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Review:
Elasticity of Demand: The sensitivity of quantity demanded to changes in price
Relative change in Q
Relative change in P
or
/\Q / Average Q
/\P / Average P
or
(Average P / Average Q) X (1 / Slope)
It's an oversimplification, but flat demand is more elastic, and steep demand is less elastic. This is due to the increase or decrease in inverted slope
Also, more right-shifted demand curves are less elastic than left-shifted demand curves. This is due to the increase or decrease in average quantity demanded at any price
HOKAY!
Why do we get different sensitivity rates to price changes (elasticity rates) for different products?
Why are certain firms able to get away with 'jacking up the price' of certain products?
THE ANSWER:
Different degrees of availability of substitutes products (outputs on the demand side) effect elasticity. The more options, and higher the quality of available substitutes, the easier it will be for consumers to simply buy a substitute product if the price of a good increases. This means that it is easier for consumers to respond to price changes by lowering or heightening demand for products with many viable substitutes...
MORE SUBSTITUTES = HIGHER ELASTICITY
The more specific a product is, the higher elasticity will be.
Coke is much more elastic as a good than 'pop'
Pop is much more elastic as a good than 'fluids'
TIME PERIOD EFFECTS THINGS
Over time, competition increases, the availability of substitutes increases, and elasticity increases.
PERCEPTION ALSO EFFECTS THINGS
products viewed as 'luxury' items will simply not be purchased if their price is raised. How consumers perceive products effects elasticity.
HOKAY Time for comparisons
NAME SHAPE ELASTICITY REASON
perfectly inelastic vertical line 0 demand never changes with price
inelastic steep line less than 1 /\ Q < /\ P
unit elastic rectangular hyperbola 1 /\ Q = /\ P
elastic flat line more than 1 /\ Q > /\ P
perfectly elastic horizontal line infinite price never changes with demand
THE PRICE ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY!
-the responsiveness of supply to changes in price
-the formulas are the same...
HOWEVER, unit elasticity is a straight line through the origin, not a rectangular hyperbola. Why- ask Jude Drutz!
Here, elasticity is determined by the availability of substitute inputs!
The more viable substitute factors of production you have to work with as a producer, the more elastic the supply if your product will be.
EG: you farm wheat and oats. It is fairly easy to divert production towards wheat if the price of wheat increases, because wheat is a substitute input for many other grain products, it is also easy to divert production away from wheat, because it uses the same machinery and land as other substitute crops. SO WHEAT has a high price elasticity of supply.
Durin fruit is difficult and unique to farm. It requires a very specific method to cultivate and harvest, which is not used to cultivate other fruits. It is very difficult to change the production quantity of Durin in response to price changes, so Durin has low elasticity.
FIN
Showing posts with label Elasticity of Demand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elasticity of Demand. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Monday, September 21, 2009
Econ 101 -> Elasticity: How responsive is the quantity demanded to a change in price?
BC is harmonizing PST & GST into a 12% harmonized sales tax. This means that our tax base is larger (we're going to be taxed fully on more items). Yeeech.
Some politicians have been saying that businesses will pass on their savings to consumers. Prof G. thinks this is rubbish! Why? We will discover and be able to explain it by the end of the week (which is very exciting
1: Price elasticity of Demand
2: Price elasticity of Supply
3: Income elasticity of Demand
4: Cross elasticity of demand
5: Note on Point Elasticity
Price (bottom) elasticity of demand (top): PeD (e will look like n, which is a greek letter eta)
BASICALLY, when we are talking about demand curves, there are two significant factors which we need to take into account when measuring elasticity: LOCATION of the curve, and INCLINATION (slope) of the curve.
Visually, elasticity is a measure of both the location and inclination of a curve. In reality, elasticity is a measure of how responsive the quantity demanded is to a change in price. High elasticity means that demand is highly responsive to price changes. Low elasticity means that demand is not very responsive to price changes.
The formula!
Elasticity = (Average Price/Average Quantity Demanded) X (1/Slope)
Elasticity = Average Change in quantity demanded / relative change in price
It's sort of like an inverted slope, in a sense, but with other factors.
WE WANT TO KNOW THE RELATIVE CHANGE, because the impact of a change depends on its context. 1$ raise is huge if you only make 50 cents per hours. It is negligible if you make 600 dollars per hour. This is why both slop and location are a factor. We use average price and average quantity demanded because if we used only the starting or ending points of an arc to measure elasticity, it would be inaccurate.

Price -bottom- elasticity of Demand -top-
/\Q / Avg Q
/\ P / Avg P

Average Quantity demanded is higher for the curve on the right, so the elasticity will be smaller.

Flatter lines are more elastic, because their inverted slope is greater.
More next time. We are still thrashing this all out.
IMPORTANT: there are lots of formulas out there. whenever possible, just use average prices, average quantity demaned, and slope. It simplifies things!
Some politicians have been saying that businesses will pass on their savings to consumers. Prof G. thinks this is rubbish! Why? We will discover and be able to explain it by the end of the week (which is very exciting
1: Price elasticity of Demand
2: Price elasticity of Supply
3: Income elasticity of Demand
4: Cross elasticity of demand
5: Note on Point Elasticity
Price (bottom) elasticity of demand (top): PeD (e will look like n, which is a greek letter eta)
BASICALLY, when we are talking about demand curves, there are two significant factors which we need to take into account when measuring elasticity: LOCATION of the curve, and INCLINATION (slope) of the curve.
Visually, elasticity is a measure of both the location and inclination of a curve. In reality, elasticity is a measure of how responsive the quantity demanded is to a change in price. High elasticity means that demand is highly responsive to price changes. Low elasticity means that demand is not very responsive to price changes.
The formula!
Elasticity = (Average Price/Average Quantity Demanded) X (1/Slope)
Elasticity = Average Change in quantity demanded / relative change in price
It's sort of like an inverted slope, in a sense, but with other factors.
WE WANT TO KNOW THE RELATIVE CHANGE, because the impact of a change depends on its context. 1$ raise is huge if you only make 50 cents per hours. It is negligible if you make 600 dollars per hour. This is why both slop and location are a factor. We use average price and average quantity demanded because if we used only the starting or ending points of an arc to measure elasticity, it would be inaccurate.
Price -bottom- elasticity of Demand -top-
/\Q / Avg Q
/\ P / Avg P
Average Quantity demanded is higher for the curve on the right, so the elasticity will be smaller.
Flatter lines are more elastic, because their inverted slope is greater.
More next time. We are still thrashing this all out.
IMPORTANT: there are lots of formulas out there. whenever possible, just use average prices, average quantity demaned, and slope. It simplifies things!
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