percentage change in quantity demanded of a good to a given percentage change in price of another good
  • 52. 52 % ∆ Q demanded of good A % ∆ price of good BEc = Cross-elasticity of Demand
  • 53. 53 What is the Price Elasticity of Supply? The ratio of the percentage change in the quantity supplied of a product to the percentage change in its price
  • 54. 54 % ∆ in Q supplied % ∆ in priceEs = Price Elasticity of Supply
  • 55. 55 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Perfectly Elastic Supply = 8
  • 56. 56 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Perfectly Inelastic Supply Es = 0
  • 57. 57 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Unit Elastic Supply Es = 1 S .5% .5%
  • 58. 58 Who pays the tax levied on sellers of goods such as gasoline, cigarettes, and alcoholic beverages? It all depends; the corporation pays all, some, or very little of the tax
  • 59. 59 What decides who pays what part of the tax increase? The more elastic the demand, the more the corporation pays; the less elastic the demand, the more the consumer pays
  • 60. 60 $1.00 $.75 $.50 $.25 5 10 15 20 $1.25 $1.50 $1.75 $2.00 25 30 35 40 45 s1 s2 D Buyers Sellers Partially shifted tax to buyers
  • 61. 61 Increase in gasoline tax Decrease in supply Consumers and suppliers share burden of tax
  • 62. 62 $1.00 $.75 $.50 $.25 5 10 15 20 $1.25 $1.50 $1.75 $2.00 25 3035 40 45 s1 s2 D Buyers Fully shifted tax to buyers
  • 63. 63 Increase in gasoline tax Decrease in supply Consumers bear full burden of tax
  • 65. 65 Key Concepts • What is Elasticity? • What is Price Elasticity of Demand? • What is Elastic Demand? • What is a Unitary Elastic Demand Curve? • What is a Perfectly Elastic Demand Curve? • What is a Perfectly Inelastic Demand Curve?
  • 66. 66 Key Concepts cont. • What factors influence Demand sensitivity? • What are other Elasticity measures? • What is Income Elasticity of Demand? • What is Cross-elasticity of Demand? • What is the Price Elasticity of Supply?
  • 68. 68 Price elasticity of demand is a measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded to a change in price. Specifically, price elasticity of demand is the ratio of the percentage change in quantity demanded to the percentage change in price.
  • 69. 69 % ∆ in Q demanded % ∆ in price Ed = Price Elasticity of Demand
  • 70. 70 What is the midpoint formula for the price elasticity of demand?
  • 71. 71 ∆ in quantity demanded sum of quantities/2 divided by ∆ in price sum of prices/2 Price elasticity equals the
  • 72. 72 Elastic demand is a change of more than one percent in quantity demanded in response to a one percent change in price. Demand is elastic when the elasticity coefficient is greater than one and total revenue (price time quantity) varies inversely with the direction of the price change.
  • 73. 73 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Elastic Demand
  • 74. 74 Inelastic demand is a change of less than one percent in quantity demanded in response to a one percent change in price. Demand is inelastic when the elasticity coefficient is less than one and total revenue varies directly with the direction of the price change.
  • 75. 75 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Inelastic Demand
  • 76. 76 Unitary elastic demand is a one percent change in quantity demanded in response to a one percent change in price. Demand is unitary elastic when the elasticity coefficient equals one and total revenue remains constant as the price changes.
  • 77. 77 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Unitary elastic Demand
  • 78. 78 Perfectly elastic demand is a decline in quantity demanded to zero for even the slightest rise or fall in price. This is an extreme case in which the demand curve is horizontal and the elasticity coefficient equals infinity.
  • 79. 79 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Perfectly Elastic Supply = 8
  • 80. 80 Perfectly inelastic demand is no change quantity demanded in response to price changes. This is an extreme case in which the the demand curve is vertical and the elasticity coefficient equals zero.
  • 81. 81 $40 $30 $20 $10 10 20 30 40 Perfectly Inelastic Supply Es = 0
  • 82. 82 Determinants of price elasticity of demand include (a) the availability of substitutes, (b) the percentage of budget spent on the product, and (c) the length of time allowed for adjustment. Each of these factors is directly related to the elasticity coefficient.
  • 83. 83 Income elasticity of demand is the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in income. For a normal good or service, income elasticity of demand is positive. For an inferior good or service, income elasticity of demand is negative.
  • 84. 84 Cross elasticity of demand is the percentage change in the quantity demanded of one product caused by a change in the price of another product. When the cross-elasticity of demand is negative, the two products are complements.
  • 85. 85 Price elasticity of supply is a measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded to a change in price. Price elasticity of supply is the ratio of the percentage change in quantity supplied to the percentage change in price.
  • 86. 86 Tax incidence is the share of a tax ultimately paid by buyers and sellers. Facing a downward-sloping demand curve and an upward- sloping supply curve, sellers cannot raise the price by the full amount of the tax. If the demand curve is vertical, sellers will raise the price by the full amount of a tax.
  • 87. 87 $1.00 $.75 $.50 $.25 5 10 15 20 $1.25 $1.50 $1.75 $2.00 25 3035 40 45 s1 s2 D Buyers Fully shifted tax to buyers
  • 88. 88 $1.00 $.75 $.50 $.25 5 10 15 20 $1.25 $1.50 $1.75 $2.00 25 30 35 40 45 s1 s2 D Buyers Sellers Partially shifted tax to buyers
  • 89. 89 Chapter 5 Quiz ©2000 South-Western College Publishing
  • 90. 90 1. If an increase in bus fares in Charlotte, North Carolina reduces total revenue of the public transit system, this is evidence that demand is a. price elastic. b. price inelastic c. unitary elastic d. perfectly elastic A. When price increases and the total revenue decreases, by definition, this represents an elastic demand curve. The revenue lost from selling fewer units is not offset by the revenue gained by charging a higher price.
  • 91. 91 2. Which of the following is the result of an increase in total revenue? a. Price increases when demand is elastic. b. Price decreases when demand is elastic. c. Price increases when demand is unitary elastic. d. Price decreases when demand is inelastic. B. When price decreases and the total revenue increases, the revenue gained by the increase in sales more than offsets the revenue lost from the lower price. By definition, this represents an elastic demand curve.
  • 92. 92 3. You are on a committee that is considering ways to raise money for your city’s symphony program. You would recommend increasing the price of symphony tickets only if you thought the demand curve for these tickets was a. inelastic. b. elastic. c. unitary elastic. d. perfectly elastic. A. When the demand curve is inelastic, the revenue gained from the higher price more than offsets the revenue lost from the decline in sales.
  • 93. 93 4. The price elasticity of demand for a horizontal demand curve is a. perfectly elastic. b. perfectly inelastic. c. unitary elastic. d. inelastic. e. elastic.A. A perfectly elastic demand curve exists when any increase in price leads to zero sales. The only curve that would illustrate this would be a horizontal line at the beginning price.
  • 94. 94 5. Suppose the quantity of steak purchased by the Jones family is 110 pounds per year when the price is $2.10 per pound and 90 pounds per year when the price is $3.90 per pound. The price elasticity of demand coefficient for this family is a. 0.33. b. 0.50. c. 1.00. d. 2.00. A. 20/100 divided by $1.80/$6.00 = .33
  • 95. 95 6. If a 5 percent reduction in the price of a good produces a 3 percent increase in the quantity demanded, the price elasticity of demand over this range of the demand curve is a. elastic. b. perfectly elastic. c. unitary elastic. d. inelastic. e. perfectly inelastic. D. Since the percentage change in quantity demanded is less than the percentage change in price, this range is defined inelastic
  • 96. 96 7. A manufacturer of Beanie Babies hires an economist to study the price elasticity of demand for this product. The economist estimates that the price elasticity of demand coefficient for a range of prices close to the selling price is greater than 1. The relationship between changes in price and quantity demanded for this segment of the demand curve is a. elastic. e. unitary elastic. b. inelastic. c. perfectly elastic. d. perfectly inelastic. A. Elasticity > 1 = elastic demand
  • 97. 97 8. A downward-sloping demand curve will have a a. higher price elasticity of demand coefficient along the top of the demand curve. b. lower price elasticity coefficient along the top of the demand curve. c. constant price elasticity of demand coefficient throughout the length of the demand curve. d. positive slope. A. The quantity demanded by consumers is more sensitive to a price change at higher prices than at lower prices.
  • 98. 98 9. The price elasticity of demand coefficient for a good will be less a. if there are few or no substitutes available. b. if a small portion of the budget will be spent on it. c. in the short run than in the long run. d. all of the above are true. D. A low elasticity of demand means that there is a low sensitivity to a change in price. When the good has few substitutes, or the purchase represents a small portion of one’s budget, or they do not have much time to adjust to the price change, price elasticity of demand is inelastic.
  • 99. 99 10. The income elasticity of demand for shoes is estimated to be 1.50. We can conclude that shoes a. have a relatively steep demand curve. b. have a relatively flat demand curve. c. are a normal good. d. are an inferior good. C. If the income elasticity coefficient is a positive number, then the good or service is a normal good.
  • 100. 100 11. To determine whether two goods are substitutes or complements, an economist would estimate the a. price elasticity of demand. b. income elasticity of demand. c. cross-elasticity of demand. d. price elasticity of supply. C. Cross-elasticity of demand shows what will happen to the demand for one good if the price of a complementary good, or a good that is a substitute, changes.
  • 101. 101 12. If the government wanted to raise tax revenue and shift most of the tax burden to the sellers, it would impose a tax on a good with a a. steep (inelastic) demand curve and a steep (inelastic) supply curve. b. steep (inelastic) demand curve and a flat (elastic) supply curve. c. flat (elastic) demand curve and a steep (inelastic) supply curve. d. flat (elastic) demand curve and a flat (elastic) supply curve. C. An elastic demand curve would mean that a leftward shift in the supply curve would lead to a big decrease in quantity demanded and little change in price, so the business would lose total revenue.
  • 102. 102 Internet Exercises Click on the picture of the book, choose updates by chapter for the latest internet exercises
  • 103. END