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Demand Analysis

and Elasticity of Demand


MBA ZC416, Managerial Economics
Agenda
• Introduction
• Concept and Definition of Demand
• Law of Demand and its Exceptions
• Concept and Definition of Supply

• Elasticity of Demand and its types


• Factors affecting elasticity of demand
• Measurement of elasticity
• Significance of elasticity of demand

• Consumer Theory
The Circular Flow of Economic Activity

Labor services supplied by households


flow to firms, and goods and services
produced by firms flow to households.

Payment for goods and services flows


from households to firms, and payment
for labor services flows from firms to
households.
Input Markets and Output Markets:
The Circular Flow
• Input and output markets are connected through the behavior of both firms
and households.

• Firms determine the quantities and character of output produced and the
types and quantities of input demanded.

• Households determine the types and quantities of products demanded and


the quantities and types of inputs supplied.
Demand in Product/Output Markets
A household’s decision about what quantity of a particular
output, or product, to demand depends on a number of
factors, including:
 The price of the product in question.
 The income available to the household.
 The household’s amount of accumulated wealth.
 The prices of other products available to the household.
 The household’s tastes and preferences.
 The household’s expectations about future income,
wealth, and prices.
Quantity Demanded ?

• The amount (number of units) of a product that a


household would buy in a given period if it could buy all it
wanted at the current market price.
Changes in Quantity Demanded vs.
Changes in Demand

• The most important relationship in individual markets is that


between market price and quantity demanded.
Changes in Quantity Demanded vs.
Changes in Demand
• Changes in the price of a product affect the quantity demanded per period.

• Changes in any other factor, such as income or preferences, affect demand.

• Thus, we say that an increase in the price of Coca-Cola is likely to cause a


decrease in the quantity of Coca-Cola demanded.

• However, we say that an increase in income is likely to cause an increase in


the demand for most goods.
What is Demand ?

• A relation showing the quantities of a good that


consumers are willing and able to buy at various prices
per period, other things constant.
Demand for commodity implies

• Desire to acquire it

• Willingness to pay for it

• Ability to pay for it


Types of Demand
• Consumer goods vs. Producer goods
• Firm vs. Industry
• Autonomous vs. Derived
• Durable vs. Perishable
• Short-term vs. Long-term
Representation
• The general ‘law of demand’
• Demand table or schedule
• Demand graph
• Equations
– Q = f (P)
– Q = f (P, A, Y, Ps,...)
• A linear demand function Q= a+bP
LAW of DEMAND

Law of demand As price rises, quantity


demanded decreases. As price falls,
quantity demanded increases.

It is reasonable to expect quantity demanded to fall when price rises, ceteris paribus,
and to expect quantity demanded to rise when price falls, ceteris paribus. Demand
curves have a negative slope.
Demand Schedule

TABLE Anna’s Demand Schedule


for Telephone Calls
QUANTITY DEMANDED
PRICE (PER CALL) (CALLS PER MONTH)
Demand schedule A table
$ 0 30
showing how much of a .50 25
given product a household 3.50 7
would be willing to buy at 7.00 3
different prices. 10.00 1
15.00 0
Demand Curve

A graph illustrating how


much of a given product a
household would be willing
to buy at different prices.

FIGURE Anna’s Demand Curve


Factors determining demand
Alex’s Demand Curve

Alex’s Demand Schedule for Gasoline

Price Quantity Demanded


(per unit) (Good X)
8.00 0
7.00 2
6.00 3
5.00 5
4.00 7
3.00 10
2.00 14
1.00 20
0.00 26

The relationship between price (P) and quantity demanded


(q) presented graphically is called a demand curve.
Demand curves have a negative slope, indicating that lower
prices cause quantity demanded to increase.
CALCULATING TOTAL REVENUE

In any market, P x Q is total revenue (TR) received by producers:

TR = P x Q
total revenue = price x quantity
MARGINAL REVENUE
• It is the additional revenue added by an additional unit of
output.

• In other words marginal revenue is the extra revenue that an


additional unit of product will bring a firm.

• Marginal revenue is the derivative of total revenue with respect


to demand.
Example
• TR = 100Q−Q^2
• MR = d(TR)/dQ = 100-2Q
• When Q = 60, MR = -20
Demand curves slope downward
• Law of Demand: The negative relationship between price and quantity
demanded: As price rises, quantity demanded decreases. As price falls,
quantity demanded increases.

• It is reasonable to expect quantity demanded to fall when price rises,


ceteris paribus, and to expect quantity demanded to rise when price
falls, ceteris paribus.
Other Properties of Demand Curves

1. They have a negative slope.

2. They intersect the quantity (X) axis, as a result of time limitations and
diminishing marginal utility.

3. They intersect the price (Y) axis, as a result of limited income and wealth.

The actual shape of an individual household demand curve whether it is


steep or flat, whether it is bowed in or bowed out depends on the unique
tastes and preferences of the household and other factors.
Classification of goods
Normal goods Goods for which demand goes up when income is higher
and for which demand goes down when income is lower.

Inferior goods Goods for which demand tends to fall when income rises.

Substitutes Goods that can serve as replacements for one another; when
the price of one increases, demand for the other increases.

Complements or Complementary goods Goods that “go together”; a


decrease in the price of one results in an increase in demand for the other
and vice versa.
Shift vs. Movement along a Demand Curve

Income rises

Price rises
Quantity demanded falls Demand for substitutes shifts right

Demand for complements shifts left


Supply of Product
Firms build factories, hire workers, and buy raw materials because they believe they can sell
the products they make for more than it costs to produce them.

Profit The difference between revenues and costs.

Quantity supplied The amount of a particular product that a firm would be willing and
able to offer for sale at a particular price during a given time period.

Supply schedule A table showing how much of a product firms will sell at alternative
prices.

Law of supply The positive relationship between price and quantity of a good
supplied: An increase in market price will lead to an increase in quantity supplied, and
a decrease in market price will lead to a decrease in quantity supplied.
Supply of Product

A producer will supply more when the price


of output is higher.

The slope of a supply curve is positive.

Supply is determined by choices made by


firms.

P – price of soya beans per bushel

Q – Bushels of soya beans produced per


year
Determinants of Supply
Assuming that its objective is to maximize profits, a firm’s decision
about what quantity of output, or product, to supply depends on:
1. The price of related products.
2. The cost of producing the product, which in turn depends on:
■ The price of required inputs (labor, capital, and land).
■ The technologies that can be used to produce the product.
Shift of Supply versus Movement Along a Supply Curve

Shift of Supply Schedule for Soybeans


following Development of a New
Disease-Resistant Seed Strain

Schedule S0 Schedule S1
Quantity Supplied Quantity Supplied
Price (Bushels per Year (Bushels per Year
(per Bushel) Using Old Seed) Using New Seed)
1.50 0 5,000
1.75 10,000 23,000
2.25 20,000 33,000
3.00 30,000 40,000
4.00 45,000 54,000
5.00 45,000 54,000

Shift of the Supply Curve for Soybeans following


Development of a New Seed Strain

When the price of a product changes, we move along the supply


curve for that product; the quantity supplied rises or falls.
When any other factor affecting supply changes, the supply
curve shifts.
Market Equilibrium

When quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied, price tends to rise.


When the price in a market rises, quantity demanded falls and quantity supplied rises until
an equilibrium is reached at which quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal.
Demand and Supply in Product Markets: A quick recap

• A demand curve shows how much of a product a household would buy if it could
buy all it wanted at the given price. A supply curve shows how much of a product a
firm would supply if it could sell all it wanted at the given price.

• Quantity demanded and quantity supplied are always per time period—that is, per
day, per month, or per year.

• The demand for a good is determined by price, household income and wealth,
prices of other goods and services, tastes and preferences, and expectations.
Demand and Supply in Product Markets: A quick recap

• The supply of a good is determined by price, costs of production, and prices of


related products. Costs of production are determined by available technologies
of production and input prices.

• Be careful to distinguish between movements along supply and demand curves and
shifts of these curves. When the price of a good changes, the quantity of that good
demanded or supplied changes—that is, a movement occurs along the curve. When
any other factor changes, the curve shifts, or changes position.

30/1/2016 MBA ZC416 MANAGERIAL


ECONOMICS Session 3
Demand and Supply in Product Markets: A quick recap

• Market equilibrium exists only when quantity supplied equals quantity


demanded at the current price.
Elasticity of Demand

• It allows us to analyze demand with greater precision.

• It is a measure of how much buyers and sellers respond to


changes in market conditions.
Elasticity of Demand
• Elasticity of Demand measures the degree of responsiveness
of the quantity demanded of a commodity to a given change in
any of the determinants of demand.


%A
elasticity of A with respect to B 
%B
Types of Elasticity of Demand
• Price elasticity of demand

• Income elasticity of demand

• Cross elasticity of demand


PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
SLOPE AND ELASTICITY

FIGURE 1 Slope Is Not a Useful Measure of Responsiveness


PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND

price elasticity of demand The ratio of


the percentage of change in quantity
demanded to the percentage of change
in price; measures the responsiveness
of demand to changes in price.

% change in quantity demanded


price elasticity of demand 
% change in price
Price Elasticity of Demand
• Elasticity of Demand

• Quantity demanded of a commodity in


response to a given change in price

• Always negative

• Relationship between the price and the


demand is inverse
PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND

FIGURE 2 Perfectly Elastic and Perfectly Inelastic Demand Curves


Degree of Price Elasticity of Demand

• Inelastic Demand (e<1): Quantity demanded does not respond


strongly to price changes.

• Elastic Demand (e>1): Quantity demanded responds strongly


to changes in price.
Degree of Price Elasticity of Demand
• Perfectly Inelastic: Quantity demanded does not respond
to price changes.

• Perfectly Elastic: Quantity demanded changes infinitely


with any change in price.

• Unitary Elastic (e=1): Quantity demanded changes by the


same percentage as the price.
Price Elasticity: Impact of Revenue
Elastic Unitary Elastic Inelastic
Price rises TR falls No change in TR rises
TR
Price falls TR rises No change in TR falls
TR
Price elasticity of Demand
Urban India Short Run Long Run
Butter 1.478 2.78
Petrol 0.3 0.9
Tea 0.718 1.14
Coffee 0.292 0.685
Burger 1.49 2.79
Clothing 1.1 2.88
Price elasticity of Demand

Goods/Services Price Elasticity


Brinjals 3.5
Cabbage 2.8
Health insurance 1.9
Public transport 1.0
Electricity for domestic 0.5
purpose
CALCULATING ELASTICITIES
CALCULATING PERCENTAGE CHANGES

To calculate percentage change in quantity demanded


using the initial value as the base, the following formula is
used:

change in quantity demanded


% change in quantity demanded  x 100%
Q1

Q2 - Q1
 x 100%
Q1
CALCULATING ELASTICITIES
We can calculate the percentage change in price in a similar way. Once again, let us use the
initial value of P—that is, P1—as the base for calculating the percentage. By using P1 as the
base, the formula for calculating the percentage of change in P is simply:

change in price
% change in price  x 100%
P1

P2 - P1
 x 100%
P1
CALCULATING ELASTICITIES
ELASTICITY IS A RATIO OF PERCENTAGES

Once all the changes in quantity demanded and price have been converted into percentages,
calculating elasticity is a matter of simple division. Recall the formal definition of elasticity:

% change in quantity demanded


price elasticity of demand 
% change in price
CALCULATING ELASTICITIES
THE MIDPOINT FORMULA
midpoint formula
A more precise way of calculating percentages using the value halfway between P1 and P2
for the base in calculating the percentage change in price, and the value halfway between
Q1 and Q2 as the base for calculating the percentage change in quantity demanded.

change in quantity demanded


% change in quantity demanded  x 100%
(Q1  Q2 ) / 2

Q2 - Q1
 x 100%
(Q1  Q2 ) / 2
CALCULATING ELASTICITIES
Using the point halfway between P1 and P2 as the base for
calculating the percentage change in price, we get

change in price
% change in price  x 100%
( P1  P2 ) / 2

P2 - P1
 x 100%
( P1  P2 ) / 2
CALCULATING ELASTICITIES

TABLE 5.2 Calculating Price Elasticity with the Midpoint Formula


First, Calculate Percentage Change in Quantity Demanded (%QD):
change in quantity demanded Q2 - Q1
% change in quantity demanded  x 100%  x 100%
(Q1  Q2 ) / 2 (Q1  Q2 ) / 2

By substituting the numbers from Figure 1(slide 32): PRICE ELASTICITY COMPARES THE
PERCENTAGE CHANGE IN QUANTITY
10  5 5 DEMANDED AND THE PERCENTAGE
% change in quantity demanded  x 100%  x 100%  66.7% CHANGE IN PRICE:
(5  10) / 2 7.5
%QD 66.7%

Next, Calculate Percentage Change in Price (%P): %P - 40.0%
 1.67
change in price P2 - P1  PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
% change in price  x 100%  x 100%
( P1  P2 ) / 2 ( P1  P2 ) / 2 DEMAND IS ELASTIC

By substituting the numbers from Figure 1(slide 32):

23 -1
% change in price  x 100%  x 100%  - 40.0%
(3  2) / 2 2.5
Problem
• You are given market data that says when the price of pizza is
Rs. 4, the quantity demanded of pizza is 60 slices and the
quantity demanded of cheese bread is 100 pieces. When the
price of pizza is Rs. 2, the quantity demanded of pizza is 80
slices and the quantity demanded of cheese bread is 70 pieces.

a. Can the PED be calculated for either good? Why?


b. If so, what is the PED?
Solution
• In order to calculate PED we need two (quantity, price) pairs
for one good (two points along a certain good’s demand
curve). We are given this information for pizza. We are never
given this information for cheese bread.

• We have two (quantity, price) pairs for pizza. Specifically, (QD1 ,


P1 ) = (60, $4) and (QD2 , P2 ) = (80, $2) .
CALCULATING ELASTICITIES
ELASTICITY AND TOTAL REVENUE
In any market, P x Q is total revenue (TR) received by producers:

TR = P x Q
total revenue = price x quantity

When price (P) declines, quantity demanded (QD) increases.


The two factors, P and QD, move in opposite directions:

Effects of price changes P  QD 


on quantity demanded: and
P  QD 
Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand
• Nature of Commodity

• Availability and proximity of Substitutes

• Proportion of Income spent on the Commodity

• Time frame

• Durability of the Commodity


Income elasticity of Demand

• Income elasticity measures the responsiveness of quantity


demanded to changes in income, holding the price of the good
& all other demand determinants constant.
Income elasticity of Demand

• Positive for a normal good

• Negative for an inferior good

• Zero for a neutral good


Income elasticity of Demand
• Luxury goods: Income elasticity is greater than 1

• Normal goods: Income elasticity is between 0 and 1

• Inferior goods: Income elasticity is negative


Cross elasticity of Demand

• Cross-price elasticity of demand (EXY) measures the


responsiveness of quantity demanded of good X to changes in the
price of related good Y, holding the price of good X & all other
demand determinants for good X constant
Cross-price elasticity of demand in the real world

Positive : Two goods are substitutes


Negative: Two goods are complements

Commodity X Commodity Y Cross-price elasticity


Tea (India) Coffee (India) 0.0385
Tea (India) Coffee (India) 0.3457 (long run)
Entertainment (US) Food (US) -0.72
Margarine (US) Butter (US) 1.53
HOUSEHOLD CHOICE IN OUTPUT MARKETS
Every household must make three basic decisions:

1. How much of each product, or output, to


demand

2. How much labor to supply

3. How much to spend today and how much


to save for the future
HOUSEHOLD CHOICE IN OUTPUT MARKETS
THE BUDGET CONSTRAINT

Information on household income and wealth,


together with information on product prices, makes
it possible to distinguish those combinations of
goods and services that are affordable from those
that are not.

budget constraint The limits imposed on


household choices by income, wealth,
and product prices.
HOUSEHOLD CHOICE IN OUTPUT MARKETS

TABLE Possible Budget Choices of a Person Earning $1,000 Per Month After Taxes
MONTHLY OTHER
OPTION RENT FOOD EXPENSES TOTAL AVAILABLE?
A $ 400 $250 $350 $1,000 Yes
B 600 200 200 1,000 Yes
C 700 150 150 1,000 Yes
D 1,000 100 100 1,200 No

choice set or opportunity set The set of options that is


defined and limited by a budget constraint.
HOUSEHOLD CHOICE IN OUTPUT MARKETS
The Budget Constraint More Formally

FIGURE Budget Constraint and Opportunity Set for Ann and Tom
HOUSEHOLD CHOICE IN OUTPUT MARKETS
THE EQUATION OF THE BUDGET CONSTRAINT

In general, the budget constraint can be


written:

PXX + PYY = I,

where PX = the price of X, X = the


quantity of X consumed, PY = the price of
Y, Y = the quantity of Y consumed, and I
= household income.
HOUSEHOLD CHOICE IN OUTPUT MARKETS
Budget Constraints Change When Prices Rise or
Fall

FIGURE The Effect of a Decrease in


Price on Ann and Tom’s
Budget Constraint

The budget constraint is defined by income, wealth, and prices. Within those limits, households are
free to choose, and the household’s ultimate choice depends on its own likes and dislikes.
THE BASIS OF CHOICE: UTILITY

utility The satisfaction, or reward, a product yields


relative to its alternatives. The basis of choice.
THE BASIS OF CHOICE: UTILITY
DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY
marginal utility (MU) The additional satisfaction gained by
the consumption or use of one more unit of something.

total utility The total amount of satisfaction obtained from


consumption
of a good or service.

law of diminishing marginal utility The more of any one


good consumed in a given period, the less satisfaction
(utility)
generated by consuming each additional (marginal) unit of
the same good.
THE BASIS OF CHOICE: UTILITY
TABLE Total Utility and Marginal
Utility of Trips to the Club
Per Week
TRIPS TOTAL MARGINAL
TO CLUB UTILITY UTILITY
1 12 12
2 22 10
3 28 6
4 32 4
5 34 2
6 34 0

FIGURE Graphs of Frank’s Total


and Marginal Utility
THE BASIS OF CHOICE: UTILITY
THE UTILITY-MAXIMIZING RULE

In general, utility-maximizing consumers spread out their


expenditures until the following condition holds:

MU X MU Y
utility - maximizing rule :  for all pairs of goods
PX PY
THE BASIS OF CHOICE: UTILITY
DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY AND DOWNWARD-SLOPING DEMAND

FIGURE Diminishing Marginal Utility and


Downward-Sloping Demand
INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS
THE INCOME EFFECT

When the price of something


we buy falls, we are better
off. When the price of
something we buy rises, we
are worse off.
INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS
THE SUBSTITUTION EFFECT

Both the income and the substitution effects imply a negative relationship
between price and quantity demanded—in other words, downward-sloping
demand. When the price of something falls, ceteris paribus, we are better off,
and we are likely to buy more of that good and other goods (income effect).
Because lower price also means “less expensive relative to substitutes,” we are
likely to buy more of the good (substitution effect). When the price of something
rises, we are worse off, and we will buy less of it (income effect). Higher price
also means “more expensive relative to substitutes,” and we are likely to buy less
of it and more of other goods (substitution effect).
Indifference Curves - Assumptions
1. We assume that consumers have the ability to choose among the combinations of goods and
services available.

2. We assume that consumer choices are consistent with a simple assumption of rationality (to
maximize his satisfaction).
Deriving Indifference Curve

An indifference curve is a
set of points, each point
representing a combination
of goods X and Y, all of
which yield the same total
utility.

FIGURE An Indifference Curve


Indifference Curves - Properties

1. It slopes downwards from left to right

2. It is convex to the origin

3. It cannot intersect with another indifference curve


Consumer Equilibrium
CONSUMER CHOICE

FIGURE: Consumer Utility-Maximizing


Equilibrium

As long as indifference curves are convex to the origin, utility maximization will take place at the
point at which the indifference curve is just tangent to the budget constraint.
THANK YOU

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