Top Banner
Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor
21

Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Dec 26, 2015

Download

Documents

Adam Watts
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Elasticity and Its Applications

Economics 230

J.F. O’Connor

Page 2: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Questions

• Are consumers spending more on gasoline now ($1.40/gal.) than three months ago ($1.10/gal) ? (Yes!)

• Price of airline tickets has increased in the past 3 months. Are consumers spending more on airline travel? (No!)

• Why the difference? Answer lies in responsiveness to price.

Page 3: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Measuring Responsiveness of One Variable to Another

• Two Methods:– Rate of change – Elasticity

• Rate of Change in y with respect to x is the change in y divided by the change in x, ceteris paribus

• Elasticity of y w.r.t. to x is the percentage change in y divided by the percentage change in x, ceteris paribus

Page 4: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Comments

• Rate of change is measured geometrically by slope.

• Advantage of elasticity is that, in contrast to rate, it does not depend on the units of measurement.

• Elasticity can be measured geometrically, from a table, or from an equation.

Page 5: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Factors Affecting Quantity Demanded

• Own price

• Price of substitutes

• Price of complements

• Income of consumers

• Preferences of consumers

• Advertising

Page 6: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Demand Curve

• Relationship between quantity demanded of the good and its price when other factors affecting demand are held constant.

• Then the demand curve is Q = 14 - 2P

• The convention in graphing demand curves is to put price on the vertical axis

Page 7: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Demand Curve (contd.)

• The equation is then P = 7 - .5Q

• Law of Demand (empirical generalization)

– A change in price, ceteris paribus, will result in a change in quantity demanded in the opposite direction

– Demand curve has negative slope

Page 8: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Equation:

P= 7 - .5Q

Equation:

P= 7 - .5Q

A Linear Demand Curve

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Pric

e

Quantity

Page 9: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Responsiveness of Quantity Demanded to Price

• Two Measures• Rate of change in quantity wrt to price

or (change in quantity)/ (change in price) = inverse of the slope

• Elasticity = Percentage change in quantity divided by percentage change in price

Page 10: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

What is wrong with rate of change?

• It is an adequate measure of responsiveness but its value depends on the units of measurement. Hard to compare the sensitivity of demand for airline tickets with that of the demand for food.

• Elasticity is independent of units of measurements. Thus, comparisons across goods are possible

Page 11: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Measuring Elasticity IGraphically

• By definition elasticity is (1/slope)(price/quantity)

• Measure elasticity at Price = 3.5$ in prior example

• (1/Slope) = - 14/7

• Quantity = 7

• Elasticity = - (14/7)3.5/7 = -1

Page 12: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

• Measure price elasticity of demand at P=5.5

• (1/Slope) = - 14/7

• Quantity = 3

• Elasticity = - (14/7)5.5/3 = -11/ 3 = -3.7

• Price elasticity of demand at P=1.5

• Quantity = 11

• Elasticity = -(14/7)1.5/11 = - 3/11

Page 13: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Observations

• Elasticity varies along the linear demand curves while slope is constant

• Simple way to measure price elasticity - take the price on the vertical axis and divide it by the distance from price to the intercept or maximum price. Put a negative sign in front. Let’s try it!

Page 14: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

At p=5.5

eta = -5.5/(7-5.5)

= -11/3

At P= 3.5,

eta = -3.5/(7-3.5)

= -1

At P = 1.5,

eta = -1.5/(7-1.5)

= -11/3

At p=5.5

eta = -5.5/(7-5.5)

= -11/3

At P= 3.5,

eta = -3.5/(7-3.5)

= -1

At P = 1.5,

eta = -1.5/(7-1.5)

= -11/3

A Linear Demand Curve

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Price

Quantity

Page 15: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Classifying Direct Price Elasticity of Demand

• Perfectly inelastic ( eta = 0 )• Inelastic ( eta between 0 and -1)• Unitary elastic ( eta = -1 )• Elastic ( eta less than negative one or

numerically greater than 1 )• Perfectly elastic ( eta negative infinity )• Note Mankiw drops negative sign

Page 16: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

What Happens to the Amount Spent on a Good when its Price

Increases?

• It all depends on the direct price elasticity of demand !

• Key relationship:

• %Change in expenditure = %change in price + % change in quantity

Page 17: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

The Effect of an Increase in Price on Expenditure

• Demand– Perfectly inelastic– inelastic– unitary elasticity– elastic– perfectly elastic

• Repeat for a decrease in price

• Expenditure– increase– increase– no change– decrease– decrease to zero

Page 18: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

What Determines the Elasticity of Demand?

• Availability of Substitutes– demand for apples more elastic than demand for

fruit

• Importance in the Consumer’s Budget• demand for housing more elastic than demand

for salt

• Time– response increases with time

Page 19: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Measuring Elasticity for a Non-linear Demand Curve

• Can still use the graphical technique

• Draw tangent at price at which elasticity is to be evaluated

• Compute negative of price divided by the difference between the intercept of the tangent and the price

Page 20: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Demand for Plones

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Price

Quantity

Compute elasticity of demand at price of 5.75 and quantity of 3.

Eta =- 5.75/(10-5.75)

=- 1.35

Compute elasticity of demand at price of 5.75 and quantity of 3.

Eta =- 5.75/(10-5.75)

=- 1.35

Page 21: Elasticity and Its Applications Economics 230 J.F. O’Connor.

Responsiveness to Other Determinants of Demand

• Income elasticity

• Cross-price elasticity

• Elasticity with respect to advertising expenditures.