4 ELASTICITY. Chapter. Key Concepts

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "4 ELASTICITY. Chapter. Key Concepts"

Transcription

1 Chapter 4 ELASTICITY Key Concepts Price Elasticity of Demand The price elasticity of demand is a units-free measure of responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good to a change in its price when all other influences on buyers plans remain the same. The price elasticity of demand equals the magnitude of: (percentage change in quantity demanded) Q / Q = ave (percentage change in price) P / Pave where ave stands for average. When the elasticity equals, the good has perfectly inelastic demand and the demand curve is vertical. When the elasticity is less than 1 and greater than, the good has inelastic demand. When the elasticity equals 1, the good has unit elastic demand. When the elasticity is greater than 1 and less than infinity, the good has elastic demand. When the elasticity equals infinity, the good has perfectly elastic demand and the demand curve is horizontal. Elasticity is not equal to the slope of the demand curve. Along a linear demand curve the slope ( P/ Q ) is constant but the elasticity falls in magnitude when moving downward along the curve. Price elasticity and total revenue (P )(Q ): When demand is A price cut results in Inelastic (elasticity < 1) a decrease in total revenue Unit elastic no change in total revenue (elasticity = 1) Elastic (elasticity > 1) an increase in total revenue The total revenue test estimates the price elasticity of demand by noting how a change in price affects the total revenue spent on the product. A person s expenditure on a good follows the same rules. If the good has an elastic demand, a price cut increases expenditure; if it has a unit elastic demand, a price cut does not change expenditure; and, if it has an inelastic demand, a price cut decreases expenditure. The price elasticity of demand depends on three factors: Substitutability the more close substitutes there are for the good, the larger is its price elasticity. Necessities generally have few substitutes and so have a small elasticity; luxuries generally have many substitutes and so have a large elasticity. Proportion of income spent on the product the greater the proportion of income spent on a good, the larger is its price elasticity of demand. Time elapsed since the price change the more time that has passed since the price changed, the greater is the price elasticity of demand. More Elasticities of Demand The cross elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of demand for a good to a change in the price of a substitute or complement. The cross elasticity of demand equals: (percentage change in the quantity demanded). (percentage change in the price of a related good) The sign of the cross elasticity of demand depends on whether the goods are substitutes or complements. When Then the goods are substitutes cross-elasticity > the goods are complements cross-elasticity < 63

2 64 CHAPTER 4 The income elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of the demand for a good to a change in income. The income elasticity of demand is defined as: (percentage change in the quantity demanded) (percentage change in income) When income elasticity > 1 < income elasticity < 1 income elasticity < Demand is income elastic; normal good income inelastic; normal good inferior good Elasticity of Supply The elasticity of supply measures the responsiveness of the quantity supplied to a change in its price when all other influences on selling plans remain the same. The elasticity of supply equals: (percentage change in the quantity supplied) (percentage change in the price) The size of the price elasticity of supply depends on: the ease with which additional resources can be substituted into the production process. the time since the price change. The momentary supply curve shows the immediate response to a price change. The short-run supply curve shows how the quantity supplied responds to a change in price after some of the possible adjustments have been made. The long-run supply curve shows the response of the quantity supplied to a price change after all possible adjustments have been made. Helpful Hints 1. INTUITION BEHIND THE CONCEPT OF ELAS- TICITY : Though there are many elasticity formulas in this chapter, all of the elasticity formulas measure how strongly a relationship responds to some change. The price elasticity of demand, for instance, indicates how strongly a change in a good s price affects the quantity demanded of the good, while the income elasticity of demand measures how strongly a change in income affects the demand for a good.. WHY ELASTICITIES USE PERCENTAGES : Percentages are a natural way to determine the importance of a change in price, income, or quantity. For example, which seems larger: a $1 hike in the price of a Big Mac served at the local McDonald s or a $1 increase in the price of the least expensive BMW sold at the nearest BMW dealer? The $1 rise in the price of the Big Mac is larger because it represents approximately a 5 percent boost. With the least expensive BMW selling for more than $,, a $1 rise in its price is minuscule, less than a.5 percent rise. Many consumers would respond to a $1 change in the price of a Big Mac; few would to a $1 change in the price of a BMW. Thus the best measure of the size of a price change is the percentage change. 3. HOW TO RECALL THE ELASTICITY FORMULA : Whether the percentage change in the quantity demanded or the percentage change in the price goes in the numerator for the price elasticity of demand is easy to forget. If you think of a kewpie doll, the sort of doll that is given away at carnivals for a display of an otherwise fairly useless talent, you should be able to keep the formula straight. The word kewpie is pronounced q-p, thereby telling us that q goes first (in the numerator) and that p goes second (in the denominator). 4. PRICE ELASTICITY AND TOTAL REVENUE : Total revenue equals price times quantity. To see why the price elasticity of demand tells us how a price change affects total revenue, think about a price rise. A price hike has two separate effects on total revenue. First, a higher price directly raises total revenue. Second, consumers respond to the higher price by decreasing the quantity they demand. The decrease in the quantity reduces total revenue. Which effect is larger? That depends on the price elasticity of demand. If demand is elastic, the percentage decrease in the quantity demanded exceeds the percentage rise in price and so the effect from the decreased quantity exceeds the impact from the higher price. Total revenue falls. But if demand is inelastic, the higher price dominates the decreased quantity and total revenue rises. Finally, if demand is unit elastic, the percentage decrease in the quantity demanded equals the percentage rise in price so the two effects offset each other, with no change in total revenue.

3 ELASTICITY WHY ONLY THE PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND USES THE MAGNITUDE OF THE PERCENTAGE CHANGES : The price elasticity of demand uses the absolute value of the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price. However, neither the income elasticity nor the cross elasticity take the absolute value. Why the difference? Because the sign of the last two elasticities is important. The price elasticity of demand always is negative. The income elasticity, however, can be either negative or positive. A negative income elasticity indicates that the product is an inferior good and a positive income elasticity signifies that the product is a normal good. The sign of the cross elasticity also is important. A negative cross elasticity indicates that the two goods are complements and a positive cross elasticity means that the two goods are substitutes. Because the signs of the income elasticity and cross elasticity convey information, we retain the sign rather than discard.. Your local Domino s Pizza outlet estimates that the price elasticity of demand for its pizzas is 4., so if it raises the price it charges for its pizza, its total revenue will increase. More Elasticities of Demand 11. The cross elasticity of demand between hot dogs and hot dog buns is negative. 1. A product that has an elastic demand if its income elasticity of demand exceeds An inferior good has an income elasticity that is negative; a normal good has an income elasticity that is positive. Elasticity of Supply 14. The elasticity of supply equals the change in the quantity supplied divided by the change in price. 15. If a good has a vertical supply curve, its elasticity of supply equals. Questions True/False and Explain Price Elasticity of Demand 11. The price elasticity of demand is the same as the slope of the demand curve. 1. The price elasticity of demand ranges from to. 13. The more demanders respond to a price change, the larger the price elasticity of demand. 14. If the price elasticity of demand is positive, the demand is elastic. 15. Exxon gasoline is likely to have an elastic demand. 16. Moving along a linear demand curve to lower prices and increased quantities, the price elasticity of demand does not change. 17. People spend more on rent than on soap, so the price elasticity of demand for housing is likely to be larger than the price elasticity of demand for soap. 18. The price elasticity of demand for food is largest in poor nations. 19. As more time passes after a price change, the price elasticity of demand becomes smaller. Multiple Choice Questions Price Elasticity of Demand 11. Suppose that a percent hike in the price of a textbook decreases the quantity demanded by percent. Then the price elasticity of demand for textbooks is a... b... c. 5.. d... TABLE 4.1 Multiple Choice Question Price per volleyball (dollars) Quantity demanded Two points on the demand curve for volleyballs are shown in Table 4.1. What is the price elasticity of demand between these two points? a..5. b... c..5. d..4.

4 66 CHAPTER The quantity of new cars increases by 5 percent. If the price elasticity of demand for new cars is 1.5, the price of a new car will a. fall by 4 percent. b. fall by 5 percent. c. fall by 6.5 percent. d. fall by 1.5 percent. 14. Along a perfectly vertical demand curve, the price elasticity of demand a. equals. b. is greater than but less than 1.. c. equals 1.. d. is negative. 15. Perfectly elastic demand is represented by a demand curve that a. is vertical. b. is horizontal. c. has a 45 slope. d. is a rectangular hyperbola. 16. The demand for a good is more price inelastic if a. its price is higher. b. the percentage of income spent on it is larger. c. it is a luxury good. d. it has no close substitutes. 17. Which of the following is likely to have the largest price elasticity of demand? a. An automobile b. A new automobile c. A new Ford automobile d. A new Ford Mustang 18. Business people often speak about price elasticity without actually using the term. Which statement describes a good with an elastic demand? a. A price cut won t help me. It won t increase my sales, and I ll just get less money for each unit. b. I don t think a price cut will help my bottom line any. Sure, I ll sell a bit more, but I ll more than lose because the price will be lower. c. My customers are real shoppers. After I cut my prices just a few cents below those my competitors charge, customers have been flocking to my store and sales are booming. d. The economic expansion has done wonders for my sales. With more people back at work, my sales are taking off! 19. Moving upward along a linear demand curve, as the price rises and the quantity demanded decreases, the price elasticity of demand a. falls. b. does not change. c. rises. d. first rises and then falls.. If the price elasticity of demand equals 1., then as the price falls the a. quantity demanded decreases. b. total revenue falls. c. quantity demanded does not change. d. total revenue does not change. 11. A rise in the price of a product increases the total revenue from the product if the a. income elasticity of demand exceeds 1. b. good is an inferior product. c. product has an inelastic demand. d. product has an elastic demand. 1. By reviewing its sales records, IBM economists discover that when it lowers the price of its personal computers, the total revenue IBM obtains from the sale of its personal computers rises. Hence a. supply of IBM personal computers is elastic. b. demand for IBM personal computers is elastic. c. supply of IBM personal computers is inelastic. d. demand for IBM personal computers is inelastic. 13. If a 4 percent rise in the price of peanut butter causes total revenue from sales of peanut butter to fall by 8 percent, then peanut butter has a(n) a. elastic demand. b. inelastic demand. c. unit elastic demand. d. There is not enough information given to determine whether the demand for peanut butter is elastic, unit elastic, or inelastic. 14. When the price of a hot dog rises percent, your expenditure on hot dogs increases. Hence, it is certain that a. hot dogs are a normal good for you. b. hot dogs are an inferior good for you. c. your demand for hot dogs is elastic. d. your demand for hot dogs is inelastic.

5 ELASTICITY 67 More Elasticities of Demand 15. For which of the following pairs of goods is the cross elasticity of demand positive? a. Tennis balls and tennis rackets b. Videotapes and laundry detergent c. Airline trips and textbooks d. Beef and chicken 16. A percent increase in the price of a Pepsi increases the demand for a Coca Cola by 5 percent. Thus the cross elasticity of demand between Pepsi and Coca Cola is a. 5.. b... c. 5.. d A fall in the price of a paperback book from $6 to $4 causes a decrease in the quantity of magazines demanded from 1, to 9. What is the cross elasticity of demand between paperback books and magazines? a..5 b..5 c.. d. Without information about what was the change in income, it is not possible to calculate the cross elasticity of demand. 18. Suppose that the income elasticity of demand for apartments is.. This value indicates that a. the demand for apartments is price inelastic. b. the demand for apartments is unit elastic. c. a rise in the rent for apartments lowers the total revenue from renting apartments. d. apartments are an inferior good. 19. Beans are an inferior good; chicken is a normal good. When people s incomes rise, the demand for beans and the demand for chicken. a. increases; increases b. increases; decreases c. decreases; increases d. decreases; decreases. A percent hike in income increases the demand for coffee by 3 percent. Then the income elasticity of demand for coffee is a..3. b c..3. d.. 1. All normal goods have a. income elasticities of demand greater than 1.. b. price elasticities of demand greater than 1.. c. negative price elasticities of demand. d. positive income elasticities of demand. Elasticity of Supply. Suppose that the price elasticity of supply for oil is.1. Then, if the price of oil rises by percent, the quantity of oil supplied will increase a. by percent. b. by percent. c. by percent. d. by. percent. 3. When the price of a CD is $13 per CD, 39,, CDs per year are supplied. When the price is $15 per CD, 41,, CDs per year are supplied. What is the elasticity of supply for CDs? a..86 b..35 c..14 d If the long-run supply of rice is perfectly elastic, then a. as people s incomes rise, the quantity of rice supplied decreases. b. as the price of corn falls, the quantity of rice demanded decreases. c. in the long run, a large rise in the price of rice causes no change in the quantity of rice supplied. d. in the long run, an increase in the demand for rice leaves the price of rice unchanged. 5. The elasticity of supply does NOT depend on a. resource substitution possibilities. b. the fraction of income spent on the product. c. the time elapsed since the price change. d. None of the above because all of the factors listed affect the elasticity of supply.

6 68 CHAPTER 4 Short Answer Problems 1. Assume that the price elasticity of demand for oil is. in the short run and.8 in the long run. To raise the price of oil by percent in the short run, what must be the decrease in the quantity of oil? In the long run, to have a percent rise in the price of oil, what must be the decrease? FIGURE 4.1 Short Answer Problem FIGURE 4. Short Answer Problem 5 Price (dollars per tape) 3 S Price (dollars per unit) Quantity (millions of tapes per year) 6 4 D A D B Quantity (units per month). In Figure 4.1 which demand is more elastic between prices $ and $8? 3. Why is the price elasticity of demand for food larger in poor nations than in rich nations? 4. Explain what perfectly elastic demand means. Sketch an example of a demand curve for a good with perfectly elastic demand. When will perfectly elastic demand occur? Be sure to use the notion of substitutes in your answer. 5. The supply curve for audio tapes is illustrated in Figure 4.. Perhaps because of a rise in wages, the supply of tapes decreases so that for every possible quantity, the new supply curve lies above the old supply curve by $1. a. Suppose the demand for tapes is perfectly elastic and is such that the initial equilibrium price is $ for a tape. After the decrease in supply, by how much does the price of a tape rise? Draw a figure to illustrate your answer. b. Suppose the demand for tapes is perfectly inelastic and is such that the initial equilibrium price of a tape is $. In this case, by how much does the price of a tape rise? Draw a figure to illustrate this situation. c. Based on your answers to parts (a) and (b), when will an increase in costs raise the price of a product the most: When demand is elastic or when it is inelastic? When will it decrease the quantity the most? When demand is elastic or inelastic? Is there any situation under which the price does not change? TABLE 4. The Demand for Burritos Price (dollars per burrito) Quantity demanded (burritos per week) Total revenue per week (dollars) $8 3 $7 4 $6 5 $5 6 $4 7 $3 8 $ 9 $1 16. Table 4. gives eight points on a demand curve for burritos. a. Graph this demand curve. b. Calculate the price elasticity of demand between $1 and $; $ and $3; $3 and $4; $4 and $5; $5 and $6; $6 and $7; and $7 and $8.

7 ELASTICITY 69 c. In Table 4., complete the last column. d. Based on your answer to part (b), how does the price elasticity of demand change for a movement downward along this demand curve? How does this change relate to your answers in part (c) for total revenue at the different prices? TABLE 4.3 The Demand For Pizza Price (dollars per slice of pizza) Quantity demanded (slices of pizza per week) Total revenue per week (dollars) $8 1.5 $ $ $5 $4 5 $ $ 5 $1 17. Table 4.3 gives eight points on a demand curve for slices of pizza. a. Graph the demand curve. b. Calculate the price elasticity of demand between $1 and $; $ and $3; $3 and $4; $4 and $5; $5 and $6; $6 and $7; and $7 and $8. c. Complete the last column in Table 4.3. d. Based on your answers to parts (b) and (c), how does the total revenue per week relate to the price elasticity of demand at the different prices? 18. You are the manager of a local restaurant. You notice that when you lower the price of your meals, your total revenue rises. What conclusion can you draw about the demand for your restaurant s meals? 19. For automobiles, why does the elasticity of supply generally increase as more time passes after a price change?. The demand for a product permanently increases. Suppose that the long-run supply is more elastic than the short-run supply. When will the price of the product rise the most? Immediately after the demand change or in the long run? When will the quantity increase the most? Draw a graph to illustrate your answers. You re the Teacher 1. How can I use the price elasticity of demand formula to calculate the price elasticity of demand? Also how can I determine how much a decrease in quantity boosts the price or how much a price change affects the quantity demanded? Your classmate is having trouble with some algebra. Once more, help out your friend by demonstrating how to use the formula for price elasticity to answer the questions.. The whole idea of elasticity is unnecessarily complicated! Take the price elasticity of demand; it tries to measure how strongly demanders respond to a price change. But the slope of the demand curve shows us that. The flatter the demand curve, the more consumers react to a price change. Clearly, economists should just use the slope of the demand curve as their measure of elasticity. I don t know why they bother to use percentages except to make this idea hard! Economists enjoy simple things as much as anyone, so they surely do not use percentages to make elasticity difficult to understand. Thus the speaker is making an error; correct the error in the analysis.

8 7 CHAPTER 4 True/False Answers Answers Price Elasticity of Demand 11. F The slope of the demand curve equals P/ Q, whereas the price elasticity of demand equals ( Q Q ave ) ( P Pave ). 1. T The smallest value for the price elasticity of demand,, reflects perfectly inelastic demand; the largest,, indicates perfectly elastic demand. 13. T The stronger the response to a price change, the larger is the elasticity. 14. F Demand is elastic when the price elasticity of demand exceeds T Other brands of gasoline, such as Shell or Amoco, are close substitutes for Exxon, so the demand for Exxon gasoline is likely to be elastic. 16. F Moving downward along a linear demand curve, the price elasticity of demand falls. 17. T Generally, the larger the total budget share spent on a product, the greater is the price elasticity of demand. 18. T In poor nations food takes a larger portion of consumer spending, so the price elasticity of demand is larger. 19. F As more time passes, more changes in demand can occur, so demand becomes more elastic.. F The demand for Domino s Pizza is elastic, so rising the price decreases the quantity by so much that total revenue declines. More Elasticities of Demand 11. T Hot dogs and hot dog buns are complements, so the cross elasticity of demand is negative. 1. F To be elastic, the price elasticity of demand must exceed T An increase in income decreases the demand for inferior goods and increases it for normal goods. Elasticity of Supply 14. F The price elasticity of supply equals the percentage change in the quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price. 15. T When the elasticity of supply equals zero, the supply is perfectly inelastic. Multiple Choice Answers Price Elasticity of Demand 11. a The price elasticity of demand is equal to ( percent)/( percent) =.. 1. b The price elasticity of demand between two points equals ( Q Qave ) ( P Pave ). In this case we get (/5)/($/$) =. 13. a Rearranging the formula for the price elasticity of demand gives (percentage change in price) = (percentage change in quantity demanded)/(elasticity of demand). So, the percentage change in price equals (5 percent)/(1.5) = 4 percent. 14. a When a product has a perfectly inelastic demand, the price elasticity of demand equals zero and the demand curve is vertical. 15. b Perfectly elastic means that a very small rise in the price means that the quantity demanded decreases to, which is the situation with a horizontal demand curve. 16. d If there are no close substitutes, demanders continue to buy the product even if its price is boosted substantially, which means that the demand is inelastic. 17. d There are many more substitutes for a new Ford Mustang than for the other goods. This answer is an example of the proposition that the more narrowly defined a good, the larger is its price elasticity of demand. 18. c This statement describes a situation whereby a small cut in price increased the quantity demanded substantially, which means that the demand is elastic. 19. a Moving upward along a linear demand curve, the price elasticity of demand falls in value.. d If demand is unit price elastic, a change in the price of the product creates an offsetting change in the quantity demanded so that total revenue does not change. 11. c If the demand is inelastic, the percentage rise in price exceeds the percentage decrease in the quantity demanded, so total revenue from sales of the good increases. 1. b When the demand is elastic, the percentage increase in the quantity demanded exceeds the percentage fall in the price, so total revenue rises. 13. a When demand is elastic, a rise in the price of the product decreases the quantity demanded by

9 ELASTICITY 71 proportionally more, so that total revenue falls when the price is boosted. 14. d When an increase in the price of a product increases your expenditure on the product, your demand for the product is inelastic. More Elasticities of Demand 15. d The cross elasticity of demand is positive for substitutes. Beef and chicken are substitutes, so their cross elasticity of demand is positive. 16. c The cross elasticity of demand equals the percentage change in the quantity of Coca Cola divided by the percentage change in the price of a Pepsi. Hence the cross elasticity of demand equals (5 percent)/( percent) = a The cross elasticity of demand is calculated as ( Q Qave ) ( P Pave ), in which the quantity refers to magazines and the price to paperback books. Using the formula for the cross elasticity gives ( /1,)/( $/$5) = d If the income elasticity is negative, the product is an inferior good. 19. c For an inferior good an increase in income decreases demand; for a normal good an increase in income increases demand.. c The income elasticity of demand equals in this case equals (3 percent)/( percent) or d An increase in income increases the demand for a normal good. Elasticity of Supply. c Rearranging the formula for the price elasticity of supply gives (percentage change in quantity supplied) = (price elasticity of supply) (percentage change in price) = (.1) ( percent) = percent. 3. b Analogous to the price elasticity of demand, the elasticity of supply is ( Q Qavg ) ( P Pavg ), or (,,/4,,)/($/$14)= d When the supply is perfectly elastic, an increase in demand has no effect on the equilibrium price. This result is illustrated in Figure 4.3, in which the increase in demand from D to D 1 leaves the price constant at $5 a ton. 5. b The proportion of income spent on the product affects the price elasticity of demand, not the price elasticity of supply. FIGURE 4.3 Multiple Choice Question 4 Price (dollars per ton of rice) Quantity (tons of rice per year) S D D 1 Answers to Short Answer Problems 1. Rearranging the formula for the price elasticity of demand gives (price elasticity of demand) (percentage change in price) = (percentage change in quantity). The price rise is percent, so the amount by which the quantity must be restricted in the short run is (.) ( percent) = percent. In the long run, the price elasticity of demand is.8, so the decrease in the quantity is (.8)( percent) = 8 percent. To raise the price by percent, the long-run decrease in the quantity must be four times the short-run decrease.. The demand represented by D A is more elastic than the demand given by D B. To see why, recall the formula for the price elasticity of demand (percentage change in quantity demanded) (percentage change in price) Along both demand curves, the percentage change in the price from $ to $8 is the same. But Figure 4.4 (on the next page) shows that the percentage change in the quantity demanded is greater along D A where the quantity demanded increases from 3 to 5, a 5 percent increase, whereas along D B the quantity demanded increases to 4, only a 9 percent increase. Because the percentage increase in the quantity demanded is greater along D A the price elasticity of demand over this price range is higher for D A.

10 7 CHAPTER 4 FIGURE 4.4 Short Answer Problem Price (dollars per unit) D A 4. A perfectly elastic demand is illustrated in Figure 4.5. Demand is perfectly elastic when demanders can find perfect substitutes for a product. For example, consider corn grown by one farmer. Other farmers corn is a perfect substitute for the first farmer s corn. If there are perfect substitutes for the product, even the smallest rise in the price of the product leads the quantity demanded to decrease to. The horizontal demand curve in Figure 4.5 indicates that any rise in the price above $4 a bushel will decrease the quantity demanded to. FIGURE 4.6 Short Answer Problem 5 (a) 4 D B Quantity (units per month) Price (dollars per tape) 3 S B S A D 3. The larger the fraction of their income that consumers spend on a product, the greater the price elasticity of demand. People in poor nations spend a larger proportion of their income on food than do people in wealthy nations, so the price elasticity of demand for food is larger in poor nations Quantity (millions of tapes per year) FIGURE 4.5 Short Answer Problem 4 Price (dollars per bushel of corn) Quantity (thousands of bushels of corn per year) D 5. a. In Figure 4.6 the rise in costs shifts the supply curve from S A to S B. The arrow indicates $1, the amount by which the new supply curve lies above the old supply curve. The price stays at $; in other words, the price does not rise. The quantity, however decreases from 4 million to million per year. b. In Figure 4.7 (on the next page), the supply curve again shifts from S A to S B and the length of the arrow again indicates $1. In this case, when the demand is perfectly inelastic, the price rises by the full amount indicated by the arrow; that is, the price climbs from $ to $3 a tape, which is a rise of exactly $1. The quantity, however, remains constant at 4 million tapes. c. As Figures 4.6 and 4.7 show, the rise in costs increases the price the most when demand is inelastic. When demand is perfectly inelastic, the price goes up by the full amount of the rise in costs. Then, as demand becomes more elastic, the price rises by less. At the other extreme,

11 ELASTICITY 73 FIGURE 4.7 Short Answer Problem 5 (b) TABLE 4.4 Short Answer Problem 6 (b) Price (dollars per tape) 3 1 D S B S A Prices Elasticity $7 to $ to to to to 4.47 to to Quantity (millions of tapes per year) when demand is perfectly elastic, the price does not change. The quantity decreases most when demand is perfectly elastic. As demand becomes less elastic, the change in the quantity becomes smaller. FIGURE 4.8 Short Answer Problem 6 (a) Price (dollars per burrito) D Quantity (burritos per week) 6. a. Figure 4.8 shows the demand curve. b. Table 4.4 contains the price elasticities of demand. To see how these elasticities are calculated, take the elasticity between $1 and $ as TABLE 4.5 Short Answer Problem 6 (c) Price Total Revenue $8 $ an example. The elasticity of demand is defined as ( Q Qave ) ( P Pave ), which in this case gives (/95)/($1/$1.5) =.16. c. The total revenues are given in Table 4.5. Total revenue equals (P )(Q ), so at a price of $6, ($6)(5) = $3. d. Moving along the demand curve from $8 to $1 results in the elasticity falling, from.14 when the price is between $8 and $7, to.16 when the price is between $ and $1. When demand is elastic, between $8 and $6, a fall in price (with its corresponding increase in sales) raises total revenue. When demand is unit elastic, between $6 and $5, total revenue is at its maximum and a drop in price (with the increase in sales) does not change the total revenue. Finally, over the range when demand is inelastic, from a price of $5 to a price of $1, even though a fall in price raises the quantity sold, it does so by a smaller percentage so that in this range the fall in price lowers total revenue.

12 74 CHAPTER 4 FIGURE 4.9 Short Answer Problem 7 (a) TABLE 4.7 Short Answer Problem 7 (c) Price (dollars per slice of pizza) Price Total Revenue $8 $ Quantity (slices of pizzas per week) 7. a. Figure 4.9 illustrates the demand curve. b. Table 4.6 contains the price elasticities of demand. For example, at a price between $4 and $5, the price elasticity of demand equals ( Q Q ave ) ( P Pave ) = (5/.5)/($1/$4.5) = 1.. c. Total revenues are in Table 4.7. Total revenue equals (P)(Q). Thus to calculate the total revenue at a price of, say, $, multiply the price times the quantity, or ($)(5) = $. d. The price elasticity of demand along this demand curve always equals 1.. In other words, this demand is always unit elastic. With unit elasticity, changes in price do not change total revenue, which is precisely what Table 4.7 illustrates. TABLE 4.6 Short Answer Problem 7 (b) Prices Elasticity $7 to $ to to to to 4 1. to to 1. D 18.The demand for the meals is elastic. Why? When the demand is elastic, a fall in price raises total revenue, which is precisely what you have observed. 19.The elasticity of supply increases as time passes after a price change because making changes in the production process becomes easier. For instance, to meet a permanent increase in the demand for automobiles, initially automakers might only be able to add an additional shift of workers at existing factories. But with the passage of time, the companies can make larger changes, such as building more factories. As more capacity is added, more cars will be manufactured, increasing the elasticity of supply. FIGURE 4. Short Answer Problem Price (dollars per unit) P 1 P P S SR S LR D 1 D Q Q 1 Q Quantity (units per month).the price of the product rises the most immediately after the increase in demand, and the quantity increases the most in the long run. These results are

13 ELASTICITY 75 illustrated in Figure 4.. Here the short-run supply curve is labeled S SR and the long-run supply curve is labeled S LR. Demand increases from D 1 to D. Immediately after the increase, the price rises from P to P 1 and the quantity increases from Q toq 1. In the long run, supply becomes more elastic and so the long run supply curve, S LR, becomes relevant. Hence the price rises ultimately only to P while the quantity increases all the way to Q. You re the Teacher 1. This is not so hard if you think about it the right way! The formula is price elasticity of demand = (percentage change in quantity demanded) (percentage change in price) This formula contains three numbers: price elasticity of demand, (percentage change in quantity demanded), and (percentage change in price). Now, just so you can really see these as symbols and numbers, let me call the (percentage change in price) % P and the (percentage change in quantity demanded) % Q. I think that by using these symbols, it makes the formulas even clearer. Now, the whole deal is that if you have any two of the numbers, you can solve for the third. For instance, if you have the % Q and % P, you can determine the price elasticity of demand. Similarly, if you know the price elasticity of demand and % Q, you can quickly rearrange the basic elasticity formula to solve for % P, as % P = (% Q)/(Price elasticity of demand). Finally, if you have the price elasticity of demand and % P, you can calculate (% Q) by rearranging the basic formula to get % Q = (Price elasticity of demand)(%). P Just plug the numbers into these formulas and that s all there is to it! TABLE 4.8 You re the Teacher Question Price Quantity Price Quantity $ You re basically right: All elasticity does is measure how strongly a relationship responds to some sort of change. But you re missing an important point about the slope. The slope of, say, the demand curve depends on the units involved and changes when the units used change. For example, two points on a demand curve are presented in different units in Table 4.8. In one case the prices are in dollars and in the other case the prices are in cents. The magnitude of the slope of the demand curve ( P/ Q) in the first part of the table is 1. and in the second part is.. If the measure of elasticity changed every time we changed units, we would have a problem. For instance, we couldn t easily compare, say, the price elasticity of demand for food in Japan, where prices are stated in yen, with that in the United States, where they are stated in dollars. Using percentages, however, avoids this problem. In each of the two columns, the price elasticity of demand is the same:.14. That s why percentages are used in the elasticity formulas, not because economists want to make us study more in order to understand elasticity!

14 76 CHAPTER 4 Chapter Quiz 11. On a supply and demand diagram, the total revenue from sales of a good is shown as a. a vertical distance. b. a horizontal distance. c. the area of a triangle. d. the area of a rectangle. 1. The fewer substitutes available for a good, the a. larger is the income elasticity of demand. b. smaller is the income elasticity of demand. c. larger is the price elasticity of demand. d. smaller is the price elasticity of demand. 13. If the price elasticity of demand exceeds 1. but is less than infinity, demand is a. inelastic. b. unit elastic. c. elastic. d. perfectly elastic. 14. If the price elasticity of demand is, the demand curve is a. infinity; horizontal b. infinity; vertical c. one; horizontal d. one; vertical 15. A fall in the price of lemons from $.5 per bushel to $9.5 increases the quantity demanded from 19, bushels to,8. The price elasticity of demand in this range of the demand is a..8. b. 1.. c d If an increase in the price of corn increases the total expenditure on corn, then it is definitely the case that the a. supply of corn is elastic. b. supply of corn is inelastic. c. demand for corn is elastic. d. demand for corn is inelastic. 17. If the demand for a product is price inelastic, but not perfectly price inelastic, then a percent decrease in its price causes the quantity demanded to increase by a. more than percent. b. percent. c. less than percent. d. percent. 18. If two different goods are complements, their a. cross elasticity of demand is negative. b. cross elasticity of demand is positive. c. income elasticity of demand is negative. d. income elasticity of demand is positive. 19. The price elasticity of supply measures a. how often the price of the good changes. b. the slope of the supply curve. c. how sensitive the quantity supplied is to changes in supply. d. how sensitive the quantity supplied is to changes in the price.. The supply of a product such as fresh fish is usually least elastic in the a. momentary period. b. short run. c. long run. d. competitive period. The answers for this Chapter Quiz are on page 367

4 ELASTICITY. Chapter. Price Elasticity of Demand. A) more elastic. B) less elastic. C) neither more nor less elastic. D) undefined.

4 ELASTICITY. Chapter. Price Elasticity of Demand. A) more elastic. B) less elastic. C) neither more nor less elastic. D) undefined. Chapter 4 ELASTICITY Price Elasticity of Demand Topic: The Price Elasticity of Demand 1) The slope of a demand curve depends on A) the units used to measure price and the units used to measure quantity.

More information

Elasticity. I. What is Elasticity?

Elasticity. I. What is Elasticity? Elasticity I. What is Elasticity? The purpose of this section is to develop some general rules about elasticity, which may them be applied to the four different specific types of elasticity discussed in

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Chapter 11 Perfect Competition - Sample Questions MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Perfect competition is an industry with A) a

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Chapter 4 - Elasticity - Sample Questions MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) The slope of a demand curve depends on A) the units used

More information

Midterm Exam #2. ECON 101, Section 2 summer 2004 Ying Gao. 1. Print your name and student ID number at the top of this cover sheet.

Midterm Exam #2. ECON 101, Section 2 summer 2004 Ying Gao. 1. Print your name and student ID number at the top of this cover sheet. NAME: STUDENT ID: Midterm Exam #2 ECON 101, Section 2 summer 2004 Ying Gao Instructions Please read carefully! 1. Print your name and student ID number at the top of this cover sheet. 2. Check that your

More information

Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply

Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply Chapter 6 Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply Chapter Outline 61 LEARNING OBJECTIVE 61 The Price Elasticity of Demand and Its Measurement Learning Objective 1 Define the price elasticity

More information

Chapter 5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply. These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook

Chapter 5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply. These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook Chapter 5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook 1 What is total revenue? Price multiplied by the quantity sold at that price

More information

Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply, and Elasticity

Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply, and Elasticity Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply, and Elasticity After reading chapter 3, MARKET DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND ELASTICITY, you should be able to: Discuss the Law of Demand and draw a Demand Curve. Distinguish between

More information

Chapter 3. The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and Producer Surplus. Chapter Objectives. Chapter Outline

Chapter 3. The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and Producer Surplus. Chapter Objectives. Chapter Outline Chapter 3 The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and roducer Surplus Chapter Objectives After reading this chapter you should be able to Understand that elasticity, the responsiveness of quantity to changes

More information

2011 Pearson Education. Elasticities of Demand and Supply: Today add elasticity and slope, cross elasticities

2011 Pearson Education. Elasticities of Demand and Supply: Today add elasticity and slope, cross elasticities 2011 Pearson Education Elasticities of Demand and Supply: Today add elasticity and slope, cross elasticities What Determines Elasticity? Influences on the price elasticity of demand fall into two categories:

More information

SUPPLY AND DEMAND : HOW MARKETS WORK

SUPPLY AND DEMAND : HOW MARKETS WORK SUPPLY AND DEMAND : HOW MARKETS WORK Chapter 4 : The Market Forces of and and demand are the two words that economists use most often. and demand are the forces that make market economies work. Modern

More information

Elasticity. Ratio of Percentage Changes. Elasticity and Its Application. Price Elasticity of Demand. Price Elasticity of Demand. Elasticity...

Elasticity. Ratio of Percentage Changes. Elasticity and Its Application. Price Elasticity of Demand. Price Elasticity of Demand. Elasticity... Elasticity and Its Application Chapter 5 All rights reserved. Copyright 21 by Harcourt, Inc. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to: Permissions Department,

More information

The formula to measure the rice elastici coefficient is Percentage change in quantity demanded E= Percentage change in price

The formula to measure the rice elastici coefficient is Percentage change in quantity demanded E= Percentage change in price a CHAPTER 6: ELASTICITY, CONSUMER SURPLUS, AND PRODUCER SURPLUS Introduction Consumer responses to changes in prices, incomes, and prices of related products can be explained by the concept of elasticity.

More information

Chapter 6 Competitive Markets

Chapter 6 Competitive Markets Chapter 6 Competitive Markets After reading Chapter 6, COMPETITIVE MARKETS, you should be able to: List and explain the characteristics of Perfect Competition and Monopolistic Competition Explain why a

More information

11 PERFECT COMPETITION. Chapter. Competition

11 PERFECT COMPETITION. Chapter. Competition Chapter 11 PERFECT COMPETITION Competition Topic: Perfect Competition 1) Perfect competition is an industry with A) a few firms producing identical goods B) a few firms producing goods that differ somewhat

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Chapter 6 - Markets in Action - Sample Questions MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) The short-run impact of the San Francisco earthquake

More information

Elasticity and Its Application

Elasticity and Its Application Elasticity and Its Application Chapter 5 All rights reserved. Copyright 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to: Permissions Department,

More information

Elasticities of Demand and Supply

Elasticities of Demand and Supply 1 CHAPTER CHECKLIST Elasticities of Demand and Supply Chapter 5 1. Define, explain the factors that influence, and calculate the price elasticity of demand. 2. Define, explain the factors that influence,

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) The law of demand states that, other things remaining the same, the lower the price of a good,

More information

7 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND* Chapter. Key Concepts

7 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND* Chapter. Key Concepts Chapter 7 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND* Key Concepts Aggregate Supply The aggregate production function shows that the quantity of real GDP (Y ) supplied depends on the quantity of labor (L ),

More information

Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy

Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy After reading Chapter 7, MONOPOLY, OLIGOPOLY AND STRATEGY, you should be able to: Define the characteristics of Monopoly and Oligopoly, and explain why the are

More information

ELASTICITY Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 3 rd Edition

ELASTICITY Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 3 rd Edition Chapter 4 ELASTICITY Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 3 rd Edition Chapter Overview This chapter continues dealing with the demand and supply curves we learned about in Chapter 3. You will

More information

4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND

4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND 4 THE MARKET FORCES OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND IN THIS CHAPTER YOU WILL Learn what a competitive market is Examine what determines the demand for a good in a competitive market Chapter Overview Examine what

More information

CHAPTER 4 ELASTICITY

CHAPTER 4 ELASTICITY CHAPTER 4 ELASTICITY Chapter in a Nutshell When economists use the word elasticity, they mean sensitivity. Price elasticity of demand is a measure of buyers sensitivity to price changes. The elasticity

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Chapter 3 - Demand and Supply - Sample Questions Answers are at the end fo this file MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) A relative

More information

Demand, Supply and Elasticity

Demand, Supply and Elasticity Demand, Supply and Elasticity CHAPTER 2 OUTLINE 2.1 Demand and Supply Definitions, Determinants and Disturbances 2.2 The Market Mechanism 2.3 Changes in Market Equilibrium 2.4 Elasticities of Supply and

More information

DEMAND AND SUPPLY. Chapter. Markets and Prices. Demand. C) the price of a hot dog minus the price of a hamburger.

DEMAND AND SUPPLY. Chapter. Markets and Prices. Demand. C) the price of a hot dog minus the price of a hamburger. Chapter 3 DEMAND AND SUPPLY Markets and Prices Topic: Price and Opportunity Cost 1) A relative price is A) the slope of the demand curve B) the difference between one price and another C) the slope of

More information

Practice Questions Week 3 Day 1

Practice Questions Week 3 Day 1 Practice Questions Week 3 Day 1 Figure 4-1 Quantity Demanded $ 2 18 3 $ 4 14 4 $ 6 10 5 $ 8 6 6 $10 2 8 Price Per Pair Quantity Supplied 1. Figure 4-1 shows the supply and demand for socks. If a price

More information

13 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL* Chapter. Key Concepts

13 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL* Chapter. Key Concepts Chapter 3 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL* Key Concepts Fixed Prices and Expenditure Plans In the very short run, firms do not change their prices and they sell the amount that is demanded.

More information

Chapter 6. Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply

Chapter 6. Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply Chapter 6. Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply Instructor: JINKOOK LEE Department of Economics / Texas A&M University ECON 202 504 Principles of Microeconomics Elasticity Demand curve:

More information

3. CONCEPT OF ELASTICITY

3. CONCEPT OF ELASTICITY 3. CONCET OF ELASTICIT The quantity demanded of a good is affected mainly by - changes in the price of a good, - changes in price of other goods, - changes in income and c - changes in other relevant factors.

More information

CHAPTER 5 WORKING WITH SUPPLY AND DEMAND Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

CHAPTER 5 WORKING WITH SUPPLY AND DEMAND Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition CHAPTER 5 WORKING WITH SUPPLY AND DEMAND Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition Chapter Overview This chapter continues dealing with the demand and supply curves we learned about in

More information

Figure 4-1 Price Quantity Quantity Per Pair Demanded Supplied $ 2 18 3 $ 4 14 4 $ 6 10 5 $ 8 6 6 $10 2 8

Figure 4-1 Price Quantity Quantity Per Pair Demanded Supplied $ 2 18 3 $ 4 14 4 $ 6 10 5 $ 8 6 6 $10 2 8 Econ 101 Summer 2005 In-class Assignment 2 & HW3 MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. A government-imposed price ceiling set below the market's equilibrium price for a good will produce an excess supply of the good. a.

More information

Chapter 27: Taxation. 27.1: Introduction. 27.2: The Two Prices with a Tax. 27.2: The Pre-Tax Position

Chapter 27: Taxation. 27.1: Introduction. 27.2: The Two Prices with a Tax. 27.2: The Pre-Tax Position Chapter 27: Taxation 27.1: Introduction We consider the effect of taxation on some good on the market for that good. We ask the questions: who pays the tax? what effect does it have on the equilibrium

More information

I. Introduction to Taxation

I. Introduction to Taxation University of Pacific-Economics 53 Lecture Notes #17 I. Introduction to Taxation Government plays an important role in most modern economies. In the United States, the role of the government extends from

More information

Pre-Test Chapter 18 ed17

Pre-Test Chapter 18 ed17 Pre-Test Chapter 18 ed17 Multiple Choice Questions 1. (Consider This) Elastic demand is analogous to a and inelastic demand to a. A. normal wrench; socket wrench B. Ace bandage; firm rubber tie-down C.

More information

How to Study for Class 4: The Determinants of Demand and Supply

How to Study for Class 4: The Determinants of Demand and Supply 1 How to Study for Class 4: The Determinants of Demand and Supply Chapter 4 introduces the factors that will shift the shift plus two new elasticity concepts. 1. Begin by looking over the Objectives listed

More information

17. Suppose demand is given by Q d = 400 15P + I, where Q d is quantity demanded, P is. I = 100, equilibrium quantity is A) 15 B) 20 C) 25 D) 30

17. Suppose demand is given by Q d = 400 15P + I, where Q d is quantity demanded, P is. I = 100, equilibrium quantity is A) 15 B) 20 C) 25 D) 30 Ch. 2 1. A relationship that shows the quantity of goods that consumers are willing to buy at different prices is the A) elasticity B) market demand curve C) market supply curve D) market equilibrium 2.

More information

FISCAL POLICY* Chapter. Key Concepts

FISCAL POLICY* Chapter. Key Concepts Chapter 11 FISCAL POLICY* Key Concepts The Federal Budget The federal budget is an annual statement of the government s expenditures and tax revenues. Using the federal budget to achieve macroeconomic

More information

Employment and Pricing of Inputs

Employment and Pricing of Inputs Employment and Pricing of Inputs Previously we studied the factors that determine the output and price of goods. In chapters 16 and 17, we will focus on the factors that determine the employment level

More information

Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium

Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium 3 Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium The price of vanilla is bouncing. A kilogram (2.2 pounds) of vanilla beans sold for $50 in 2000, but by 2003 the price had risen to $500 per kilogram. The price

More information

a. Meaning: The amount (as a percentage of total) that quantity demanded changes as price changes. b. Factors that make demand more price elastic

a. Meaning: The amount (as a percentage of total) that quantity demanded changes as price changes. b. Factors that make demand more price elastic Things to know about elasticity. 1. Price elasticity of demand a. Meaning: The amount (as a percentage of total) that quantity demanded changes as price changes. b. Factors that make demand more price

More information

1. a. Interest-bearing checking accounts make holding money more attractive. This increases the demand for money.

1. a. Interest-bearing checking accounts make holding money more attractive. This increases the demand for money. Macroeconomics ECON 2204 Prof. Murphy Problem Set 4 Answers Chapter 10 #1, 2, and 3 (on pages 308-309) 1. a. Interest-bearing checking accounts make holding money more attractive. This increases the demand

More information

Consumers face constraints on their choices because they have limited incomes.

Consumers face constraints on their choices because they have limited incomes. Consumer Choice: the Demand Side of the Market Consumers face constraints on their choices because they have limited incomes. Wealthy and poor individuals have limited budgets relative to their desires.

More information

Douglas, Spring 2008 February 21, 2008 PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

Douglas, Spring 2008 February 21, 2008 PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam. , Spring 2008 February 21, 2008 PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam. SIGNED: PRINT NAME: Econ 202 Midterm 1 1. What will happen to the equilibrium price of hamburgers

More information

Chapter 8. Competitive Firms and Markets

Chapter 8. Competitive Firms and Markets Chapter 8. Competitive Firms and Markets We have learned the production function and cost function, the question now is: how much to produce such that firm can maximize his profit? To solve this question,

More information

University of Lethbridge - Department of Economics ECON 1010 - Introduction to Microeconomics Instructor: Michael G. Lanyi. Lab #4

University of Lethbridge - Department of Economics ECON 1010 - Introduction to Microeconomics Instructor: Michael G. Lanyi. Lab #4 University of Lethbridge - Department of Economics ECON 1010 - Introduction to Microeconomics Instructor: Michael G. Lanyi Lab #4 Chapter 4 Elasticity MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best

More information

LABOR UNIONS. Appendix. Key Concepts

LABOR UNIONS. Appendix. Key Concepts Appendix LABOR UNION Key Concepts Market Power in the Labor Market A labor union is an organized group of workers that aims to increase wages and influence other job conditions. Craft union a group of

More information

6. Which of the following is likely to be the price elasticity of demand for food? a. 5.2 b. 2.6 c. 1.8 d. 0.3

6. Which of the following is likely to be the price elasticity of demand for food? a. 5.2 b. 2.6 c. 1.8 d. 0.3 Exercise 2 Multiple Choice Questions. Choose the best answer. 1. If a change in the price of a good causes no change in total revenue a. the demand for the good must be elastic. b. the demand for the good

More information

Chapter. Perfect Competition CHAPTER IN PERSPECTIVE

Chapter. Perfect Competition CHAPTER IN PERSPECTIVE Perfect Competition Chapter 10 CHAPTER IN PERSPECTIVE In Chapter 10 we study perfect competition, the market that arises when the demand for a product is large relative to the output of a single producer.

More information

Review of Fundamental Mathematics

Review of Fundamental Mathematics Review of Fundamental Mathematics As explained in the Preface and in Chapter 1 of your textbook, managerial economics applies microeconomic theory to business decision making. The decision-making tools

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. MBA 640 Survey of Microeconomics Fall 2006, Quiz 6 Name MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) A monopoly is best defined as a firm that

More information

Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply and Elasticity

Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply and Elasticity Chapter 3 Market Demand, Supply and Elasticity Multiple Choice Questions Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Ceteris paribus means (a) other things

More information

Practice Questions Week 2 Day 1 Multiple Choice

Practice Questions Week 2 Day 1 Multiple Choice Practice Questions Week 2 Day 1 Multiple Choice 1. When individuals come together to buy and sell goods and services, they form a(n) a. economy b. market c. production possibilities frontier d. supply

More information

Practice Exam 1. 1. Economics is the study of choice under conditions of a. demand b. supply c. scarcity d. opportunity e.

Practice Exam 1. 1. Economics is the study of choice under conditions of a. demand b. supply c. scarcity d. opportunity e. Practice Exam 1 1. Economics is the study of choice under conditions of a. demand b. supply c. scarcity d. opportunity e. abundance 2. Suppose your friends take you out for dinner on your birthday and

More information

Elasticity. Definition of the Price Elasticity of Demand: Formula for Elasticity: Types of Elasticity:

Elasticity. Definition of the Price Elasticity of Demand: Formula for Elasticity: Types of Elasticity: Elasticity efinition of the Elasticity of emand: The law of demand states that the quantity demanded of a good will vary inversely with the price of the good during a given time period, but it does not

More information

Pre Test Chapter 3. 8.. DVD players and DVDs are: A. complementary goods. B. substitute goods. C. independent goods. D. inferior goods.

Pre Test Chapter 3. 8.. DVD players and DVDs are: A. complementary goods. B. substitute goods. C. independent goods. D. inferior goods. 1. Graphically, the market demand curve is: A. steeper than any individual demand curve that is part of it. B. greater than the sum of the individual demand curves. C. the horizontal sum of individual

More information

MICROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES SPRING 2001 MIDTERM ONE -- Answers. February 16, 2001. Table One Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pounds Produced in 20 Hours

MICROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES SPRING 2001 MIDTERM ONE -- Answers. February 16, 2001. Table One Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pounds Produced in 20 Hours MICROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES SPRING 1 MIDTERM ONE -- Answers February 1, 1 Multiple Choice. ( points each) Circle the correct response and write one or two sentences to explain your choice. Use graphs as appropriate.

More information

Elements of a graph. Click on the links below to jump directly to the relevant section

Elements of a graph. Click on the links below to jump directly to the relevant section Click on the links below to jump directly to the relevant section Elements of a graph Linear equations and their graphs What is slope? Slope and y-intercept in the equation of a line Comparing lines on

More information

Elasticity. Demand is inelastic if it does not respond much to price changes, and elastic if demand changes a lot when the price changes.

Elasticity. Demand is inelastic if it does not respond much to price changes, and elastic if demand changes a lot when the price changes. Elasticity The price elasticity of demand measures the sensitivity of the quantity demanded to changes in the price. Demand is inelastic if it does not respond much to price changes, and elastic if demand

More information

1. If the price elasticity of demand for a good is.75, the demand for the good can be described as: A) normal. B) elastic. C) inferior. D) inelastic.

1. If the price elasticity of demand for a good is.75, the demand for the good can be described as: A) normal. B) elastic. C) inferior. D) inelastic. Chapter 20: Demand and Supply: Elasticities and Applications Extra Multiple Choice Questions for Review 1. If the price elasticity of demand for a good is.75, the demand for the good can be described as:

More information

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS 23-1 Briefly indicate the basic characteristics of pure competition, pure monopoly, monopolistic competition, and oligopoly. Under which of these market classifications

More information

UTILITY AND DEMAND. Chapter. Household Consumption Choices

UTILITY AND DEMAND. Chapter. Household Consumption Choices Chapter 7 UTILITY AND DEMAND Household Consumption Choices Topic: Consumption Possibilities 1) The level of utility a consumer can achieve is limited by A) prices only. B) income only. C) the consumer

More information

OVERVIEW. 2. If demand is vertical, demand is perfectly inelastic. Every change in price brings no change in quantity.

OVERVIEW. 2. If demand is vertical, demand is perfectly inelastic. Every change in price brings no change in quantity. 7 PRICE ELASTICITY OVERVIEW 1. The elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of 1 the buyer to a change in price. The coefficient of price elasticity is the percentage change in quantity divided

More information

PAGE 1. Econ 2113 - Test 2 Fall 2003 Dr. Rupp. Multiple Choice. 1. The price elasticity of demand measures

PAGE 1. Econ 2113 - Test 2 Fall 2003 Dr. Rupp. Multiple Choice. 1. The price elasticity of demand measures PAGE 1 Econ 2113 - Test 2 Fall 2003 Dr. Rupp Multiple Choice 1. The price elasticity of demand measures a. how responsive buyers are to a change in income. b. how responsive sellers are to a change in

More information

Elasticities of Demand

Elasticities of Demand rice Elasticity of Demand 4.0 rinciples of Microeconomics, Fall 007 Chia-Hui Chen September 0, 007 Lecture 3 Elasticities of Demand Elasticity. Elasticity measures how one variable responds to a change

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Econ 201 Practice Test 1 Professor V. Tremblay MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Scarcity can best be defined as a situation in which:

More information

CHAPTER 2 THE BASICS OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND

CHAPTER 2 THE BASICS OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND CHAPTER 2 THE BASICS OF SUPPLY AN EMAN EXERCISES 1. Consider a competitive market for which the quantities demanded and supplied (per year) at various prices are given as follows: Price ($) emand (millions)

More information

Chapter 4 Elasticities of demand and supply. The price elasticity of demand

Chapter 4 Elasticities of demand and supply. The price elasticity of demand Chapter 4 Elasticities of demand and supply The price elasticity of demand measures the sensitivity of the quantity demanded of a good to a change in its price It is defined as: % change in quantity demanded

More information

An increase in the number of students attending college. shifts to the left. An increase in the wage rate of refinery workers.

An increase in the number of students attending college. shifts to the left. An increase in the wage rate of refinery workers. 1. Which of the following would shift the demand curve for new textbooks to the right? a. A fall in the price of paper used in publishing texts. b. A fall in the price of equivalent used text books. c.

More information

chapter Perfect Competition and the >> Supply Curve Section 3: The Industry Supply Curve

chapter Perfect Competition and the >> Supply Curve Section 3: The Industry Supply Curve chapter 9 The industry supply curve shows the relationship between the price of a good and the total output of the industry as a whole. Perfect Competition and the >> Supply Curve Section 3: The Industry

More information

or, put slightly differently, the profit maximizing condition is for marginal revenue to equal marginal cost:

or, put slightly differently, the profit maximizing condition is for marginal revenue to equal marginal cost: Chapter 9 Lecture Notes 1 Economics 35: Intermediate Microeconomics Notes and Sample Questions Chapter 9: Profit Maximization Profit Maximization The basic assumption here is that firms are profit maximizing.

More information

The Cost of Production

The Cost of Production The Cost of Production 1. Opportunity Costs 2. Economic Costs versus Accounting Costs 3. All Sorts of Different Kinds of Costs 4. Cost in the Short Run 5. Cost in the Long Run 6. Cost Minimization 7. The

More information

Week 1: Functions and Equations

Week 1: Functions and Equations Week 1: Functions and Equations Goals: Review functions Introduce modeling using linear and quadratic functions Solving equations and systems Suggested Textbook Readings: Chapter 2: 2.1-2.2, and Chapter

More information

Pre-Test Chapter 25 ed17

Pre-Test Chapter 25 ed17 Pre-Test Chapter 25 ed17 Multiple Choice Questions 1. Refer to the above graph. An increase in the quantity of labor demanded (as distinct from an increase in demand) is shown by the: A. shift from labor

More information

17. If a good is normal, then the Engel curve A. Slopes upward B. Slopes downward C. Is vertical D. Is horizontal

17. If a good is normal, then the Engel curve A. Slopes upward B. Slopes downward C. Is vertical D. Is horizontal Sample Exam 1 1. Suppose that when the price of hot dogs is $2 per package, there is a demand for 10,000 bags of hot dog buns. When the price of hot dogs is $3 per package, the demand for hot dog buns

More information

Chapter 14 Monopoly. 14.1 Monopoly and How It Arises

Chapter 14 Monopoly. 14.1 Monopoly and How It Arises Chapter 14 Monopoly 14.1 Monopoly and How It Arises 1) A major characteristic of monopoly is A) a single seller of a product. B) multiple sellers of a product. C) two sellers of a product. D) a few sellers

More information

Monopolistic Competition

Monopolistic Competition In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions: How is similar to perfect? How is it similar to monopoly? How do ally competitive firms choose price and? Do they earn economic profit? In what

More information

Years after 2000. US Student to Teacher Ratio 0 16.048 1 15.893 2 15.900 3 15.900 4 15.800 5 15.657 6 15.540

Years after 2000. US Student to Teacher Ratio 0 16.048 1 15.893 2 15.900 3 15.900 4 15.800 5 15.657 6 15.540 To complete this technology assignment, you should already have created a scatter plot for your data on your calculator and/or in Excel. You could do this with any two columns of data, but for demonstration

More information

Practice Questions Week 8 Day 1

Practice Questions Week 8 Day 1 Practice Questions Week 8 Day 1 Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. The characteristics of a market that influence the behavior of market participants

More information

Practice Multiple Choice Questions Answers are bolded. Explanations to come soon!!

Practice Multiple Choice Questions Answers are bolded. Explanations to come soon!! Practice Multiple Choice Questions Answers are bolded. Explanations to come soon!! For more, please visit: http://courses.missouristate.edu/reedolsen/courses/eco165/qeq.htm Market Equilibrium and Applications

More information

Managerial Economics

Managerial Economics Managerial Economics Unit 1: Demand Theory Rudolf Winter-Ebmer Johannes Kepler University Linz Winter Term 2012/13 Winter-Ebmer, Managerial Economics: Unit 1 - Demand Theory 1 / 54 OBJECTIVES Explain the

More information

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics Chapter 16 - Monopolistic Competition and Product Differentiation Fall 2010 Herriges (ISU) Ch. 16 Monopolistic Competition Fall 2010 1 / 18 Outline 1 What is Monopolistic

More information

ELASTICITY. Answers to the Review Quizzes. Page 92

ELASTICITY. Answers to the Review Quizzes. Page 92 C h a p t e r 4 ELASTICITY Answers to the Review Quizzes Page 92 1. Why do we need a units-free measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good or service to a change in its price? The

More information

Learning Objectives. After reading Chapter 11 and working the problems for Chapter 11 in the textbook and in this Workbook, you should be able to:

Learning Objectives. After reading Chapter 11 and working the problems for Chapter 11 in the textbook and in this Workbook, you should be able to: Learning Objectives After reading Chapter 11 and working the problems for Chapter 11 in the textbook and in this Workbook, you should be able to: Discuss three characteristics of perfectly competitive

More information

AP Microeconomics Chapter 12 Outline

AP Microeconomics Chapter 12 Outline I. Learning Objectives In this chapter students will learn: A. The significance of resource pricing. B. How the marginal revenue productivity of a resource relates to a firm s demand for that resource.

More information

Market Structure: Perfect Competition and Monopoly

Market Structure: Perfect Competition and Monopoly WSG8 7/7/03 4:34 PM Page 113 8 Market Structure: Perfect Competition and Monopoly OVERVIEW One of the most important decisions made by a manager is how to price the firm s product. If the firm is a profit

More information

Chapter 03 The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and

Chapter 03 The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and Chapter 03 The Concept of Elasticity and Consumer and Multiple Choice Questions Use the following Figure 3.1 to answer questions 1-4: Figure 3.1 1. In Figure 3.1, if demand is considered perfectly elastic,

More information

Chapter 4 Supply and Demand Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

Chapter 4 Supply and Demand Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter 4 Supply and Demand Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter Overview In this chapter, you ll find the basics of supply and demand analysis. As you work through this chapter, you will

More information

http://ezto.mhecloud.mcgraw-hill.com/hm.tpx

http://ezto.mhecloud.mcgraw-hill.com/hm.tpx Page 1 of 17 1. Assume the price elasticity of demand for U.S. Frisbee Co. Frisbees is 0.5. If the company increases the price of each Frisbee from $12 to $16, the number of Frisbees demanded will Decrease

More information

This file includes the answers to the problems at the end of Chapters 1, 2, 3, and 5 and 6.

This file includes the answers to the problems at the end of Chapters 1, 2, 3, and 5 and 6. This file includes the answers to the problems at the end of Chapters 1, 2, 3, and 5 and 6. Chapter One 1. The economic surplus from washing your dirty car is the benefit you receive from doing so ($6)

More information

Chapter 4 Online Appendix: The Mathematics of Utility Functions

Chapter 4 Online Appendix: The Mathematics of Utility Functions Chapter 4 Online Appendix: The Mathematics of Utility Functions We saw in the text that utility functions and indifference curves are different ways to represent a consumer s preferences. Calculus can

More information

Managerial Economics Prof. Trupti Mishra S.J.M. School of Management Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay. Lecture - 13 Consumer Behaviour (Contd )

Managerial Economics Prof. Trupti Mishra S.J.M. School of Management Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay. Lecture - 13 Consumer Behaviour (Contd ) (Refer Slide Time: 00:28) Managerial Economics Prof. Trupti Mishra S.J.M. School of Management Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay Lecture - 13 Consumer Behaviour (Contd ) We will continue our discussion

More information

Final Exam Microeconomics Fall 2009 Key

Final Exam Microeconomics Fall 2009 Key Final Exam Microeconomics Fall 2009 Key On your Scantron card, place: 1) your name, 2) the time and day your class meets, 3) the number of your test (it is found written in ink--the upper right-hand corner

More information

Common sense, and the model that we have used, suggest that an increase in p means a decrease in demand, but this is not the only possibility.

Common sense, and the model that we have used, suggest that an increase in p means a decrease in demand, but this is not the only possibility. Lecture 6: Income and Substitution E ects c 2009 Je rey A. Miron Outline 1. Introduction 2. The Substitution E ect 3. The Income E ect 4. The Sign of the Substitution E ect 5. The Total Change in Demand

More information

Microeconomics Topic 7: Contrast market outcomes under monopoly and competition.

Microeconomics Topic 7: Contrast market outcomes under monopoly and competition. Microeconomics Topic 7: Contrast market outcomes under monopoly and competition. Reference: N. Gregory Mankiw s rinciples of Microeconomics, 2 nd edition, Chapter 14 (p. 291-314) and Chapter 15 (p. 315-347).

More information

Profit Maximization. 2. product homogeneity

Profit Maximization. 2. product homogeneity Perfectly Competitive Markets It is essentially a market in which there is enough competition that it doesn t make sense to identify your rivals. There are so many competitors that you cannot single out

More information

Economics 100 Exam 2

Economics 100 Exam 2 Name: 1. During the long run: Economics 100 Exam 2 A. Output is limited because of the law of diminishing returns B. The scale of operations cannot be changed C. The firm must decide how to use the current

More information

Problem Set for Chapter 20(Multiple choices)

Problem Set for Chapter 20(Multiple choices) Problem Set for hapter 20(Multiple choices) 1. According to the theory of liquidity preference, a. if the interest rate is below the equilibrium level, then the quantity of money people want to hold is

More information

Econ 202 Final Exam. Table 3-1 Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pound of: Meat Potatoes Farmer 8 2 Rancher 4 5

Econ 202 Final Exam. Table 3-1 Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pound of: Meat Potatoes Farmer 8 2 Rancher 4 5 Econ 202 Final Exam 1. If inflation expectations rise, the short-run Phillips curve shifts a. right, so that at any inflation rate unemployment is higher. b. left, so that at any inflation rate unemployment

More information