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Page 1: Elasticity
Page 2: Elasticity

Price Quantity Total MarginalRevenue Revenue

10 1 109 2 18 88 3 24 67 4 28 46 5 30 25 6 30 04 7 28 -23 8 24 -42 9 18 -61 10 10 -8

Total and Marginal Revenue

Page 3: Elasticity

Quantity Demanded

MR

/Pric

e

-10

-5

0

5

10

Total Revenue

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

0 2 4 6 8 10 12Quantity per period

Tota

l Rev

enue

15

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

Marginal Revenue

Average Revenue

Page 4: Elasticity

Marginal Revenue Equation

Demand Equation Q = B + ap P

P = -B/ap + Q/ap

TR = PQ = -B/ap*Q + Q2/ap

MR = d(PQ)/dQ = -B/ap+ 2Q/ap

MR = 0 , Q = B/2

For Q < B/2 , MR = +ve Q > B/2 , MR = -ve

Page 5: Elasticity

Relation of Demand & Marginal Revenue Curve

• The curves intercept y-axis at same point

– Intercept of MR & Demand (DD) curve = -B/ap

• Slope of (DD) curve = 1/ ap

• Slope of MR curve = 2/ ap = 2 DD curve

Page 6: Elasticity

ELASTICITY

• A general concept used to quantify the response in one variable when another variable changes

• elasticity of A with respect to B =% A/ %B

Page 7: Elasticity

Calculating Elasticities

P1 = 3

P2 = 2

Q1 = 5 Q2= 10

D

Price perPound

Pounds of X per week

Pounds of X per month

Slope: Y = P2 – P1

X = Q2 – Q1

= 2 – 3 = -1

10 – 5 = 5

Ounces of X per month

Slope: Y = P2 – P1

X = Q2 – Q1

= 2 – 3 = -1

160 –80 = 80

PP

P1 = 3

P2 = 2

Q1 = 80 Q2= 160

D

Price perPound

Ounces of X per weekQ Q00

Page 8: Elasticity

Point Price Elasticity of Demand

//P

Q Q Q PEP P P Q

Point Definition

Ratio of the percentage of change in quantity demanded to the percentage change in price.

% QEp =

% P

Page 9: Elasticity

For P approaching 0

Q/P = dQ/dP

Linear equation = dQ/dP = constant

dQ/dP = ap

Qd = B + apP = B + dQ/dP P

Point Price Elasticity of Demand

Page 10: Elasticity

Point Price Elasticity of demand

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700Qx

Px

A

F

G

H

J

B

C

Dx

Page 11: Elasticity

• B = -5• C = -2• F = -1• G = -0.5• H = -0.2

Page 12: Elasticity

Arc Price Elasticity of Demand

2 1 2 1

2 1 2 1PQ Q P PEP P Q Q

Ep = Q2 - Q1 P2 - P1

(Q2 + Q1)/2 (P2 + P1)/2

Page 13: Elasticity

Example

• Calculate the arc price elasticity from point C to point F.

= (300 – 200)/ (3-4) * ((3+4)/ (300+200)) = -1.4

Page 14: Elasticity

Price Quantity Total MarginalRevenue Revenue

10 1 109 2 18 88 3 24 67 4 28 46 5 30 25 6 30 04 7 28 -23 8 24 -42 9 18 -61 10 10 -8

Calculate Elasticity

Page 15: Elasticity

Price Quantity Total Marginal Price Revenue Revenue Elasticity

10 1 10 -10.009 2 18 8 -4.508 3 24 6 -2.677 4 28 4 -1.756 5 30 2 -1.205 6 30 0 -0.834 7 28 -2 -0.573 8 24 -4 -0.382 9 18 -6 -0.221 10 10 -8 -0.10

Total Marginal Elasticity

Page 16: Elasticity

Quantity Demanded

MR

/Pric

e

-10

-5

0

5

10

Total Revenue

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

0 2 4 6 8 10 12Quantity per period

Tota

l Rev

enue

15

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

Marginal Revenue

ElasticEp < - 1

Unitary elasticEp = - 1

Inelastic-1 < Ep < 0

Page 17: Elasticity

Price

Qty Demanded0 Q

P Price

Qty Demanded0 Q

PD

D

Perfectly Inelastic Demand Perfectly Elastic Demand

Page 18: Elasticity

Perfectly inelastic demandQd does not change at all when price changes

Inelastic demand

-1 < E 0

Unitary elastic demand

E = -1 Elastic demand

E < -1

Perfectly elastic demand

Qd drops to zero at the slightest increase in price

Page 19: Elasticity

Exercise• For each of the following equations, determine

whether the demand is elastic, inelastic or unitary elastic at the given price.a) Q =100 – 4P and P = $20b) Q =1500 – 20 P and P = $5c) P = 50 – 0.1Q and P = $20

a) -4, elastic

b) -0.07, Inelastic

c) -0.67, Inelastic

Page 20: Elasticity

Marginal Revenue and Price Elasticity of Demand

11P

MR PE

MR = d(PQ) = dQ*P + dP*Q

dQ dQ dQ

= P + QdP = P 1 + dP.Q dQ dQ P

Page 21: Elasticity

• P * Qd = TR Elastic Demand

• P * Qd = TR Elastic Demand

• P * Qd = TR Inelastic Demand

• P * Qd = TR Inelastic Demand

Page 22: Elasticity

Present Loss : $ 7.5 millionPresent fee per student : $3,000Suggested increase : 25%Total number of students : 10000Elasticity for enrollment at state universities is -1.3 with respect to tuition changes

1% increase in tuition = 1.3% decrease in enrollmentIncrease of 25% decline in enrollment by 32.5%

3000 * 10000 = $30,000,0003750 * 6750 = $25,312,500

Problem

Page 23: Elasticity

Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand

Demand for a commodity will be less elastic if:

• It has few substitutes

• Requires small proportion of total expenditure

• Less time is available to adjust to a price change

Page 24: Elasticity

Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand

Demand for a commodity will be more elastic if:

• It has many close substitutes

• Requires substantial proportion of total expenditure

• More time is available to adjust to a price change

Page 25: Elasticity

Income Elasticity of Demand

Point Definition//I

Q Q Q IEI I I Q

The responsiveness of demand to changes in income.Other factors held constant, income elasticity of a good is the percentage change in demand associated with a 1% change in income

Page 26: Elasticity

Income Elasticity of Demand

Arc Definition 2 1 2 1

2 1 2 1IQ Q I IEI I Q Q

Page 27: Elasticity

Demand of automobiles as a function of income isQ = 50,000 + 5(I)

Present Income = $10,000 Changed Income = $11,000

I1 = $10,000, Q = 100,000I2 = $11,000, Q = 105,000

EI = 0.512

Page 28: Elasticity

• Normal Goods ΔQ/ΔI = +ve, EI = +ve – Necessities 0 < EI 1

– Luxuries EI > 1

• Inferior Goods ΔQ/ΔI = -ve, EI = -ve

Page 29: Elasticity

Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand

Point Definition //

X X X YXY

Y Y Y X

Q Q Q PEP P P Q

Responsiveness in the demand for commodity X to a change in the price of commodity Y. Other factors held constant, cross price elasticity of a good is the % change in demand for commodity X divided by the % change in the price of commodity Y

Page 30: Elasticity

Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand

Arc Definition 2 1 2 1

2 1 2 1

X X Y YXY

Y Y X X

Q Q P PEP P Q Q

Substitutes

0XYE

Complements

0XYE

Page 31: Elasticity

Importance of Elasticity in Decision making

• To determine the optimal operational policies

• To determine the most effective way to respond to policies of competing firms

• To plan growth strategy

Page 32: Elasticity

Importance of Income Elasticity

– Forecasting demand under different economic conditions

– To identify market for the product

– To identify most suitable promotional campaign

Page 33: Elasticity

Importance of Cross price Elasticity

– Measures the effect of changing the price of a product on demand of other related products that the firm sells

– High positive cross price elasticity of demand is used to define an industry

Page 34: Elasticity

Exercise

• A consultant estimates the price-quantity relationship for New World Pizza to be at P = 50 – 5Q.– At what output rate is demand unitary elastic?– Over what range of output is demand elastic?– At the current price, eight units are demanded

each period. If the objective is to increase total revenue, should the price be increased or decreased? Explain.

Page 35: Elasticity

P =50 -5QMR = 50-10Q• For unitary elastic MR = 0 so Q =5• MR will be +ve when Q<5, so demand will be

elastic when 0<=Q<5.• P for Q=8 is P=50-5*8 = 50-40 = 10

• Ep= -1/5*10/8 = -0.25. As demand is inelastic, when we increase price, TR increases.

5/1/ PQ

Page 36: Elasticity

Question: Demand for a firm’s product has been estimated to be

Qd = 1000-200P If the price of the product is Rs 3 per unit, find out the

price elasticity of demand at this price.Solutuion: Price elasticity of demand is ep= dQ/dP*P/Q in the given demand function 200 is the coefficient of price

which measures dQ/dP. In order to find out price elasticity of demand at price Rs3, we have first to find out the quantitydemanded at this price by using the given demand equation. Thus,

Q=1000-200*3=400 Thus, P=Rs3 and quantity demanded at the price is 400

units. Substituting the values of dQ/dP, P and Q in the price elasticity formula, we have

ep= dq/dp*P/Q=200*3/400=3/2=1.5

Page 37: Elasticity

Q. The price elasticity of demand for colour TVs is estimated to be -2.5. if the price of colour TVs is reduced by 20 percent, how much percentage increase in the quantity of colour TVs sold do you expect?

Solu. Price elasticity of demand being equal to -2.5 means that one pwercent change in price causes 2.5 percent change in quantity demanded or sold. 20 percent reduction in price of colour will cause increase in quantity sold by 2.5*20=50 percent.