Price elasticity of Demand Flashcards
Define PED
A measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a product to a change in its price in % terms
Give an equation for PED
%change in quantity demanded/%change in price
Describe and explain what is meant by a relatively price elastic good
A price elastic good has PED > 1 and is very responsive to a change in price so leads to an even bigger change in demand. It has a fairly small gradient. %change in demand>% change in price
Describe and explain what is meant by a price inelastic good
A price inelastic good has PED < 1 and is relatively unresponsive to a change in price so a small change in demand. It has a fairly large gradient. % change in demand
Describe and explain what is meant by a unitary elastic good
A unitary elastic good has a PED = 1 and change in demand = to change in price and has a L shaped curve
Describe and explain what is meant by a perfectly inelastic good
A perfectly inelastic good has PED = 0 and demand does not change when price changes so is a | shape
Describe and explain what is meant by a perfectly elastic good
A perfectly elastic good has PED = infinity and has a demand which falls to zero when price changes so is —- shaped
If the price of bread increased by 15% and the quantity demanded decreased by 20% the PED of bread is
-20%/15%=-1.33 which is > 1 and so relatively price elastic
PED is important because
it allows entrepreneurs to know whether to increase their price or not
firms are interested in XED as it allows them to see how many comepetitors they have therefore are less likely to be affected by price changes by other firms if they are selling complementary or substitute goods
Factors influencing PED
Necessity (PED<1 if necessary)
Substitutes (If more substitutes PED>1)
Addictiveness (PED<1 as people addicted so demand isn’t affected by price as much (evaluate with real life))
Durability of good
Peak and off peak demand
Proportion of income spent on good
What does the sign show?
-ve if normal good as demand curve -ve, sign doesn’t change elasticity just whether normal or inferior, +ve giffen good
If firms sell a good with the tax burden falls
if inelastic then on consumer, if elastic then falls on producer
If good inelastic firms can… if elastic then…
raise prices without quantity sold falling significantly increasing total revenue,
if price rises quantity sold falls reducing total revenue
Elasticity along a curve with \
elasticities vary along going from elastic to inelastic down the curve
perfectly elastic at y axis relatively elastic unit elasticity in middle relatively inelastic perfectly inelastic at x axis
Inferior goods (YED) =
income increases demand falls, YED < 0 (negative)