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Page 1: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3

www.lancaster.ac.uk/postgrad/murphys4/[email protected]

office: LUMS C85

Page 2: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

outline

Q1 – 5 min.Q2 – 10 min.Q3 – 5 minQ4 – 5 min. (skip a &b)Q5 – 10 min.Q6 – 10 min.Practice exam ?’s – 5 min.

Page 3: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 1Outline three determinants of the price elasticity of demand for a product and comment on the importance of these in determining the degree of elasticity.

Page 4: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 1: Price Elasticity of Demand

• Few Close Substitutes• Necessities• Broadly defined

Markets• Lower Proportion of

Income devoted to product

• Short Time Horizon

• Many Close Substitutes

• Luxuries• Narrowly-defined

markets• Higher Proportion of

Income devoted to Product

• Longer Time Horizon

Less Elastic More Elastic

Page 5: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 2(a)Suppose The Times estimates that if it raises the subscription price of its online newspaper from £1.00 to £1.50 then the number of subscribers will fall from 50,000 to 40,000. a. What is the price elasticity of demand for the Daily News when elasticity is calculated using the midpoint method?

Page 6: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 2(a): Price Elasticity of Demand

= = 0.56

Page 7: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Price Elasticity of Demand (midpoint method):

Income Elasticity of Demand:% Change in Quantity Demanded

% Change in Income

Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand:% Change in Quantity Demanded of Good 1

% Change in Price of Good 2

Price Elasticity of Supply:% Change in Quantity Supplied

% Change in Price

% Change in Quantity Demanded = (Q2-Q1)/[(Q2+Q1)/2]% Change in Price (P2-P1)/[(P2+P1)/2]

Page 8: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 2(b) & (c) (b)What is the advantage of using the midpoint method? With the midpoint method, the value of the elasticity is the same whether you begin at a price of £1.00 and raise it to £1.50 or begin at a price of £1.50 and reduce it to £1.00.

(c) If The Times' only concern is to maximise total revenue, should it raise the price of a newspaper from £1.00 to £1.50? Why or why not? Yes. In this price range, the price elasticity of demand is less than one (inelastic), so an increase in price will increase total revenue.

Page 9: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 3 The table below provides the demand schedule for motel rooms at Small Town Motel. Use the information provided to complete the table. Answer the following questions based on your responses in the table. Use the midpoint method to calculate the percentage changes used to generate the elasticities.

Price (£) Quantity Demanded

Total Revenue

% Change in Price

% Change in Quantity

Elasticity

20 2440 2060 1680 12100 8120 4

Page 10: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 3 Price (£) Quantity

DemandedTotal Revenue

% Change in Price

% Change in Quantity

Elasticity

20 24 480 0.67 0.18 0.2740 20 800 0.40 0.22 0.5560 16 960 0.29 0.29 1.0080 12 960 0.22 0.40 1.82100 8 800 0.18 0.67 3.72120 4 480

Page 11: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 3(a) & (b)

a. Over what range of prices is the demand for motel rooms elastic? To maximise total revenue, should Small Town Motel raise or lower the price within this range?

Answer: £80 to £120; lower its prices b. Over what range of prices is the demand for motel rooms inelastic? To maximise total revenue, should Small Town Motel raise or lower the price within this range?

Answer: £20 to £60; raise its prices

Price (£) Quantity Demanded

Total Revenue

% Change in Price

% Change in Quantity

Elasticity

20 24 480 0.67 0.18 0.2740 20 800 0.40 0.22 0.5560 16 960 0.29 0.29 1.0080 12 960 0.22 0.40 1.82100 8 800 0.18 0.67 3.72120 4 480

Page 12: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 3(c)

c. Over what range of prices is the demand for motel rooms unit elastic? To maximise total revenue, should Small Town Motel raise or lower the price within this range?

Answer: £60 to £80; it doesn’t matter. For prices in this range, a change in price proportionately changes the quantity demanded so total revenue is unchanged.

Price (£) Quantity Demanded

Total Revenue

% Change in Price

% Change in Quantity

Elasticity

20 24 480 0.67 0.18 0.2740 20 800 0.40 0.22 0.5560 16 960 0.29 0.29 1.0080 12 960 0.22 0.40 1.82100 8 800 0.18 0.67 3.72120 4 480

Page 13: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 4 The demand schedule from Question 3 above is reproduced below along with another demand schedule when consumer incomes have risen to £60,000 from £50,000. Use this information to answer the following questions. Use the midpoint method to calculate the percentage changes used to generate the income elasticities. Price(£)

Quantity DemandedIncome = £50,000

Quantity DemandedIncome = £60,000

20 24 3440 20 3060 16 2680 12 22100 8 18120 4 14

a. What is the income elasticity of demand when motel rooms rent for £40? Answer: (10/25)/(£10,000/£55,000) = 2.2

Page 14: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 4b. What is the income elasticity of demand when motel rooms rent for £100? Answer: (10/13)/(£10,000/£55,000) =4.2 c. Are motel rooms normal or inferior goods? Why? Answer: Normal goods, because the income elasticity of demand is positive. d. Are motel rooms likely to be necessities or luxuries? Why? Answer: Luxuries, because the income elasticity of demand is large (greater than 1). In each case, an 18 percent increase in income caused a much larger increase in quantity demanded.

Page 15: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Income Elasticity of Demand

A few things we know:+ Normal good- Inferior good>1 Luxury<1 Necessity

Page 16: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 5Use Excel and the following supply and demand schedules for bicycles to answer the questions below. Price Quantity

DemandedQuantity Supplied

300 60 30400 55 40500 50 50600 45 60700 40 70800 35 80

Page 17: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 5(a)a. Plot the supply and demand curves for bicycles. On the graph, impose a tax of £300 per bicycle to be collected from the sellers. After the tax, what has happened to the price paid by the buyers, the price received by the sellers, and the quantity sold when compared to the free market equilibrium? Answer: The price buyers pay rises to £700, the price sellers receive falls to £400, and the quantity sold falls to 40 units.

Page 18: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 5(b)b. Again, plot the supply and demand curves for bicycles. On the graph, impose a tax of £300 per bicycle to be collected from the buyers. After the tax, what has happened to the price paid by the buyers, the price received by the sellers, and the quantity sold when compared to the free market equilibrium?

Page 19: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 5(b)b. Again, plot the supply and demand curves for bicycles. On the graph, impose a tax of £300 per bicycle to be collected from the buyers. After the tax, what has happened to the price paid by the buyers, the price received by the sellers, and the quantity sold when compared to the free market equilibrium? Answer: The price buyers pay rises to £700, the price sellers receive falls to £400, and the quantity sold falls to 40 units.

Page 20: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 5(c) c. Compare your answers to questions (a) and (b) above. What conclusion do you draw from this comparison? Answer: The impact of a tax collected from sellers is equivalent to the impact of a tax collected from buyers.

Page 21: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 5(d)d. Who bears the greater burden of this tax, the buyers or the sellers? Why? Answer: The greater burden of the tax has fallen on the buyers. The free market equilibrium price was £500. After the tax, the price the buyers pay has risen £200 while the price the sellers receive has fallen £100. This is because demand is less price elastic than supply at this price.

Page 22: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 6(a)Suppose the government introduces a tax, t, on some good that is priced at p. In the after tax equilibrium, D(p) = S(p-t). Note that p is a function of t, i.e. p(t) . So, in equilibrium, D(p(t))=S(p(t)-t). Some (fairly) simple geometry can be used to show that the incidence of a (small) change in t, call this dt where d means “small change in”, on p depends on the relative slopes of D and S. In particular, one can show that

We know that dD/dp<0 (D slopes downwards) and dS/dp>0 (S slopes upwards) so the denominator is ambiguous – it could be positive or negative depending on whether D or S is steeper. Show that this implies that

where ε is the price elasticity and D and S refer to D and S curves.HINT: multiply numerator and denominator by p/Q where Q is the quantity demanded and supplied.

Page 23: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 6(a) Write in terms of and .

Page 24: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 6(b)For many years the US government has subsidised corn which is used in ethanol which is a petrol substitute – supposedly to reduce US dependence on imported oil. It also provided a direct subsidy. The idea was to get consumers to shift away from regular petrol. In 2010 the government spent $4b on these two subsidies that amounted to about $2.60 a gallon. Just as a tax shifts the S curve up, a subsidy shifts it down. The price elasticity of D is estimated to be 2.9 and the elasticity of S is estimated to be 0.25. Using the above equation calculate the incidence of this tax.

Page 25: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 6(b)

Answer: About 0.24. In other words the $2.60 subsidy only reduced price by 24c – the producer and corn growers pocketed almost all of the subsidy. And the policy had little effect on oil use.

Page 26: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Question 6(c)Do you think the subsidy is a good idea?

http://www.economist.com/node/18867278

Page 27: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Practice Multiple Choice Questions

Page 28: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

An Inferior Good:a) Is a Giffen goodb) Has a positive income elasticity of demandc) Has a negative income elasticity of demandd) Has an upward sloping demand function

Page 29: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Suppose a demand curve is written D=60-3P. Find the intercept and slope of the corresponding inverse demand curve.

a) Slope of -20, intercept of 3b) Slope of -1/3, intercept of 20c) Slope of -3, intercept of 20d) Slope of 1/3, intercept of 60

Page 30: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Suppose D=120-4P. Find the price elasticity at a price of 10 and at a price of 20. Use the standard mathematical method, not the midpoint method.

a) -0.2, -2, respectivelyb) -0.5, -2, respectivelyc) -0.5, -4, respectivelyd) Not possible to say without knowing what

the corresponding level of demand is.

Page 31: ECON 100 Tutorial: Week 3  s.murphy5@lancaster.ac.uk office: LUMS C85.

Suppose D=200-2P and S=20+4P. What is the equilibrium price and quantity?

a) P*=20, Q*=100b) P*=30, Q*=140c) P*=50, Q*=220d) P*=40, Q*=180