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Elasticity Chapter 9

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Page 1: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

ElasticityChapter 9

Page 2: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.1 IntroductionConsider a demand function q=q(p).

The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes down.

Consider the following question:

If the price increases by 1%, by how many percent will the quantity demanded decrease?

Absolute versus proportionate changes: compare “wages went up by $5” to “wages went up by 1%”.

Arc versus point elasticities: for continuous and discrete variables

Marginal revenue versus price elasticity of demand.

General definition of elasticity.

Page 3: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.2 Absolute, Proportionate, and Percentage Changes

Definition. A change in the level of variable Y is called an absolute change.

Notation: 01 YYY

Definition. The ratio of an absolute change in variable Y to its initial value is called the proportionate change in variable Y.

Notation: 0Y

Y

Example. Let variable Y represent income. Let : your income increases from the level of $200 per week to $240 per week.

The absolute increase in your income is

The proportionate increase in your income is

240$,200$ 10 YY

40$200$240$01 YYY

%202.05

1

200$

40$

0

Y

Y

Page 4: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Percentage and Proportionate Change

Mathematically, .

For that reason, there are two ways to represent proportionate changes:

1) Decimal form:

2) Percentage form:

%202.0

2.00

Y

Y

%20%1002.0%1000

Y

Y

Page 5: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Units and Proportionate Changes

Consider a change in income from $200 to $240.

The absolute change is .

The same absolute change is also (4000 US cents).

40$Y

4000cY

The proportionate change will be the same in both cases:

%2020

4

20000

4000

200$

40$

0

c

c

Y

Y

The measurement of proportionate change is independent of the units of measurement.

Page 6: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Arbitrary Zero PointKey point: when the zero level of a variable is chosen in an arbitrary fashion, the proportionate change will be different depending on the choice of the zero point.

Example: Suppose your appointment is at 4PM, but in fact you arrived at 6PM. Formally, the proportionate measure of your being late should be computed as

Remembering that 4PM=16.00 hours, the same change can be written as

%504

2

hours

hours

%5.1216

2

hours

hours

Elapsed time: this problem does not arise when applying the concept of proportionate change to the elapsed time: for instance, if it took the train 3 instead of 2 hours, the proportionate change is 50%, and it is meaningful.

Page 7: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Graphical Representation

Consider a movement from A to B.

Absolute change:

Proportionate change:

BCy

CD

BC

y

y

0

Page 8: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.3 Arc Elasticity of Supply

Consider a supply function . pfq

Definition. The ratio of a proportionate change in quantity supplied to proportionate change in price is called the arc elasticity of supply.

Notation: 0

0

0

0

q

p

p

q

ppqq

E SA

The law of supply says that higher prices are associated with higher quantities supplied so that the arc elasticity of supply is a positive number:

Interpretation: Let the price increase by 1%:

In this case the arc elasticity of supply becomes , which implies that

The arc elasticity of supply is a percentage change in the quantity supplied caused by a one-percent change in the price.

0SAE

%10

p

p

0q

qE SA

Page 9: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.4 Elastic and Inelastic SupplySuppose that a 1% increase in the price causes a more than 1% increase in quantity supplied, that is . In this case

00 p

p

q

q

1

0

0

ppqq

E SA

Alternatively, if it follows that

Definition. Supply is called elastic at a point if .

Definition. Supply is called inelastic at a point if .

00 p

p

q

q

1

0

0

ppqq

E SA

00 , pq 1SAE

00 , pq 1SAE

Interpretation. Elastic supply is sensitive to changes in the price: a small price increase causes a relatively large increase in quantity supplied. Inelastic supply is not sensitive to the price changes.

Page 10: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.5 Elasticity as a Rate of Proportionate Change

Definition. A difference quotient measured at some point is called the rate of change of y. x

y

00 , yx

Definition. The ratio of two proportionate changes is called a rate of proportionate change.

Consider a supply function q=f(p). The rate of proportionate change of the quantity supplied with respect to the price is given by:

However, this expression is the arc elasticity of supply.0

0

ppqq

Elasticity is the rate of proportionate change!

Page 11: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.6 Diagrammatic Treatment

RFFKNJ

JF

ppqq

E SA

0

0

Page 12: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Elasticities and SlopesLet us rewrite the expression for arc elasticity of supply as follows:

0

0

0

0

pq

pq

ppqq

E SA

The nominator is the difference quotient of the supply function at , which is approximating the slope of supply at that point.

00 , pq

arc elasticity of supply is thus equal to the ratio of the slope of the supply function and the price ratio.

Elasticities are not the same with slopes!

Page 13: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.7 Shortcomings of Arc Elasticity

Shortcoming 1. The value of depends on the size of the price change .SAE p

Shortcoming 2. Asymmetry: Computing a price change fromJ to K is based on initial price , while computing the sameprice change from K to J is based on initial price .

As a result, we have two elasticities: and

0p

1p

0

0

ppqq

E SA

1

1

ppqq

E SA

Which one do we choose?

Shortcoming 3. Arc elasticity is difficult to calculate.

Page 14: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.8 Point Elasticity of SupplyDefinition. The limit of arc elasticity of supply at a point is called the point price elasticity of supply.

00 , pq

Computation:

0

00

0

0

0

0lim

pqdp

dq

q

p

dp

dq

q

p

p

qE

p

S

Point elasticity of supply depends solely on the point at which it is measured: no ambiguity!

00 , pq

Page 15: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Diagrammatic Representation of Point Elasticity

Point elasticity of supply is the ratio of two slopes: the slope of tangent line to the supply function at point J, and the slope of the ray OJ.

Arc elasticity of supply is given by the ratio of chord JK to ray OJ.

Page 16: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.9 Reconciling Point and Arc ElasticitiesThe arc and point elasticities are computed in a similar fashion:

0

0p

qp

q

E SA

and 0

0p

qdp

dq

E S

The denominators are the same, while the nominators are different.

If supply is linear, the two definitions result in the same number.

When the price changes are small, the two elasticities are very close to each other.

For larger price changes, the arc elasticity is preferable.

p

Page 17: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Example 9.1aConsider a supply function .

a) Find arc elasticity of supply when p increases from 10 to 11.

100010 3 pq

Let . Plug those price in the supply function to receive

Compute absolute changes in prices and quantities:

11,10 10 pp 12310,9000 10 qq

3310,1 0101 qqqppp

Compute proportionate changes prices and quantities: 36777.090003310

0

q

q 1.0101

0

p

p

Arc elasticity of supply is the ratio of the proportionate change in quantities to the proportionate change in prices:

6777.31.0

36777.0

0

0

ppqq

E SA

Check to see that, if the starting point is the value of arc elasticity will be close, but different:

11, pq

333.3

0

0

ppqq

E SA

Page 18: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Example 9.1bFind point elasticity of supply at p=10.

333333.3900

3000

90010

9000

30001030

30100010

0

0

10

0

0

2

10

23

pq

dpdq

E

p

q

dp

dq

pdp

dqpq

pS

p

Page 19: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.11 Arc Elasticity of DemandConsider a demand function q=g(p).

Definition. The ratio of proportionate change in quantity demanded to the proportionate change in price is called arc elasticity of demand.

Notation.

0

0

0

0

pqdp

dq

ppqq

EDA

Elasticity of demand is negative since the demand curve is downward sloping, so prices and quantities move in opposite directions.

Page 20: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.12 Elastic and Inelastic DemandNote. Since the demand elasticity is negative, it makes sense talking about the absolute value of the elasticity of demand. For instance, demand elasticity of -3 is mathematically less than demand elasticity of -2, but -3 corresponds to a more responsive demand.

Definition. If at some point , demand is called elastic.

Definition. If at some point , demand is called inelastic.

Definition. If at some point , demand is called unit elastic.

1DAE 00 , pq

1DAE 00 , pq

1DAE 00 , pq

Page 21: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Elastic versus Inelastic

Page 22: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.14 Point Elasticity of DemandDefinition. The limit of the ratio of the proportionate change in quantity demanded to the proportionate change in the price at some point is calledpoint elasticity of demand.

00 , pq

Notation.000

0

0

0

0lim

pq

dpdq

q

p

dp

dq

q

p

p

qE

p

D

What’s the mistake in the yellow rectangle?

Page 23: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Example 9.3bConsider a demand function .

b) Find the point elasticity when p=5 and p=13.

1005 pq

333.0575

5

0050

pq

dpdqE

p

D

857.11335

5

00130

pq

dpdqE

p

D

Observation. As price increases, demand becomes more elastic (i.e. more sensitive to the change in price). How does that relate to your personal consumption behavior?

Page 24: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Elasticity Changes

Key features

Demand is inelastic when prices are high.

Demand is elastic when prices are low.

Demand is unit elastic at one intermediate price.

The slope of demand function is the same everywhere, but demand elasticity varies with changes in prices: elasticities are not slopes!

Page 25: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.17 Two Simplifications

1) From now on, when we say “elasticity” we will mean “point elasticity.”

2) We will omit zero subscripts for prices and quantities in the definition of elasticities: for instance, we will write

q

p

dp

dqE S

Page 26: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.18 Marginal Revenue and Demand Elasticity

Key point: the sign of the marginal revenue at a point depends on the magnitude of elasticity of demand.

00 , pq

Consider an inverse demand function . Total revenue is .

By definition of the marginal revenue,

qfp qqfpqqTR

qfqqfdq

qdTRqMR

Since p=f(q), we can rewrite the above as pqqfqMR

Taking p outside the brackets results in

DD

Ep

dp

dq

q

pE

dq

dp

p

qpqMR

111

DEpqMR

11

Page 27: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Example 9.5Consider a demand function

1) Compute elasticity of demand

2) Compute

3) Compute marginal revenue independently and see that it is equal to the result in (2)

2002 pq

DEp

11

Page 28: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Graphical RepresentationKey features

1) MR>0 if demand is elastic, TR increases

2) MR<0 if demand is inelastic, TR decreases

3) When demand is unit elastic, MR=0, and TR reaches its maximum

Page 29: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.19 Demand Elasticity under Perfect Competition

is the market price.

If the demand is zero since no one will buy above the market price.

If the demand is the size of the whole market.

p

pp

pp

Key point: under perfect competition,

is not well-defined since is not

well-defined.

q

p

dp

dqED

dp

dq

Page 30: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Thinking in the LimitConsider the case of a very flat demand function: the firm’s product is just slightly different from the other firms’ products. As a result, an increase above the market price will not result in losing all customers, and a decrease below the market price will not attract the whole market. Let the inverse demand be .

Demand 1

P

Q

p

1q

p

q

dp

dqp

0lim is getting bigger as

demand gets flatter: dp

dqb 0lim

bpaq

2q

Demand 2

pE

pMRDED

11

Page 31: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Example 9.7Consider a demand function .

a) Find the price at which TR is at its maximum.

b) Show that demand has unitary elasticity at this price.

c) Show that demand is elastic at higher prices and inelastic at lower prices.

1005 pq

Page 32: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Example 9.8

Consider a demand function .

a) Find the price p* at which TR is at its maximum.

b) Show that demand is elastic when p>p* and inelastic when p<p*.

52.0130 1 ppq

Page 33: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.21 Other Elasticities in EconomicsDefinition. The ratio of the proportionate change in total costs to the proportionate change in output is called elasticity of total cost with respect to output.

Notation. AC

MC

qTC

dqdTC

TC

q

dq

dTCETC

The elasticity of total cost with respect to output is equal to the ratio of marginal to average costs.

Page 34: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.23 Aggregate Consumption Function

Consider a consumption function C=f(Y) where C is aggregate consumption, and Y is income (e.g. GDP).

Definition. The ratio of aggregate consumption to income is called average propensity to consume, computed as .

Definition. The derivative of the consumption function at some point is called marginal propensity to consume,

Note. Marginal propensity to consume can be defined in terms of the difference quotient, too.

Y

CAPC

0Y

dY

dCMPC

Interpretation: Marginal propensity to consume is equal to the increase in consumption as a result of an increase in income. It is normally less than 1.

Page 35: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

Income Elasticity of ConsumptionDefinition. The ratio of the proportionate change in consumption to the proportionate change in income is called income elasticity of consumption and is computed as .

Note. Since and , the income elasticity of consumption can be re-written as

YC

dYdCEC

dY

dCMPC

Y

CAPC

APC

MPC

YC

dYdCEC

Graphically, the income elasticity of consumption is the ratio of the slope of tangent DE to the slope of the ray OA.

Page 36: Elasticity Chapter 9. 9.1 Introduction Consider a demand function q=q(p). The law of demand says that if price p goes up, the quantity demanded q goes

9.24 General Concept of ElasticityDefinition. For an arbitrary function y=f(x), the ratio

at some point is called the elasticity of the function at that point.

y

x

dx

dy

xy

dxdyE y

00 , yx

Definition. The first derivative of function y=f(x) at some point is called the marginal function of the primitive function f(x), denoted as M.

00 , yx

Definition. Given a primitive function f(x), the ratio f(x)/x is called average function of the primitive function f(x), denoted as A.

In general, the elasticity of function y=f(x) at some point can be written at this point as:

A

ME y

Exercise. Show that the average function is rising if M>A, and vice versa.