Calculating Elasticty Worksheet
Calculating Elasticty Worksheet
Calculating Elasticty Worksheet
Step 1 - E L A S T I C or INELASTIC?
Price Elasticity of Demand is a measure of how responsive demand is to a change in price. If a price change
leads to a considerably bigger change in quantity demanded, we would consider the good to be responsive to
a price change: hence elastic. If, however, a similar price change leads to a much smaller change in demand,
we would consider it inelastic.
To get a more precise measure than this of the responsiveness to a price change we can calculate a value for
price elasticity of demand. We use the formula:
Use the formula above to calculate values of Price Elasticity for all the situations below:
25 30 100 40 1. ___________
40 70 120 90 2. ___________
In each case identify whether you would describe it as elastic / unitary elastic / inelastic
1. _________________________ 2. _________________________
3. _________________________ 4. _________________________
Step 2 - E L A S T I C MONEY?
Different elasticity values will lead to different effects on the level of total revenue a firm receives. For
example, if a good is elastic and a firm increases the price, by say 10%, they will lose more than 10% of
their business, and so although they are getting more money for each one they sell, they are selling far fewer.
To see the effect that elasticity has on total revenue, fill in the table below:
Price Quantity Revenue
Price Elasticity of Demand
Initial New Initial New Before price change After price change
25 30 100 40 1. ___________
40 70 120 90 2. ___________
1. _________________________ 2. _________________________
3. _________________________ 4. _________________________
Judge the products in the table below to decide whether you think they will be elastic or inelastic:
A box of matches
A luxury vacation
'Heinz' Ketchup
Cigarettes
Rubber bands
The group Mothers Against Drunk Driving (M.A.D.D.) has set a goal of reducing the number of
highway deaths among young adults by 39%. Based on what we know from above, how much would
the price of beer need to be increased to meet this goal?
2.) A 1997 study by Michael Phillips and Suein Hwang discovered that the demand for cigarettes among
teens is elastic, with an elasticity of 1.3. Therefore, a 25% increase in the price would reduce smoking
by 32.5% (25% X 1.30 = 32.5%). One of the stated objectives of the federal Tobacco Agreement of
1997 was to reduce teenage smoking by 60%. What % increase in the price of cigarettes would be
needed to achieve this target?
3.) As a transit planner your job is to predict ridership and total fare revenue. Suppose the short-run
elasticity of demand for commuter rail (over a one month period) is .60, and the long-run elasticity
(over a 2 year period) is 1.60. The current ridership is 100,000 people per day. Suppose that the
transit authority decides to increase its fares from $2.00 to $2.20.
a. Predict the changes in train ridership over a one month period (the short run) and a 2 year
period (the long run).
b. Over the one-month period, will total fare revenue increase or decrease? What about over a 2
year period?