Econ Chapter 4
A normal good is defined as
A good that when the income rises we buy more because we can afford to. Example: When you get more money, you buy more shoes
(Continuing from the last flashcard) and at the current price of burger king, the quantity demanded of burger king shifts up so we see
A price rise in Mcdonalds causes the quantity demanded of Burger king to rise
Firms hope for as inelastic demand as possible...
Because then they get more of dat mula $$$
Another possible relation between goods is
Complements
IF QUANTITY DEMANDED CHANGES PROPORTIONALLY MORE THAN THE PRICE, (5% increase in price causes 8% decrease in quantity demanded)
Demand is responsive and Elastic
Anybody who says policy is simple...
Is either simple minded or thinks you are
How can policy affect the "price" of choices?
It can change with actually prices like taxes. Or it can change time prices like with HOV lanes.
Inelastic goods are
A Necessity, has no good substitutes, and little time to adjust, and also pretty inexpensive. Example: Insulin
Markets are like a spider web b.c..
A change in one affects everywhere. There is a complex web of connections
IF QUANTITY DEMANDED CHANGES PROPORTIONALLY LESS THAN THE PRICE, (5% increase in price causes 1% decrease in quantity demanded)
Demand is not responsive and is Inelastic
The equation for cross price elasticity, E is
E(1x2)=%(delta)Q2/%(delta)p1
For inferior goods E is <> 0
E1<0
Income elasticity equation
E1= %(delta)Q/%(delta)I
For normal goods E< or E> 0?
E1>0
What does E<1 and E>1 mean?
E<1 = Inelastic E>1 = Elastic
How the quantity demanded changes proportionally to price can be represented by the equation,
E= I %(delta)Qa/%(delta)Pa I E stands for own price elasticity or epsilon and the delta (its the triangle lookin things) means change in BUT IT'S THE ABSOLUTE VALUE
A demand curve with a lower slope is...
Elastic
An inferior good is one that we buy less as our income rises
Example: Cheap ramen noodles that broke college kids slurp up
More demanders mean more
Quantity demanded at any given price So entry demand shifts to the right (Example a ton of baby boomer are of the age to purchase an item so the demand shifts right)
More suppliers mean more
Quantity supplied at any given price so supply shifts to the right
Let's say for the burger things. If people are substituting BK for McD at any given price then people want more BK burgers. What happens to the demand curve?
So the demand curve shifts to the right.
If E>1, Q changes proportionally more than p
So this is elastic case
If E<1, Q changes proportionally less than p
So this is the inelastic case
Subsitutes
If one gets more expensive people will replace it with the other and if it gets less expensive people will buy it over the other.
How do you know when it's elastic?
If the quantity demanded changes proportionally more than the price, the demand is responsive or Elastic. (if the change in quantity demanded is higher than the change in price)
Elasticity Is very important for private policy
If you're going to make a pricing decision because it will either increase or reduce your total revenue
Another shift variable for product demand is
Income
I stands for
Income
In a perfectly competitive world, we assume:
Individual firms can't distinguish their products, competitors can't be kept away, and individual suppliers face a perfectly elastic demand line.
A demand curve with a very high slope is..
Inelastic
Less suppliers mean less quantity supplied at any given price so
Supply shifts to the left
Individuals maximize utility by...
balancing at the margin
Changes in the price of related goods...
shift demand lines
If taste gets weaker for an item
People will buy less at any given price and Demand shifts left
No children eat spinach
Negative Compliment Positive Substitute
T stands for
Tastes
Complements
Two goods that are consumed together. (Example: Marijuana and Papers or Burgers and French Fries)
This is why we call this price of a related good
A shift variable because the price of a substitute can shift a demand curve
How can a firm affect the own price elasticity of demand for its product?
By changing perceptions with respect to -necessity versus luxury -the quality of available substitutes -time frame
Decrease in the demand for french fries
Causes a increase in the demand for pizza
Lets use the burger king example again. The price of Mcdonalds goes up then the quantity demanded of burger king
Goes up
If n goods have different prices, then a balanced marginal utility over $ optimization would look like
MU1/p1=MU2/p2...=MUn/pn
Elastic goods are
More luxurious, good substitutes, have time to adjust, and price is high relative to income. Example: Jordans and Rolexes and McDonalds
A perfectly inelastic Demand curve is totally vertically straight which means...
No matter how the price changes quantity demanded stays exactly the same
One of the shift variables for product demand is the
Price of related goods
Elasticity examples in private and public policies
Private example: McDonalds changing prices Public example: Public transportation price changes
Product demand shift variables
Q1D=D (P1/pr, I, T)
Product demand shifts in the direction of tastes. So as taste gets stronger for an item
People will buy more at any given price and demand shifts to the right
E=0
Perfect Inelasticity (Pay at any price)
Responsiveness of Qd to a change in its own price "p"
Response to a given price change can vary significantly
Examples on this last slide in commercial advertising
Smell like a Man, Man. -Old Spice
The cross price elasticity can equal zero
So a change in the price of another good has no effect on the quantity demanded of another good Example: Gas and wool
So following the trend of hamburgers and fries cuz we love that shit, the demand of french fries shifts to the right as people have fries with their burgers and at the current price of french fries the quantity demanded of french fries goes up...
So we see a price in hamburgers fall caused by a quantity demanded of french fries rise which is confusing as hell
Why does elasticity matter
Suppose you're Mcdonalds ad want to increase revenue from hamburger sales, you would want to raise the price right? NOPE. Because them whoppers are elastic so demand would reduce by a lot. So on the other hand you might wanna reduce the price to increase demand.
The third shift variable for product demand is
Tastes
In the case of taxing inelastic goods...
Tax is paid almost entirely by the consumer
For the government to generate tax revenue
Tax revenue= Tax x quantity
And (Continuing from the last flashcard) as people substitute more Burger king for Mcdonalds cuz Mcdonalds sucks ass and is overhyped and overpriced
The Demand curve for burger king shifts to the right
In theory there is no such thing as unrelated markets so...
The cross price elasticity is actually very close to zero but can be treated as zero
If there is a decrease in the price of a whopper in response to the quantity demanded of the whopper going up, and If we assume that any reasonable person will "have fries and a pop with that" as a compliment...
The demand for fries and other complements shifts to the right increasing the Quantity demanded So in conclusion microeconomics is a huge reason for obesity
Cross Price Elasticity
The measure of the responsiveness of a good to a change in the price of a related good Example: If burger king raises the price of its hamburgers what happens to the quantity of hamburgers McDonalds sells?
As the demand for something shifts to the right
The quantity demanded goes up
Market quantity demand
The sum of the individual quantities demanded at a given price. Example If at 1 dollar price Quantity person A demands is 3 Quantity person b demands is 4 Then at the 1$ price The market demand is 7. (3+4)=7
In the case of elastic goods
The tax burden goes primarily to the supplier
If P1 goes up and quantity demanded of 2 goes down
Then the goods have a negative cross price elasticity and are complements
If the price of one thing goes up and the quantity demanded of the other goes up
Then the goods have a positive cross price elasticity and are substitutes examples are like coke and pepsi.
own price elasticity of demand
This is a measure of the responsiveness of the Quantity Demanded to a change in its own price
How does the Government use policies?
To Generate Revenue or to change behavior
Total Revenue Equation
Total Revenue= Price x Quantity
E=1
Unitary or Unit Elastic
If the quantity demanded changes proportionally less than the price...
We say that demand is not very responsive. So it is inelastic. (If the percent change in price is higher than the percent change in demand)
How do price and Qd work For complements?
When price of a goes up Qd of b goes down
Increase in the price of hamburgers causes
ceteris paribus
Less demanders mean
less quantity demanded at any given price So with exit demand shifts to the left (Example all the baby boomer die so demand on some goods shift to the left)
If the government wanted to discourage consumption it would...
tax elastic goods to cause a more significant drop in Qd even though less tax $ is raised.
P stands for
the price of related goods
If the government wanted to raise revenue,...
they would tax inelastic goods
There are different attitudes...
to different products