1 / 16

Elasticity of Demand

Elasticity of Demand. A2 Business Studies Unit 4 - Marketing. Objectives. Introduction. The demand for goods and services is determined by a wide variety of factors The demand for the new Fiat Punto will be influenced by: The price The price of similar cars The amount spent on advertising

sage
Télécharger la présentation

Elasticity of Demand

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Elasticity of Demand A2 Business Studies Unit 4 - Marketing

  2. Objectives

  3. Introduction • The demand for goods and services is determined by a wide variety of factors • The demand for the new Fiat Punto will be influenced by: • The price • The price of similar cars • The amount spent on advertising • Seasonality • And many other factors

  4. Introduction (2) • Elasticity measures how the demand for a product changes in response to a variable such as price or income. • Each variable that affects demand has its own relative elasticity • A price rise is likely to reduce demand • An increase in advertising is likely to increase demand • The elasticties most commonly used business are Price & Income

  5. Price Elasticity of Demand • In the short term, the most important factor affecting demand is PRICE • If Coca-Cola increased the price of Coke, sales would almost certainly fall • Some consumers would switch to a different brand • Some would buy Coke less frequently • If Coca-cola increased their price by 10%, and demand only fell 1%, they would benefit hugely from the price hike

  6. Price Elasticity of Demand (2) • How much will demand fall when price increases? • This can be answered by calculating the price elasticity of demand for Coca-cola • PEoD is not about whether the demand changes with price, but the degree to which it changes

  7. Price Elasticity of Demand (3) • Price elasticity can be calculated using the following formula: % Change in quantity demanded Price elasticity = % Change in price • If a 10% price increase led to a 20% fall in demand, the price elasticity would be: -20% 10% -2 =

  8. Price Elasticity of Demand (4) • This demonstrates that for every 1% price increase, demand will fall by 2% -20% 10% -2 = • Some product are more price sensitive than others • Example 1 • Example 2

  9. Using price elasticity information • There are two main purposes for price elasticity: • Sales forecasting • Pricing strategy

  10. 16% -20% -0.8 = Forecasting sales • A firm considering a price rise will want to know the effect the price change is likely to have on demand • The Sun newspaper cut its price by 20% (from 25p to 20p, and sale rose by 16% (which was up to 4million copies per day • What was it’s price elasticity? Can the higher demand levels be met?

  11. Pricing strategy • There are many factors that determine the demand and profitability of a product that are beyond control • However, the price a firm charges is within its control • Price elasticity information can be used in conjunction with the firm’s own information about costs, to forecast the effect of price change on profit

  12. Pricing Strategy Example • A second hand car dealer sells 60 cars each year. • Each car costs around £2,000 to buy • Annual overheads are £18,000 • He charges customers £2,500 per car • How much profit does he make per year?

  13. Pricing Strategy Example 2 • Total revenue = £2,500 x 60 = £150,000 • Total Cost = £18,000 + (2,000 x 60) = £138,000 • Total Profit = £150,000 - £138,000 = £12,000

  14. Pricing Strategy Example (3) • From past experience, the salesman believes the price elasticity of his cars is approximately –0.75 • He is thinking about increasing his prices to £3,000 per car, and increase of 20% • How would this impact profit? • % Change in demand = 20% x –0.75 = -15%

  15. Pricing Strategy Example (4) • A 15% fall in demand on current sales equates to a fall of 9 cars per year: 60 100 15 9 cars per year x = • On the basis of these new figures, the new annual profit would be: • Total revenue = £3,000 x 51 = £153,000 • Total cost = £18,000 + (51x£2,000) = £138,000 • New Profit = £153,000 –£138,000 = £15,000

  16. £33,000 - £12,000 £12,000 175% x 100 = Pricing Strategy Example (5) • This equates to an increase in profit of 175% • These calculations are all based on two assumptions: • The price elasticity of –0.75 was correct • Other factors that could affect demand remain unchanged

More Related