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Elasticity

Elasticity. The price of wheat tripled in 2007 due to a small decrease in supply. This is evidence that the demand for wheat is: Income inelastic Income elastic Greater than supply Price elastic Price inelastic. Quiz on readings. Farm incomes in response to drought.

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Elasticity

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  1. Elasticity

  2. Chapter 4: Elasticity The price of wheat tripled in 2007 due to a small decrease in supply. This is evidence that the demand for wheat is: Income inelastic Income elastic Greater than supply Price elastic Price inelastic Quiz on readings

  3. Chapter 4: Elasticity Farm incomes in response to drought Total ‘consumer’ expenditure = P*Q Before drought: 50*100=500 After drought 90*90 = 810 Total expenditure= Total farmer revenue

  4. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity of Demand Elasticity A measure of the extent to which quantity demanded and quantity supplied respond to variations in price, income, and other factors.

  5. Chapter 4: Elasticity Why does it matter? Agriculture How quickly can ag output respond to prices? How much is demand for food affected by prices? Natural resources Can the supply respond to price changes? How does demand respond? Health care Essential drugs, procedures Community development Land values, rent and housing Supply and demand for housing Drugs and crime What happens when we reduce the supply of drugs?

  6. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity of Demand General definition A measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good to a change in the price of that good How does your demand for food (or beer, cigarettes) change in response to an increase in price?

  7. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity of Demand Formal definition ∆Q/Q ∆P/P By convention, we drop the negative sign

  8. Chapter 4: Elasticity Example: The price of Intervale organic produce falls by 2% and the quantity demanded increases by 6% Then the price elasticity of demand for local organic produce is Total revenue for Intervale farmers increases Price Elasticity of Demand

  9. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity of Demand Elastic demand: total revenue and price move in opposite directions, revenue and quantity move in same direction Inelastic demand: total revenue and price move in same direction, revenue and quantity in opposite directions > 1: elastic When is < 1: inelastic = 1: unit elastic

  10. Chapter 4: Elasticity So What? Oil supply

  11. Chapter 4: Elasticity Oil prices

  12. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity of Demand What is the elasticity of demand for oil? Originally (1978) Price = $46/barrel Quantity demanded = 63.332 billion barrels day New (1980) Price = $97/barrel Quantity demanded = 62.948 bil. barrels/day, then

  13. Chapter 4: Elasticity Elasticity of demand and volatility Price Inelastic demand Small changes in quantity supplied lead to large changes in price. Fluctuations in supply lead to fluctuations in economy: INSTABILITY Instability makes it very difficult to plan or invest, and undermines quality of life Food and oil in 2007/2008

  14. Chapter 4: Elasticity Elasticity and Total Expenditure Total Expenditure = P x Q Market demand measures the quantity (Q) at each price (P) Total Expenditure = Total Revenue

  15. Chapter 4: Elasticity Inelastic demand and profits Lower supply = greater profit How do profit maximizing industries respond? OPEC cartel California’s electricity crisis Exxon profits in 2008: $45.2 billion What’s the elasticity of demand for water? How many choices of water supply do you have? Bechtel corporation and Cochabamba World Bank, IMF and developing nations

  16. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity of Demand Elasticity of domestic manufacturing jobs that can be exported to Mexico. Originally Wage = $10/hr Quantity demanded = 10,000 jobs/year New Price = $10.50/hr Quantity demanded = 8,000 jobs/year, then

  17. Chapter 4: Elasticity Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand The more essential, the less elastic How essential is agriculture? William Nordhaus, Thomas Schelling, Wilfred Beckerman How essential are natural resources? Robert Solow Substitution Possibilities Lots of substitutes for domestic jobs, few substitutes for oil. Budget Share What share of income is spent on food? Time- elasticity increases over time

  18. Chapter 4: Elasticity A Graphical Interpretation of Price Elasticity of Demand A P P P - P Q D Q Q + Q Slope = ∆y/∆x= ∆P/∆Q So ∆Q/Q = P * ∆Q ∆P/P Q ∆P Price Quantity

  19. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity and the Steepness of the Demand Curve 12 D1 6 4 D2 4 6 12 What is the price elasticity of demand when P = $4? If two demand curves have a point in common, the steeper curve must be less elastic with respect to price at that point Price Quantity

  20. Chapter 4: Elasticity Price Elasticity Regions along a Straight-Line Demand Curve Observation Price elasticity varies at every point along a straight-line demand curve a a/2 b/2 b Price Quantity

  21. The Demand Curve for Essential and Non-substitutable Resources (e.g. Critical Natural Capital) Important: inelastic demand Critical: Perfectly inelastic demand Valuable: Large change in Q, Small change in P Elastic/inelastic Marginal value Demand curve for essential resources Quantity of Essential Resource

  22. Chapter 4: Elasticity Perfectly Elastic Demand Curve Price Quantity What’s an example of this?

  23. Chapter 4: Elasticity Perfectly Inelastic Demand Curve Price Quantity What’s an example of this?

  24. Implications of inelastic demand for GNP • GNP essentially sums PxQ across all final goods and services in an economy • What’s the optimal marginal value for essential resources provided freely by nature? • What happens to total expenditures on food or energy production when Q goes down? • What happens to their share in GNP? • Does GNP measure costs or benefits? • Does it make sense to try and maximize GNP?

  25. Chapter 4: Elasticity Cross-price elasticity of demand The percentage by which quantity demanded of the first good changes in response to a 1 percent change in the price of the second good

  26. Chapter 4: Elasticity Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand Substitute Goods When the cross-price elasticity of demand is positive Price of oil goes up, demand for ethanol goes up Complement Goods When the cross-price elasticity of demand is negative Price of oil goes up, demand for big cars goes down

  27. Chapter 4: Elasticity Income Elasticity of Demand is: The percentage by which A. quantity demanded changes in response to a 1 percent change in income B. price changes in response to a 1 percent change in income C. quantity supplied changes in response to a 1 percent change in income D. income changes in response to a 1% change in quantity demanded E. income changes in response to a 1% change in price

  28. Chapter 4: Elasticity Income Elasticity of Demand Normal Goods Income elasticity is positive Inferior Goods Income elasticity is negative

  29. Chapter 4: Elasticity The Price Elasticity of Supply Price Elasticity of Supply The percentage change in the quantity supplied that occurs in response to a 1 percent change in price

  30. Price Elasticity of Supply for Oil • Oil price Jan. 2005=$40, July 2008=$127 • Percent change = 219% • Oil production Jan. 2005 = 84179 thousand barrels/day July 2008 = 86671 • Percent change = 3% • Elasticity = 3%/219% = 1/73=.0135

  31. Chapter 4: Elasticity A Perfectly Inelastic Supply Curve S Elasticity = 0 at every point along a vertical supply curve What is the price elasticity of supply of land within the borough limits of Manhattan? Price ($/acre) 0 Quantity of land in Manhattan (1,000s of acres)

  32. Chapter 4: Elasticity Highly inelastic supply curves How elastic is the supply of agricultural output? Tree crops Annual crops Milk Beef How elastic is the supply curve for natural resources? Renewable Non-renewable

  33. Chapter 4: Elasticity Determinants of Supply Elasticity Flexibility of inputs Mobility of inputs Ability to produce substitute inputs Time The Price Elasticity of Supply

  34. Chapter 4: Elasticity What do you think? How do elasticity of supply and demand affect price volatility? Should the price and quantity of things like agriculture, electricity and water be left to the market? Elasticity

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