demand and supply: elasticities and applications chapter 5

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Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

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Page 1: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications

Chapter 5

Page 2: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Elasticity of Demand

• The responsiveness of consumers to a change in the price of a good/service

• In other words: How much does changing the price of a good impact how much we demand of that good.

Page 3: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Elasticity of Demand

• Practice: Think about your spending habits. Come up with one good that you do not care what it costs when it comes to buying it…you will buy the same amount no matter what happens. Come up with one good that you would definitely buy more of it was cheaper and less of if it was more expensive.

Page 4: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Elasticity of Demand

• So how do we figure out exactly what the elasticity of demand is?

• A lovely formula!

• Ed = % change in Qd of X

% change in P of X

Page 5: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Elasticity of Demand

• Here’s another way of looking at it!

• Ed = (Q2 – Q1)/Q1

(P2 – P1)/P1

We always use absolute value when calculating elasticity!

Page 6: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Midpoint Formula

• Ed = (Q2 – Q1)/[(Q1 + Q2)/2]

(P2 – P1)/[(P1 + P2)/2]

• This is the formula you should actually use to calculate the elasticity of demand

• (why do they give you the other one too?....I don’t know!)

Page 7: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

Page 8: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Midpoint Formula = (Q2-Q1)/[(Q1+Q2)/2]

(P2-P1)/[(P1+P2)/2]

Page 9: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Midpoint Formula = (160-180)/[160+180)/2]

($2.00-$1.00)/[($2.00+$1.00)/2]

Page 10: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Midpoint Formula = -20/170

$1.00/$1.50

Page 11: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Midpoint Formula = -.118

• .667

Page 12: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Midpoint Formula = -0.18

• Use absolute value and change to percent = 0.18

Page 13: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Use absolute value and change to percent = 0.18

• So what is our demand?! Inelastic? Elastic? Unit Elastic?

Page 14: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Elastic Demand

• %change in Qd > %change in P• Elasticity Ratio > 1

Page 15: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Inelastic Demand

• %change in Qd < %change in P• Elasticity Ratio < 1

Page 16: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Unitary Elasticity

• %change in Qd = %change in P• Elasticity Ratio = 1

Page 17: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Use absolute value and change to percent = 0.18

• So what is our demand?! Inelastic? Elastic? Unit Elastic?

Page 18: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Let’s PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $1 to $2

• Use absolute value and change to percent = 0.18

• Inelastic at this price point!

Page 19: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Your turn!Price Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $5 to $6

Page 20: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Your turn!Price Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• Calculate the price elasticity of demand when price changes from $5 to $6

• (80-100)/[(100+80)/2] ($6-$5)/[$5+$6)/2]• (-20/90)/($1/$5.50)• -.222/.182 = -1.22• Absolute value = 1.22• Elastic Demand!

Page 21: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• If the price changes from $3 per cup to $4 per cup, is demand elastic, inelastic or unit elastic?

Page 22: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

PracticePrice Per Cup of Coffee

Quantity Demanded

$10 0

$9 20

$8 40

$7 60

$6 80

$5 100

$4 120

$3 140

$2 160

$1 180

Free! 200

• If the price changes from $3 per cup to $4 per cup, is demand elastic, inelastic or unit elastic?

• Inelastic!

Page 23: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Why Use Percentages?

1.Using absolute changes would be affected by the units used

Example: If $ units used: • $3$2 causes 60100 Qd change– Seems very responsive

If cents used:• 300200 causes 60100 Qd change– Does not seem as responsive

Page 24: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Why Use Percentages?

2. Easier to compare different products

• $ changes depend on the original cost of the good/service

• $1 increase in a good/service which costs $1 has a different impact than a $1 increase in a good/service which costs $20,000

Page 25: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Why Use Percentages?

In other words….

- Adding $1 to the price of a pack of starbursts is going to have a different impact that adding $1 to the price of a new car!

Page 26: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Elasticity Varies with Price Range

• Demand is more elastic in the upper left region of the demand curve than in the lower right region

Page 27: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Elasticity Varies with Price Range

• In upper left: –%change in quantity is large

because original quantity is small–%change in price is small because

the original price is large

Page 28: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Elasticity Varies with Price Range

• In lower right: –%change in quantity is small because

original quantity is large –%change in price is large because the

original price is small

Page 29: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5
Page 30: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Perfectly Inelastic Demand

• %change in price does not change the quantity demanded

• Demand Curve is Parallel to the Y Axis

Q

P D

15

100

700

Page 31: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Perfectly Elastic Demand

• %change increase in price causes quantity demanded to fall to zero

• %change decrease in price causes quantity demanded to increase to infinity

• Demand Curve is Parallel to the X Axis

P

Q

D16

10 20

Page 32: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Midpoint Formula

• If original formula used, two different answersP1=5; P2=4; Q1=4; Q2=5• Ed = (Q2 – Q1)/Q1

(P2 – P1)/P1

= (5-4)/4 (4-5)/5= (1/4)/1/5= 5/4=1.25

Page 33: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Midpoint Formula

• If original formula used, two different answersP1=4; P2=5; Q1=5; Q2=4

• Ed = (Q2 – Q1)/Q1

(P2 – P1)/P1

= (4-5)/5 (5-4)/4= (1/5)/(1/4)=.8

Page 34: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Determinants of Supply

Explain how each of these impacts supply:•Technology•Subsidies/Taxes•Costs/Resource Prices •Other good prices•Number of Sellers •Expectations/Fears

Page 35: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Slope Does NOT Measure Elasticity

• Slope is calculated from absolute changes in price and quantity, not percentage changes

Page 36: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Total Revenue Test

• TR = PQ

• Total revenue = Price X Quantity

Page 37: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Total Revenue Test

• Elastic Demand

– P increase leads to decrease in TR

– P decrease leads to increase in TR

– Firms tend to have sales on elastic goods

Page 38: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Total Revenue Test

• Inelastic Demand:

– P increase leads to increase in TR

– P decrease leads to decrease in TR

– Government taxes inelastic goods e.g., (sin taxes)

Page 39: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Total Revenue Test

• Unitary Demand:– P increasesNo change in TR

– P decreasesNo change in TR

Page 40: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand

Page 41: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

1. Substitutability

• The larger the number of substitutes, the greater the elasticity of demand

• There are how many different pizza places out there?

Vs.• There are how many utility companies out there?

Page 42: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

1. Substitutability

• Individual products versus industry: Tide, All, Cheer versus laundry detergent

• Our demand for the industry might be inelastic (we need clean clothes!)

But• Our demand for a specific brand might be

elastic (I don’t care what makes them clean…just do it)

Page 43: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

2. Proportion of Income

• Step One: Look at your income

• Step Two: Look at the price of the good/service

• Step Three: What portion of your income does it take to buy the good/service?

Page 44: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

2. Proportion of Income

If it takes a large portion of your income to buy the good/service – greater the elasticity.

If it take a small portion of your income to buy the good/service – usually more inelastic.

– Low-priced items are usually more inelastic than high-priced items: salt versus cars

Page 45: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

3. Luxuries versus Necessities

• Necessities = inelastic

• Luxuries = elastic

Page 46: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

3. Luxuries versus Necessities

• Necessities = inelastic– Life saving heart surgery (probably doesn’t matter

if the price increases…I’m gonna go ahead and have that)

• Luxuries = elastic– Starbursts (while desirable…not worth it if the

price goes up!)

Page 47: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

4. Time

• Goods tend to have more elastic demand over longer time periods

Consider the market for gasoline:• When the price rises, the quantity of gasoline in

the first few months/years changes very little • Over longer periods of time quantity will

change as people switch to public transportation, buy fuel efficient cars or move closer to work.

Page 48: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Elasticity of Supply

• The responsiveness of producers to price changes• Es = %change in quantity supplied of X

%change in price of X• Es >1elastic• Es < 1inelastic• Es = 1unitary• You can still use the midpoint method to calculate

this!

Page 49: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Determinants of Price Elasticity of Supply

• How flexible are sellers when it comes to changing the amount of the good they produce?

For example:• Land in Manhattan for development – inelastic

supply because you can’t really create more of it• Soccer balls produced by a factory – elastic supply

because you could operate your factory for longer, hire more workers, etc. to produce more if you wanted.

Page 50: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Determinants of Price Elasticity of Supply

• Time Period

Long Time = All factors of production are adjustable = more elastic the supply

• Firms have a longer amount of time to shift resources to adjust to a price change

Short Run = plant capacity is fixed = more inelastic supply

• Harder to make changes in production quickly

Page 51: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Determinants of Price Elasticity of Supply

• There is no revenue test for Price Elasticity of Supply

Page 52: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Homework

Read “Why Did OPEC Fail to Keep the Price of Oil High?” in your book starting on page 105– Answer question 10 on page 110– Be prepared to share your answer tomorrow.

Page 53: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Group Work

• We are going to assemble into groups of four• Once you are in your group, the youngest two

people in the group are partners and the oldest two are partners

• Each pair will be given a topic to take notes on as you read about it in your book.

• Using these notes, the pair must devise a short lesson designed to share this information with the rest of the class

Page 54: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Group Work

• You may utilize technology, posters, the board or any other supplies you feel are necessary in order to teach your lesson.

• You must design a lesson plan that contains all the components listed on your half sheet.

• When you are finished, you will turn your lesson plan into Mrs. Krieger

• Young ones – your topic is Cross Elasticity of Demand • Oldies – your topics is Income Elasticity of Demand

Page 55: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5
Page 56: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Cross Elasticity of Demand

• Responsiveness of quantity demanded of good/service X when the price of good/service Y changes

• Exy = %change in quantity demanded of X %change in price of Y

Page 57: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

If Cross Elasticity of Demand is:

1. PositiveX and Y are Substitutes2. NegativeX and Y are Complements3. (Near) ZeroX and Y are Independent (i.e.,

no relation to each other)

Page 58: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Income Elasticity of Demand

• Responsiveness of quantity demanded to a change in income

• Ei = %change in quantity demanded of X %change in income

• Ei > 0Normal Goods• Ei < 0Inferior Goods

Page 59: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Government Intervention

• Price Ceilings and Price Floors

• Basically the same thing as a surplus or shortage caused by the government!

Page 60: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Ceilings and Floors

• Everyone point to the ceiling now

• Now point to the floor

• Now forget everything you ever thought you knew about ceilings and floors

Page 61: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Ceiling

• A Price Ceiling is actually located BELOW equilibrium price

• It is a set price that suppliers may not charge more than – that’s why it’s called a ceiling

Page 62: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Ceiling

Page 63: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Examples of Price Ceilings

• Live Nation

• Ticketmaster

Page 64: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Floors

• A Price Floor is actually located ABOVE equilibrium price

• This is a set price that suppliers may not charge less than – that’s why it’s called a floor

Page 65: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Price Floors

Page 66: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Famous Price Floor = MILK

Page 67: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Attempts to Correct

• Ticket Scalpers– Sell tickets to those in need – but at a higher

price! Changing the quantity demanded

• Got Milk? Campaign– Increase demand for milk and bring equilibrium

price up to floor

Page 68: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Discussion Question

• How would elasticity impact the shortage/surplus caused by a ceiling/floor?

Page 69: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Homework

• Read pages 124 through 127 in your textbook talking about taxes.

• Create a graphic organizer (chart is probably the easiest way to go) including information on the three steps to analyzing taxes on buyers and sellers and the implications of these taxes.

Page 70: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Homework

• For example:Taxes on Buyers Taxes on Sellers

Step One

Step Two

Step Three

Implications

Page 71: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Taxes on Buyers

• Which curve would this impact? Demand or Supply?

• This is a tax on consumers. Which curve deals with consumers?

• The Demand Curve– This is the curve that is going to be shifting.

Page 72: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Taxes on Buyers

• Which curve would this impact? Demand or Supply?

• This is a tax on consumers. Which curve deals with consumers?

• The Demand Curve– This is the curve that is going to be shifting.

Page 73: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Taxes on Buyers

• Which way is our curve going to move?

• Does this added tax make the product more or less desirable?

• Less desirable – shifting to the left

• The amount of the shift is determined by looking at the amount of the tax.

Page 74: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Taxes on Buyers

• Now we examine what actually happened with the tax:– Compare the new equilibrium to the old

equilibrium– Money going to sellers goes down– Quantity will go down – The tax has reduced the size of the market!

Page 75: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Taxes on Buyers

• What does this mean? – Consumers pay higher prices due to the tax• Even though equilibrium price might be lower, there is

still a 50 cent tax on top!

– Sellers receive less for each product • Due to the decrease in equilibrium

Page 76: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Chapter 5

Taxes on Buyers

• What does this mean? – Taxes make markets shrink • Quantity at equilibrium goes down

– Buyers and sellers both get hurt• Buyers pay more for the good• Sellers make less for the good