ECON 1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Midpoint Method, Demand Curve, Forego

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3 Jun 2018
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4/19/18
Determinants of Elasticity of Demand
- Availability of substitutes
- Time horizon
- Category of product (specific or broad)
- Necessities vs luxuries
o The nature of the good to the consumer can also affect the elasticity of demand
o Necessities: we do not change Q much when P changes tend to have inelastic demands
o Luxuries: we are more sensitive to P changes tend ot have elastic demands
o Ex: insulin vs Caribbean cruises
The prices of both goods rise by 20%. For which good does QD drop the most? Why?
To millions of diabetics, insulin is a necessity. A rise in its price would cause little or no
decrease in demands
A cruise is a luxury. If the price rises, some people will forego it
Price elasticity is higher for luxuries than for necessities
- Purchase size
o The size of the purchase (relative to our budget) matters
o We are less sensitive to price change when the good feels cheap
o We are more sensitive to price changes when the good feels expensive
Summary of determinants of elasticity of demand
less elastic
More elastic
Fewer substitutes
More substitutes
Short run (less time)
Long run (more time)
Necessities
luxuries
Small part of budget
Large part of budget
- Price elasticity of demand (ED) = measures how much QD responds to a change in price (P)
o Measure the price-sesitiity of uyes’ dead
o Ex: if the price of oil increase by 10% and over a period of several years, the quantity demanded
falls by 5%, then the long run elasticity of demand for oil is: ED = -5%/10% = -0.5
o Elasticity of demand is always negative, so we typically drop the negative sign and use absolute
value instead
If the |ED| < 1, the demand curve is inelastic
If the |ED| > 1, the demand curve is elastic
If the |ED| = 1, the demand curve is unit elastic
ED =
Peetage hage i uatity deaded
Peetage hage i pie
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Document Summary

Why: to millions of diabetics, insulin is a necessity. A rise in its price would cause little or no decrease in demands: a cruise is a luxury. If the price rises, some people will forego it: price elasticity is higher for luxuries than for necessities. Purchase size: the size of the purchase (relative to our budget) matters, we are less sensitive to price change when the good feels cheap, we are more sensitive to price changes when the good feels expensive. Summary of determinants of elasticity of demand less elastic. Price elasticity of demand (ed) = measures how much qd responds to a change in price (p) Pe(cid:396)(cid:272)e(cid:374)tage (cid:272)ha(cid:374)ge i(cid:374) (cid:395)ua(cid:374)tity de(cid:373)a(cid:374)ded: measure the price-se(cid:374)siti(cid:448)ity of (cid:271)uye(cid:396)s" de(cid:373)a(cid:374)d. If the |ed| < 1, the demand curve is inelastic. If the |ed| > 1, the demand curve is elastic. If the |ed| = 1, the demand curve is unit elastic.

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