5 Elasticity and its Application PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS FOURTH EDITION N. G R E G O R Y M A N K I W PowerPoint® Slides by Ron Cronovich © 2007 Thomson South-Western, all rights reserved In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions: What is elasticity? What kinds of issues can elasticity help us understand? What is the price elasticity of demand? How is it related to the demand curve? How is it related to revenue & expenditure? What is the price elasticity of supply? How is it related to the supply curve? What are the income and cross-price elasticities of demand? CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 1 A scenario… You design websites for local businesses. You charge $200 per website, and currently sell 12 websites per month. Your costs are rising (including the opp. cost of your time), so you’re thinking of raising the price to $250. The law of demand says that you won’t sell as many websites if you raise your price. How many fewer websites? How much will your revenue fall, or might it increase? CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 2 Elasticity Basic idea: Elasticity measures how much one variable responds to changes in another variable. • One type of elasticity measures how much demand for your websites will fall if you raise your price. Definition: Elasticity is a numerical measure of the responsiveness of Qd or Qs to one of its determinants. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 3 Price Elasticity of Demand Price elasticity of demand Percentage change in Qd = Percentage change in P Price elasticity of demand measures how much Qd responds to a change in P. Loosely speaking, it measures the pricesensitivity of buyers’ demand. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 4 Price Elasticity of Demand Price elasticity of demand Example: Price elasticity of demand equals 15% = 1.5 10% CHAPTER 5 Percentage change in Qd = Percentage change in P P P rises P2 by 10% P1 D Q2 Q1 Q Q falls by 15% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 5 Price Elasticity of Demand Price elasticity of demand Percentage change in Qd = Percentage change in P Along a D curve, P and Q move in opposite directions, which would make price elasticity negative. P P2 P1 We will drop the minus sign and report all price elasticities as positive numbers. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION D Q2 Q1 Q 6 Calculating Percentage Changes Standard method of computing the percentage (%) change: Demand for your websites end value – start value x 100% start value P $250 B Going from A to B, the % change in P equals A $200 D 8 CHAPTER 5 12 ($250–$200)/$200 = 25% Q ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 7 Calculating Percentage Changes Problem: The standard method gives different answers depending on where you start. Demand for your websites P $250 From A to B, P rises 25%, Q falls 33%, elasticity = 33/25 = 1.33 B A $200 From B to A, P falls 20%, Q rises 50%, Q elasticity = 50/20 = 2.50 D 8 CHAPTER 5 12 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 8 Calculating Percentage Changes So, we instead use the midpoint method: end value – start value x 100% midpoint The midpoint is the number halfway between the start & end values, also the average of those values. It doesn’t matter which value you use as the “start” and which as the “end” – you get the same answer either way! CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 9 Calculating Percentage Changes Using the midpoint method, the % change in P equals $250 – $200 x 100% = 22.2% $225 The % change in Q equals 12 – 8 x 100% = 40.0% 10 The price elasticity of demand equals 40/22.2 = 1.8 CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 10 1: Calculate an elasticity ACTIVE LEARNING Use the following information to calculate the price elasticity of demand for hotel rooms: if P = $70, Qd = 5000 if P = $90, Qd = 3000 11 ACTIVE LEARNING Answers 1: Use midpoint method to calculate % change in Qd (5000 – 3000)/4000 = 50% % change in P ($90 – $70)/$80 = 25% The price elasticity of demand equals 50% = 2.0 25% 12 The Determinants of Price Elasticity: A Summary The price elasticity of demand depends on: the extent to which close substitutes are available whether the good is a necessity or a luxury how broadly or narrowly the good is defined the time horizon: elasticity is higher in the long run than the short run. Percent of budget. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 13 What determines price elasticity? To learn the determinants of price elasticity, we look at a series of examples. Each compares two common goods. In each example: • Suppose the prices of both goods rise by 20%. • The good for which Qd falls the most (in percent) has the highest price elasticity of demand. Which good is it? Why? • What lesson does the example teach us about the determinants of the price elasticity of demand? CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 14 CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 15 EXAMPLE 1: Rice Krispies vs. Sunscreen The prices of both of these goods rise by 20%. For which good does Qd drop the most? Why? • Rice Krispies has lots of close substitutes (e.g., Cap’n Crunch, Count Chocula), so buyers can easily switch if the price rises. • Sunscreen has no close substitutes, so consumers would probably not buy much less if its price rises. Lesson: Price elasticity is higher when close substitutes are available. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 16 EXAMPLE 2: “Blue Jeans” vs. “Clothing” The prices of both goods rise by 20%. For which good does Qd drop the most? Why? • For a narrowly defined good such as blue jeans, there are many substitutes (khakis, shorts, Speedos). • There are fewer substitutes available for broadly defined goods. (Can you think of a substitute for clothing, other than living in a nudist colony?) Lesson: Price elasticity is higher for narrowly defined goods than broadly defined ones. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 17 EXAMPLE 3: Insulin vs. Caribbean Cruises The prices of both of these 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 demand. • A cruise is a luxury. If the price rises, some people will forego it. Lesson: Price elasticity is higher for luxuries than for necessities. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 18 EXAMPLE 4: Gasoline in the Short Run vs. Gasoline in the Long Run The price of gasoline rises 20%. Does Qd drop more in the short run or the long run? Why? • There’s not much people can do in the short run, other than ride the bus or carpool. • In the long run, people can buy smaller cars or live closer to where they work. Lesson: Price elasticity is higher in the long run than the short run. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 19 The Variety of Demand Curves Economists classify demand curves according to their elasticity. The price elasticity of demand is closely related to the slope of the demand curve. Rule of thumb: The flatter the curve, the bigger the elasticity. The steeper the curve, the smaller the elasticity. The next 5 slides present the different classifications, from least to most elastic. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 20 “Perfectly inelastic demand” (one extreme case) % change in Q Price elasticity = = of demand % change in P P D curve: vertical CHAPTER 5 10% =0 D P1 Consumers’ price sensitivity: 0 Elasticity: 0 0% P2 P falls by 10% Q1 Q Q changes by 0% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 21 “Inelastic demand” < 10% % change in Q Price elasticity <1 = = of demand 10% % change in P P D curve: relatively steep P1 Consumers’ price sensitivity: relatively low Elasticity: <1 CHAPTER 5 P2 D P falls by 10% Q1 Q2 Q Q rises less than 10% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 22 “Unit elastic demand” % change in Q Price elasticity = = of demand % change in P P1 Consumers’ price sensitivity: intermediate CHAPTER 5 10% =1 P D curve: intermediate slope Elasticity: 1 10% P2 P falls by 10% D Q1 Q2 Q Q rises by 10% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 23 “Elastic demand” > 10% % change in Q Price elasticity >1 = = of demand 10% % change in P P D curve: relatively flat P1 Consumers’ price sensitivity: relatively high Elasticity: >1 CHAPTER 5 P2 P falls by 10% D Q1 Q2 Q Q rises more than 10% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 24 “Perfectly elastic demand” (the other extreme) any % % change in Q Price elasticity = infinity = = of demand 0% % change in P P D curve: horizontal Consumers’ price sensitivity: extreme Elasticity: infinity CHAPTER 5 D P2 = P1 P changes by 0% Q1 Q2 Q Q changes by any % ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 25 Elasticity of a Linear Demand Curve P 200% E = = 5.0 40% $30 67% E = = 1.0 67% 20 40% E = = 0.2 200% 10 $0 0 CHAPTER 5 20 40 60 The slope of a linear demand curve is constant, but its elasticity is not. Q ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 26 Price Elasticity and Total Revenue Continuing our scenario, if you raise your price from $200 to $250, would your revenue rise or fall? Revenue = P x Q A price increase has two effects on revenue: • Higher P means more revenue on each unit • you sell. But you sell fewer units (lower Q), due to Law of Demand. Which of these two effects is bigger? It depends on the price elasticity of demand. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 27 Price Elasticity and Total Revenue Price elasticity = of demand Percentage change in Q Percentage change in P Revenue = P x Q If demand is elastic, then price elast. of demand > 1 % change in Q > % change in P The fall in revenue from lower Q is greater than the increase in revenue from higher P, so revenue falls. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 28 Price Elasticity and Total Revenue Elastic demand (elasticity = 1.8) If P = $200, Q = 12 and revenue = $2400. If P = $250, Q = 8 and revenue = $2000. P $250 increased Demand for revenue due your websiteslost to higher P revenue due to lower Q $200 When D is elastic, a price increase causes revenue to fall. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION D 8 12 Q 29 Price Elasticity and Total Revenue Price elasticity = of demand Percentage change in Q Percentage change in P If demand is inelastic, then Revenue = P x Q price elast. of demand < 1 % change in Q < % change in P The fall in revenue from lower Q is smaller than the increase in revenue from higher P, so revenue rises. In our example, suppose that Q only falls to 10 (instead of 8) when you raise your price to $250. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 30 Price Elasticity and Total Revenue Now, demand is inelastic: elasticity = 0.82 If P = $200, Q = 12 and revenue = $2400. If P = $250, Q = 10 and revenue = $2500. P $250 increased Demand for revenue due your websites lost to higher P revenue due to lower Q $200 When D is inelastic, a price increase causes revenue to rise. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION D 10 12 Q 31 Total Revenue and Ped CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 32 Journal Entry Explain why an airline would want to practice price discrimination. Under what conditions would the airline be able to do so? CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 33 Explain why the PED for many primary commodities is relatively low and the PED for manufactured products is relatively high. The price elasticity of demand for many primary products is relatively price inelastic. They are often necessities and have few close substitutes. The importance of the price elasticity can be demonstrated in the diagram below. Two demand curves have been drawn. One, typical of many primary commodities is relatively price inelastic, D1, and one for comparison relatively price elastic D2. Let us assume that the market is in equilibrium at price P2. If there is now a supply shock and supply decreases causing the supply curve to makes a shift to the left the equilibrium market price will increase. When demand is relatively price inelastic the price will increase from P2 to P1 and when the demand is relatively price elastic the price will increase from P2 to P0. Theory predicts therefore that the prices of primary commodities are inclined to fluctuate more that other goods where there are less likely to be supply shocks and the price elasticity of demand is likely to be higher. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 34 2: Elasticity and expenditure/revenue ACTIVE LEARNING A. Pharmacies raise the price of insulin by 10%. Does total expenditure on insulin rise or fall? B. As a result of a fare war, the price of a luxury cruise falls 20%. Does luxury cruise companies’ total revenue rise or fall? 35 ACTIVE LEARNING Answers 2: A. Pharmacies raise the price of insulin by 10%. Does total expenditure on insulin rise or fall? Expenditure = P x Q Since demand is inelastic, Q will fall less than 10%, so expenditure rises. 36 ACTIVE LEARNING Answers 2: B. As a result of a fare war, the price of a luxury cruise falls 20%. Does luxury cruise companies’ total revenue rise or fall? Revenue = P x Q The fall in P reduces revenue, but Q increases, which increases revenue. Which effect is bigger? Since demand is elastic, Q will increase more than 20%, so revenue rises. 37 APPLICATION: Does Drug Interdiction Increase or Decrease Drug-Related Crime? One side effect of illegal drug use is crime: Users often turn to crime to finance their habit. We examine two policies designed to reduce illegal drug use and see what effects they have on drug-related crime. For simplicity, we assume the total dollar value of drug-related crime equals total expenditure on drugs. Demand for illegal drugs is inelastic, due to addiction issues. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 38 Policy 1: Interdiction Interdiction reduces Price of Drugs the supply of drugs. P2 Since demand for drugs is inelastic, P1 P rises proportionally more than Q falls. new value of drugrelated crime S2 D1 Result: an increase in total spending on drugs, and in drug-related crime CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION S1 initial value of drugrelated crime Q2 Q 1 Quantity of Drugs 39 Policy 2: Education Education reduces the demand for drugs. Price of Drugs new value of drugrelated crime D2 D1 S P and Q fall. Result: A decrease in total spending on drugs, and in drug-related crime. CHAPTER 5 initial value of drugrelated crime P1 P2 Q2 Q1 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION Quantity of Drugs 40 Price Elasticity of Supply Price elasticity of supply Percentage change in Qs = Percentage change in P Price elasticity of supply measures how much Qs responds to a change in P. Loosely speaking, it measures the pricesensitivity of sellers’ supply. Again, use the midpoint method to compute the percentage changes. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 41 Price Elasticity of Supply Price elasticity of supply Example: Price elasticity of supply equals 16% = 2.0 8% CHAPTER 5 Percentage change in Qs = Percentage change in P P S P rises P2 by 8% P1 Q1 Q2 Q Q rises by 16% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 42 The Variety of Supply Curves Economists classify supply curves according to their elasticity. The slope of the supply curve is closely related to price elasticity of supply. Rule of thumb: The flatter the curve, the bigger the elasticity. The steeper the curve, the smaller the elasticity. The next 5 slides present the different classifications, from least to most elastic. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 43 “Perfectly inelastic” (one extreme) 0% % change in Q Price elasticity = = of supply % change in P P S curve: vertical CHAPTER 5 S P2 Sellers’ price sensitivity: 0 Elasticity: 0 10% =0 P1 P rises by 10% Q1 Q Q changes by 0% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 44 “Inelastic” < 10% % change in Q Price elasticity <1 = = of supply 10% % change in P P S curve: relatively steep S P2 Sellers’ price sensitivity: relatively low Elasticity: <1 CHAPTER 5 P1 P rises by 10% Q1 Q2 Q Q rises less than 10% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 45 “Unit elastic” % change in Q Price elasticity = = of supply % change in P S P2 Sellers’ price sensitivity: intermediate CHAPTER 5 10% =1 P S curve: intermediate slope Elasticity: =1 10% P1 P rises by 10% Q1 Q2 Q Q rises by 10% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 46 “Elastic” > 10% % change in Q Price elasticity >1 = = of supply 10% % change in P P S curve: relatively flat S P2 Sellers’ price sensitivity: relatively high Elasticity: >1 CHAPTER 5 P1 P rises by 10% Q1 Q2 Q Q rises more than 10% ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 47 “Perfectly elastic” (the other extreme) any % % change in Q Price elasticity = infinity = = of supply 0% % change in P P S curve: horizontal Sellers’ price sensitivity: extreme Elasticity: infinity CHAPTER 5 S P2 = P1 P changes by 0% Q1 Q2 Q Q changes by any % ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 48 How the Price Elasticity of Supply Can Vary CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 49 The Determinants of Supply Elasticity The more easily sellers can change the quantity they produce, the greater the price elasticity of supply. (Manufactured or service vs Primary products) For many goods, price elasticity of supply is greater in the long run than in the short run, because firms can build new factories, or new firms may be able to enter the market. (Time Frame) Amount of excess capacity, the greater the excess capacity the more elastic supply will be and the lass the excess capacity the less elastic. (excess capacity) Availability of substitutes in production, the more substitutes the more elastic and the less substitutes the less elastic. (substitutes) CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 50 3: Elasticity and changes in equilibrium ACTIVE LEARNING The supply of beachfront property is inelastic. The supply of new cars is elastic. Suppose population growth causes demand for both goods to double (at each price, Qd doubles). For which product will P change the most? For which product will Q change the most? 51 ACTIVE LEARNING Answers When supply is inelastic, an increase in demand has a bigger impact on price than on quantity. 3: Beachfront property (inelastic supply): P D1 D2 S B P2 P1 A Q 1 Q2 Q 52 ACTIVE LEARNING Answers When supply is elastic, an increase in demand has a bigger impact on quantity than on price. 3: New cars (elastic supply): P D1 D2 S P2 P1 B A Q1 Q2 Q 53 How the Price Elasticity of Supply Can Vary P Supply often becomes less elastic as Q rises, due to capacity limits. S elasticity <1 $15 12 elasticity >1 4 $3 100 200 CHAPTER 5 Q 500 525 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 54 PES & Total Revenue CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 55 Other Elasticities The Income elasticity of demand measures the response of Qd to a change in consumer income. Percent change in Qd Income elasticity = of demand Percent change in income Recall from chap.4: An increase in income causes an increase in demand for a normal good. Hence, for normal goods, income elasticity > 0. (Positive) For inferior goods, income elasticity < 0. (Negative) CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 56 Income Elasticity Types of Goods • Normal Goods = As your income goes up, you • buy more. Inferior Goods = As your income goes down, you buy more. Higher income raises the quantity demanded for normal goods (positive relationship) but lowers the quantity demanded for inferior goods (negative relationship). CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 57 Income Elasticity Iped > 0, Normal good Iped > 1, Luxury good Iped < 1 but > 0, Normal necessity Iped < 0, Inferior good CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 58 IPED CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 59 Income Elasticity Goods consumers regard as necessities tend to be income inelastic • (Normal Necessity) Examples include food, fuel, clothing, utilities, and medical services. Goods consumers regard as luxuries tend to be income elastic. (Luxury) • Examples include sports cars, furs, and expensive foods, & gold grills. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 60 Engle Curves The Engle’s curve shows the relationship between income and quantity or consumption. For a normal good as income increases, quantity increases. (Positive slope) CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 61 Engle Curves With inferior goods, as income increases, quantity decreases. (Negative slope) CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 62 Income Price Elasticity of Demand CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 63 Income Price Elasticity of Demand CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 64 Income Price Elasticity of Demand CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 65 primary products Examine the implications for producers and for the economy of a relatively low IPED for primary products, a relatively higher IPED for manufactured products and an even higher IPED for services. Low Income elasticity of demand. As income increases, demand for many food stuffs, doesn’t really increase. As incomes increases, demand for tea, coffee and sugar don’t increase that much. Therefore, countries who rely on primary products may have lower income growth than countries producing manufactured goods, with a higher income elasticity of demand. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 66 Veblen Goods (Normal Goods) Exceptions The definition does not require that any Veblen goods actually exist. However, it is claimed that some types of highstatus goods, such as expensive wines or perfumes are Veblen goods, in that decreasing their prices decreases people's preference for buying them because they are no longer perceived as exclusive or high status products. The Veblen effect is named after the economist Thorstein Veblen, who invented the concepts of conspicuous consumption and status-seeking. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 67 Giffen good (Inferior Goods) Exceptions Giffen goods are an exception. Their price elasticity of demand is positive. When price goes up the quantity demanded also goes up, and vice versa. In order to be a true Giffen good, price must be the only thing that changes to get a change in demand. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 68 Giffen good Exceptions The classic example given is of inferior quality staple foods whose demand is driven by poverty, which makes their purchasers unable to afford superior foodstuffs. As the price of the cheap staple rises, they can no longer afford to supplement their diet with better foods, and must consume more of the staple food. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 69 Giffen good Exceptions There are three necessary preconditions for this situation to arise. They are: 1. The good in question must be an inferior good, 2. There must be a lack of close substitute goods, 3. And the good must comprise a substantial percentage of the buyer's income. If precondition #1 is changed to "The good in question must be so inferior that the income effect is greater than the substitution effect" then this list defines necessary and sufficient conditions CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 70 Other Elasticities The cross-price elasticity of demand measures the response of demand for one good to changes in the price of another good. % change in Qd for good 1 Cross-price elast. = of demand % change in price of good 2 For substitutes, cross-price elasticity > 0 E.g., an increase in price of beef causes an increase in demand for chicken. (Positive) For complements, cross-price elasticity < 0 E.g., an increase in price of computers causes decrease in demand for software. (Negative) CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 71 Cross elasticity of demand In economics, the cross elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good to a change in the price of another good. It is measured as the percentage change in demand for the first good that occurs in response to a percentage change in price of the second good. For example, if, in response to a 10% increase in the price of fuel, the quantity of new cars demanded decreased by 20%, the cross elasticity of demand would be -20%/10% = -2. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 72 Cross elasticity of demand The higher the value of the elasticity the closer the relationship between the two goods. For example, if the CPED is +2 the goods are close substitutes. If the CPED is +.02 the goods are weak substitutes. If the CPED is zero the goods are independent. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 73 Cross elasticity of demand In the example, the two goods, fuel and cars, are complements - that is, one is used with the other. In these cases the cross elasticity of demand will be negative. Where the two goods are substitutes the cross elasticity of demand will be positive, so that as the price of one goes up the quantity demanded of the other will increase. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 74 CPED CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 75 CPED CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 76 Cross Price Elasticity of Demand CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 77 Cross Price Elasticity of Demand CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 78 CHAPTER SUMMARY Elasticity measures the responsiveness of Qd or Qs to one of its determinants. Price elasticity of demand equals percentage change Qd in divided by percentage change in P. When it’s less than one, demand is “inelastic.” When greater than one, demand is “elastic.” When demand is inelastic, total revenue rises when price rises. When demand is elastic, total revenue falls when price rises. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 79 CHAPTER SUMMARY Demand is less elastic in the short run, for necessities, for broadly defined goods, or for goods with few close substitutes. Price elasticity of supply equals percentage change in Qs divided by percentage change in P. When it’s less than one, supply is “inelastic.” When greater than one, supply is “elastic.” Price elasticity of supply is greater in the long run than in the short run. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 80 CHAPTER SUMMARY The income elasticity of demand measures how much quantity demanded responds to changes in buyers’ incomes. The cross-price elasticity of demand measures how much demand for one good responds to changes in the price of another good. CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 81
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