Unit 4 Lecture: 7and 8
Unit 4 Lecture: 7and 8
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
CONTENTS
Introduction
Objectives
Price Elasticity of Demand
Determinants of Demand Elasticity
Tutor-Marked Assignment
References
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Introduction : Elasticity of Demand
Example : Do people care about the price of
petrol?
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OBJECTIVES
• At the end of this unit, you should be able to:
Ed = %DQ
%DP
DQ/Q DQ P
Or Ed = or Ed = ´
DP/P DP Q
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Cal
cul
ation ofPercentage change in Quantity
Demanded
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The Midpoint Method: A Better Way to Calculate
Percentage Changes and Elasticities
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Midpoint formula
Midpoint formula describes more accurately the
percentage change. It can be define as a way of
calculating percentage change in demand and price
using the halfway values between Q1 and Q2 and P1
and P2.
Midpoint formula - Example
% change in quantity
demanded
% change in price
Example
Now that we know that:
% change in quantity demanded = 66.7%
% change in price = -35.3%
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• Inelastic demand:
W hen Ed < 1 means that a 1 percent change in price
evokes less than a 1 percent change in quantity
demanded, the good has price inelastic demand.
Example :necessary goods
• Unitaryel
astic
W hen Ed = 1 means that the percentage change in
quantity demanded is exactly the same as the percentage
change in price, the good has unit elastic demand.
For instance, if 5 per cent increase in price of petrol
drives down the quantity of petrol demanded by 5 per
cent. Then elasticity is calculated as follow:
-5/5= -1
Summary of the price elasticities of demand
Perfectl
yEl
astic Demand
0.05
Elasticity = =0.5
0.10
Measuring elasticity of demand : Solving the
problem
Answer (b) on the basis of the answer to (a).
We find that price elasticity of demand for cigarettes
is less than one, or inelastic. This is not
unexpected. Cigarette smoking is a difficult habit to
give up. An increase in price alone is insufficient to
induce people to break this habit.
SELF-ASSESSM EN T EXERCISE
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then they are cheaper than close-up. Consumer will shift
easily to any of the other tooth pastes. Hence the
demand elasticity of close-up will be very elastic such
that a little increase in price will drive down the
quantity demanded for it rapidly.
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• Addict or habit
People that are addicted to some product consumed out
of their habit which ‘die hard’are another factor that
can determine demand elasticity. Smokers and
drunkards who consume cigarette and alcohols out of
habit will not budge from buying their brands despite
increase in price. As such, elasticity of demand for these
products will be inelastic.
• Importance ofa commodity
The greater the uses of a product the more its price
elasticity. For example, ginger powder is not only use
for soup seasoning, but can be included in, fried rice,
beans porridge, oat meal, and can even be added to
black tea, green tea or used to make pure ginger tea. For
these alternative uses it can be put to, its demand
becomes very elastic. Increase in price of ginger may
lead to decrease in quantity demanded.
SELF-ASSESSMENT EXERCISE
TR = P x Q
The relationship between price
elasticity and total revenue
When demand is price elastic:
A decrease in price leads to an increase in total revenue.
An increase in price leads to a decrease in total revenue.
Price
Reducing the Price wh en
demand is elastic increases
total revenue.
30 𝠵𝠵
1 = 30𝠵
16 = $480
𝠵𝠵
2 = 20𝠵
28 = $560
20
Demand Curve
16 28
0 Quantity Demanded
The relationshipbetween price elasticityand
totalrevenue
Demand Curve
0 16 20
Quantity Demanded
The rel
ationshipbetween price el
asticityand total
revenue
el
astic a decrease in price the increase in
increases revenue quantity demanded is
proportionally greater
than the decrease in
price
The rel
ationshipbetween price el
asticityand total
revenue: continued
Would you expect the cross price elasticity between the following
pairs of goods to be positive or negative? Explain your answers.
a)Coke and Pepsi.
b)DVD players and DVDs.
c)Gucci sunglasses and vegemite.
Cross price elasticities – Solving the Problem
(a) Coke and Pepsi are the classic example of two goods which are
substitutes in consumption. An increase in the price of Coke
would, therefore, lead to an increase in demand for Pepsi, so the
cross-price elasticity would be positive.
(b) DVD players and DVDs are complements in consumption. An
increase in the price of DVD players would see a decrease in
demand for DVD players, and hence a decrease in demand for
the complement DVDs. The cross-price elasticity between the
two goods would, therefore, be negative.
(c)Gucci sunglasses and vegemite are completely unrelated goods,
therefore, we would expect the cross price elasticity to equal
zero.
Other demand elasticities