10e 06 Chap Student Workbook
10e 06 Chap Student Workbook
10e 06 Chap Student Workbook
After reading Chapter 6 and working the problems for Chapter 6 in the textbook and in
this Workbook, you should be able to:
Explain how price elasticity of demand (E) is used to measure the responsiveness
or sensitivity of consumers to a change in the price of a good.
Explain the role that price elasticity plays in determining how a change in the price
of a commodity affects the total revenue (TR = P Q) received.
List and explain several factors that affect the elasticity of demand.
Calculate the elasticity of demand (a) over an interval using the interval (or arc)
formula, and (b) at a point on a demand curve.
Define and compute the income elasticity of demand (EM) and the cross-price elasticity of demand (EX Y).
Write the marginal revenue equation for linear inverse demand functions.
Essential Concepts
1.
E=
%Q
%P
Since P and Q are inversely related by the law of demand, the numerator and denominator of E always have opposite algebraic signs, and E is always negative.
The larger the absolute value of E, the more sensitive buyers will be to a change in
price.
2.
Demand is elastic when E > 1 , demand is inelastic when E < 1 , and demand is
unitary elastic when E = 1 . [Note: The symbol | | denotes the absolute value.]
121
3.
Using price elasticity, the percentage change in quantity demanded (%Qd) can be
predicted for a given percentage change in price (%P) as
%Qd = %P E
Alternatively, the percentage change in price required for a given change in quantity demanded can be predicted as
%P = %Qd E
4.
The effect of a change in price on total revenue (TR = PQ) is determined by the
price elasticity of demand. When demand is elastic (inelastic), the quantity (price)
effect dominates. Total revenue always moves in the same direction as the variable
(P or Q) having the dominant effect. When demand is unitary elastic, neither effect
dominates, and changes in price leave total revenue unchanged. These results are
summarized in the following table:
Relations Between Price Elasticity (E ) and Total Revenue (TR)
Elastic
Unitary elastic
%Q > %P
%Q = %P
Inelastic
%Q < %P
Q-effect dominates
No dominant effect
P-effect dominates
Price rises
TR falls
No change in TR
TR rises
Price falls
TR rises
No change in TR
TR falls
5.
Several factors affect the elasticity of demand for a good: (1) the better and more
numerous the substitutes for a good, the more elastic is the demand for the good,
(2) the greater the percentage of the consumers budgets spent on the good, the
more elastic is demand, and (3) the longer the time period consumers have to adjust
to price changes, the more responsive they will be and the more elastic is demand.
6.
P
%P
P Q
100
P
Thus, price elasticity can be calculated by multiplying the slope of demand
(Q/P) times the ratio of price to quantity (P/Q), which avoids making tedious
percentage change computations.
7.
Price elasticity can be measured either (1) over an interval (or arc) along demand,
or (2) at a specific point on the demand curve. In either case, E still measures the
sensitivity of consumers to changes in the price of the commodity. The choice of
whether to measure demand elasticity at a point or over an interval of demand depends on the length of demand over which E is measured. If the change in price is
relatively small, a point measure is generally suitable. Alternatively, when the price
change spans a sizable arc along the demand curve, the interval measurement of
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand
122
When calculating the price elasticity of demand over an interval of demand, use the
arc or interval elasticity formula:
E=
9.
Q Average P
P Average Q
When calculating the price elasticity of demand at a point on demand, multiply the
slope of demand (Q/P), computed at the point of measure, times the ratio P/Q,
computed using the values of P and Q at the point of measure. The method of
measuring the point elasticity depends on whether demand is linear or curvilinear.
Point Elasticity when Demand is Linear
For a generalized linear demand function of the form Q = a + bP + cM + dPR , let
income and the price of the related good take specific values of M and PR , respectively. The demand equation can then be expressed as Q = a + bP, where
a ' = a + cM + dPR and the slope parameter b measures the rate of change in quantity demanded per unit change in price (b = Q / P ). The price elasticity of a linear demand can be computed using either of two formulas that give the same value
for E:
P
P
E = b or E =
Q
P A
where P and Q are the values of price and quantity demanded at the point of measure along demand, and A (= a '/ b ) is the price-intercept of demand.
Point Elasticity when Demand is Curvilinear
For curvilinear demand functions, the price elasticity at a point can be computed
using either of two equivalent formulas:
Q P
P
E=
=
P Q P A
where Q / P is the slope of the curved demand at the point of measure (which is
the inverse of the slope of the tangent line at the point of measure), P and Q are the
values of price and quantity demanded at the point of measure, and A is the priceintercept of the tangent line extended to cross the price-axis.
10.
In general, the price elasticity of demand varies along a demand curve. For linear
demand curves, price and |E| vary directly: the higher (lower) the price, the more
(less) elastic is demand. For a curvilinear demand, there is no general rule about the
relation between price and elasticity, except for the special case of Q = aPb, which
has a constant demand (equal to b) for all prices.
11.
Marginal revenue (MR) is the change in total revenue per unit change in output:
TR
MR =
Q
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand
123
When inverse demand is linear, P = A + BQ, marginal revenue is also linear, intersects the vertical (price) axis at the same point demand does, and is twice as steep
as demand. The equation of the linear marginal revenue cure is MR = A + 2BQ.
13.
For any demand curve (linear or curvilinear), when demand is elastic (|E| > 1), MR
is positive. When demand is inelastic (|E| < 1), MR is negative. When demand is
unitary elastic (|E| = 1), MR is zero.
Marginal Revenue, Total Revenue, and Price Elasticity of Demand
14.
Marginal Revenue
Total Revenue
Price Elasticity
MR > 0
Increases as Q increases
MR = 0
Is maximized
MR < 0
Decreases as Q increases
For all demand and marginal revenue curves, the relation between marginal revenue, price, and elasticity can be expressed as
1
MR = P 1 +
E
15.
EM =
%Qd
%M
Qd
M Qd
E XY =
%Q X
%PY
Q X
PY
PY
QX
Cross-price elasticity is positive (negative) when the two goods are substitutes
(complements).
17.
EM =
Q Average M
Q Average PR
and E XR =
M Average Q
PR Average Q
124
For the linear demand function Q X = a + bPX + cM + dPY , point measures of income and cross-price elasticities can be calculated as
P
M
EM = c
and E XR = d R
Q
Q
Matching Definitions
interval (or arc) elasticity
cross-price elasticity
price elasticity of demand
elastic demand
income elasticity
inelastic demand
inframarginal units
1. __________________
2. ___________________
3. ___________________
4. ___________________
5. ___________________
6. ___________________
7. ___________________
8. ___________________
9. ___________________
10. ___________________
11. ___________________
12. ___________________
13. ___________________
marginal revenue
point elasticity
price effect
quantity effect
total revenue
unitary elastic demand
125
Study Problems
1.
2.
b.
3.
The price elasticity of demand for a firms product is equal to 0.5 over the
range of prices being considered by the firms manager. If the manager decreases the price of the product by 12 percent, the manager predicts the quantity demanded will _____________ (increase, decrease) by ______ percent.
The price elasticity of demand for an industrys demand curve is equal to
0.5 for the range of prices over which supply increases. If total industry
output is expected to increase by 6 percent as a result of the supply increase,
managers in this industry should expect the market price of the good to
_____________ (increase, decrease) by ______ percent.
4.
When the price effect dominates the quantity effect, demand is __________.
When the quantity effect dominates the price effect, demand is __________.
When the quantity effect and price effect exactly offset one another, demand
is ______________________.
When a change in price causes a change in quantity demanded, total revenue
always moves in the ________________ direction as the variable (P or Q)
having the ____________ effect.
126
5.
Use the graph below of a linear demand curve to answer questions 5 and 6:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
The equation for the linear demand in the figure above is Qd = ___________.
The equation for the inverse linear demand is P = ___________.
Using the equations in parts a and b, find the missing prices and quantities at
points A F:
A: P = $_____
C: Q = _____
E: Q = _____
B: Q = _____
D: P = $_____
F: P = $_____
Compute the following interval (or arc) elasticities:
Interval A to B:
EAB = ________
Interval C to D:
ECD = ________
Interval E to F:
EEF = ________
Compute the following point elasticities using the two formulas
E = ( Q / P) (P / Q) and E = P / ( P A) :
E=
Point
f.
g.
Q P
P Q
E=
P
P A
EA =_________
EA =_________
EC =_________
EC =_________
EF =_________
EF =_________
127
6.
7.
a.
b.
c.
Compute the point elasticity of demand at a price of $8 for D1, D2 , and D3.
D1:
E = __________
D2:
E = __________
D3:
E = __________
At what price is demand unitary elastic for each of these three demand
curves?
D1:
P = __________
D2:
P = __________
D3:
P = __________
At a price of $8, the point price elasticity of demand for D1 and D3 are
____________. Explain this result.
128
8.
9.
If a firm sells an additional unit of output and total revenue rises, then marginal
revenue must be ____________ (negative, positive) and demand must be
____________ (elastic, inelastic, unitary elastic). Alternatively, if a firm sells an
additional unit and total revenue falls, then marginal revenue must be
____________ (negative, positive) and demand must be ____________ (elastic,
inelastic, unitary elastic).
Suppose the demand for good X is Qd = 100P 1 .
a.
b.
10.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
129
11.
c.
d.
e.
12.
Compute the quantity of good X demanded for the given values of P, M, and
PR .
For the quantity in part a, calculate the point price elasticity of demand. At
this point on the demand, is demand elastic, inelastic, or unitary elastic?
How would decreasing the price of X affect total revenue? Explain.
Calculate the income elasticity of demand EM. Is good X normal or inferior?
Explain how a 3.5 percent decrease in income would affect demand for X, all
other factors affecting the demand for X remaining the same.
Calculate the cross-price elasticity EXR. Are the goods X and R substitutes or
complements? Explain how a 6 percent increase in the price of related good
R would affect demand for X, all other factors affecting the demand for X
remaining the same?
Find the equations for demand, inverse demand and marginal revenue for the
given values of P, M, and PR. At the point on demand in parts a and b, is
marginal revenue positive, negative or zero? Is this as you expected? Explain why or why not.
b.
Panel A shows how the demand for X shifts when income increases from
$33,000 to $35,000. The income elasticity of demand for X equals
_____________. Good X is a(an) _____________________ good.
Panel B shows how the demand for X shifts when the price of related good Y
decreases from $80 to $60. The cross-price elasticity equals _____________.
Goods X and Y are ________________.
130
13.
The following figure shows a linear demand curve. Fill in the blanks a through l as
indicated in the following figure:
131
is %P %Qd
b.
c.
d.
e.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The demand for most agricultural products is rather inelastic. Thus, when bad
weather reduces the size of crops (i.e., supply decreases),
a.
farmers incomes rise.
b.
the marginal revenue of selling one more unit of an agricultural product is
negative.
c.
the percentage decrease in crop sales exceeds the percentage increase in
price.
d.
both a and b.
e.
both b and c.
6.
If price elasticity of demand is 1.8 and price falls by 20 percent, then sales
increase by
a.
11.1 percent.
b.
36 percent.
c.
9 percent.
d.
90 percent.
132
7.
8.
9.
Which of the following would NOT tend to make demand for a good X more elastic?
a.
A major competitor of good X goes out of business.
b.
Product X is improved so that it becomes more durable.
c.
Incomes fall, which increases the share of families budgets spent on X.
d.
both a and c.
10.
133
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
Which of the following will NOT affect the price elasticity for a product?
a.
The number of substitutes.
b.
How long consumers have to adapt to price changes.
c.
The cost of producing the product.
d.
The percentage of consumers budgets spent on the product.
e.
All of the above will affect the elasticity of demand for a product.
17.
18.
19.
20.
134
ANSWERS
MATCHING DEFINITIONS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
demand elasticity
inelastic demand
elastic demand
unitary elastic demand
total revenue
price effect
quantity effect
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
arc elasticity
point elasticity
income elasticity
cross-price elasticity
marginal revenue
inframarginal units
STUDY PROBLEMS
a.
b.
elastic; E > 1
c.
greater than (When E > 1 , the numerator of E must be larger, in absolute value,
than the denominator of E.)
a.
b.
3.
a.
b.
c.
d.
inelastic
elastic
unit elastic
same; dominant
4.
a.
b.
c.
d.
increase; increase
decrease; increase
increase; remain the same
elastic [If Q decreases, P must have increased. When price increases and revenue
decreases, demand is elastic.]
unit elastic [No change in total revenue indicates demand is unitary elastic.]
elastic [If Q increases, P must have decreased. When price decreases and revenue
increases, demand is elastic.]
1.
2.
e.
f.
5.
a.
Qd = 6, 250 125P .
cept parameter, a, is the Q-intercept (= 6,250), and the slope parameter, b, measures
Qd/P (= 6,250/50 = 125). If this is confusing, see Linear Functions on page 3
of this Workbook.
b.
c.
d.
E AB =
Q Average P +250 43
= 6.14
P Average Q
2 875
Chapter 6: Elasticity and Demand
135
ECD =
E EF =
e.
EA =
EC =
EE =
6.
Average P
P Average Q
Q
Average P
P Average Q
Q
P Q
Q
P Q
Q
P Q
= 125
= 125
= 125
+250
2
+250
2
44
750
25
3,125
12.50
4, 687.5
= 7.33 =
26
3, 000
15
4, 375
= 1.0
= 0.33
44
44 50
= 1.08 =
= 0.43 =
26
26 50
15
15 50
f.
$25; 3,125. For a linear demand, the unit elastic point occurs at the midpoint of the
demand line.
g.
less; less. Moving down linear demand, Q increases, P decreases, and |E| decreases.
a.
MR = 50 0.016Q . Inverse demand and marginal revenue have the same intercept
parameters and the slope parameter of MR is twice the slope parameter of inverse
demand. Since inverse demand is P = 50 0.008Qd , MR has an intercept of 50 and
a slope of 0.016 (= 2 0.008).
7.
b.
50; 3,125. Inverse demand and marginal revenue have the same vertical intercepts.
If MR is twice as steep as inverse demand, then MR must cross the Q axis midway
between 0 and 6,250.
c.
d.
e.
a.
b.
D1 : P = $10.50;
D2 : P = $6.50;
c.
equal; The two demand curves have equal point elasticities because they both have
the same price-intercept (a = $21). Measured at the same price (in this case, P= $8),
their point elasticities must be equal.
8.
9.
a.
D3 : P = $10.50
TRP = 2 = P Q = 2 50 = $100
TRP = 4 = P Q = 4 25 = $100
TRP = 10 = P Q = 10 10 = $100
b.
constant; 1
136
10.
Q P +250 100
=
= 0.25
P Q 500 200
a.
EH =
b.
EH =
c.
They are equal, as they should be, since the two formulas are equivalent methods of
computing point elasticity.
d.
EG =
e.
P
P A
P A
100
100 500
= 0.25
600
600 1,100
= 1.2
a.
b.
E=b
c.
EM = c
d.
E XR = d
e.
Demand:
Q = (125,000 0.76 45,000 + 360 120) 400P
P
Q
= 400
M
Q
PR
Q
200
54,000
= 0.76
= 360
45,000
54,000
120
54,000
= 134,000 400P
Inverse Demand:
P = 134,000 / 400 + (1 / 400)Q
= 335 0.0025Q
Marginal Revenue:
MR = 335 + 2 ( 0.0025)Q
= 335 0.005Q
At Q = 54,000, MR = 65. MR is expected to be positive because demand is elastic at
this quantity (Recall that E = 1.481 in part b).
12.
13.
a.
EM =
b.
E XY =
a.
b.
$55
$30
c.
150
Q Average M
400 34,000
= 1.48 ; inferior
M Average Q +2,000 4,600
Q X
PY
Average PY
Average Q X
+400
20
70
4,700
= 0.30 ; complements
137
d.
e.
f.
>
=
<
g.
h.
i.
j.
10
50
150
k.
l.
175
300
MULTIPLE CHOICE/TRUE-FALSE
1.
The absolute value of price elasticity is directly related to price. Thus, as price falls
along demand, so does E .
2.
3.
4.
c
a
a
5.
6.
1.8 =
7.
8.
9.
10.
When demand is inelastic, the price effect dominates. In this case, price falls and the
arrow representing the price effect points down and is longer than the arrow for the
output effect (which points up). Total revenue moves in the direction of the dominant effect, and so in this case total revenue falls.
When demand is elastic, the quantity effect dominates. In this case, price rises and
the arrow representing the quantity effect points down and is longer than the arrow
for the price effect (which points up). Total revenue moves in the direction of the
dominant effect, and so in this case total revenue falls.
The exit of a major competitor would decrease the number of substitutes, thereby
making demand less elastic.
Extend tangent line T to cross the P-axis to find the value of A, which equals 6.
Then, substituting A = 6, E = 1/2 = P/(P A) = 2/(2 6). Since tangent line T
crosses the Q-axis at 90, the same answer can be obtained using the equivalent formula: 1/2 = ( Q / P)( P / Q) = (90 / 6)(2 / 60) .
11.
12.
b
a
Since demand is inelastic at $2, TR must fall when price decreases to $1.99.
Since total revenue is falling at P = $2, marginal revenue must be negative (which
must, of course, be less than the positive value of price).
13.
0.80 =
14.
15.
16.
e
c
%Q
20%
%Q = +36%
+10%
%M
% M = 12.5%
138
17.
18.
19.
20.
F
T
139
HOMEWORK EXERCISES
Use the figure below to answer the following questions.
P
16
14
12
Price (dollars)
1.
Demand
10
B
8
6
C
4
D
2
Q
0
50
100
200
300
400
Quantity
a.
Calculate total revenue at points A, B, C, and D. If price falls from $16 to $8,
total revenue _________________ (increases, decreases, stays the same). If
price falls from $8 to $4, total revenue _________________ (increases, decreases, stays the same). If price falls from $4 to $2, total revenue
_________________ (increases, decreases, stays the same).
b.
Given your answer in part b, is there any reason to believe this demand curve
has a constant price elasticity of demand? Explain.
c.
Q =
________. Since |b| is _________ (greater than, less than, equal to) one, demand is ______________(elastic, inelastic, unitary elastic) at every price.
d.
Compute point price elasticities for prices of $8, $4, and $2. [Hint: Use a
straight-edge to construct carefully the appropriate tangent lines. Your tangent lines will be approximations since you are constructing them by sight.]
EB = __________ EC = __________
ED = __________
e.
Do the point elasticities in part d support your answer in part c? Explain why
or why not.
140
2.
Market researchers at Chrysler have estimated the demand for their new Chrysler
Crossfire sports cars as follows:
QC = 1,050,000 95PC + 14.25M + 60PBMW + 25PP
where QC is the quantity of Chrysler Crossfires sold annually, PC is the price of a
Chrysler Crossfire, M is average household income, PBMW is the price of BMWs
330i sports sedan, and PP is the price of Porsches Boxster S sports car. The marketing team at Chrysler plans to price the Crossfire at $32,000. They predict that
average household income is $75,000 for buyers in the market for their sports sedan. The current prices for BMWs 330i and Porsches Boxster S are $34,000 and
$50,000, respectively. Use this information to answer the following questions.
a.
Compute the predicted annual sales of the Chrysler Crossfire:
QC = ____________ units per year.
b.
c.
d.
Compute the cross-price elasticity of demand for Chrysler Crossfires with respect to changes in the price of the BMW 330i:
EC-BMW = __________.
Compute the cross-price elasticity of demand for Chrysler Crossfires with respect to changes in the price of the Porsche Boxster S:
EC-P = __________.
Both cross-price elasticities are _______________ (positive, negative,
greater than 1, less than 1) because these two cars are viewed by car-buyers
as ______________ (substitute, complement, inferior, normal) goods.
e.
141
Qd = 80 8P
a.
b.
Plot Cactus demand curve in Panel A of the figure below. Label Cactus
demand curve D.
The equation for Cactus Enterprises' marginal revenue curve can be expressed as MR = ____________________. Plot Cactus' marginal revenue
curve in Panel A of the figure below.
c.
Over the range ______ to ______ units, total revenue is rising. Over the
range ______ to ______ units, total revenue is falling. Total revenue is
maximized at ______ units.
Compute the total revenue received by Cactus Enterprises for the levels of
output Q = 10, 20, 30, ..., 80. Plot the total revenue curve in Panel B below.
$
10
8
Price (dollars)
d.
6
4
2
Q
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Quantity
3.
160
120
80
40
Q
0
10
20
30
40
50
Quantity
142
60
70
80
90
4.
Over the past 30 years, cigarette makers did not worry too much about rising excise
taxes on their product because they could simply raise prices to generate the extra
revenue needed to pay the higher taxes. Apparently, according to recent stories in
the Wall Street Journal, this pricing tactic no longer works. Explain carefully, using graphical analysis, why continued increases in the price of cigarettes eventually
becomes an ineffective means of raising revenues.
5.
As part of his plan to reduce the budget deficit, President Clinton proposed raising
the excise tax on gasoline by 50 cents per gallon. While passage of this proposal
was blocked by Congress, what would have happened to the sales of gasoline if the
price of gasoline were to rise by 45 cents per gallon (i.e., producers cannot pass the
entire 50-cent tax increase on to consumers)? Assume that the average price of
gasoline is now $1.30 per gallon and use the short-run price elasticity for gasoline
presented in Illustration 6.2 (page 231 of the text) to answer this question. Would
you have expected consumers total expenditure on gasoline to have risen or fallen
had Clintons proposed 50-cent-per-gallon excise tax been enacted? Explain.
6.
One way to reduce the amount consumers spend on health care is to raise the price
of health care by increasing the health insurance copayment (i.e., the portion of the
price patients must pay themselves). At current copayment levels, if the price elasticity of demand for visits to see the doctor is 0.25, by what percentage will the
quantity demanded of doctor visits decrease if the copayment is raised from 20
percent to 25 percent? (Be careful, the percentage change in price is not 5 percent
in this problem.)
143