Elasticity: Price Elasticity of Demand
Unitary Elastic demand
A change in price leads to a proportionately equal change in the quantity demanded. PED = 1
Price Elastic Demand
A change in price leads to a proportionately greater change in the quantity demanded. PED > 1
Price inelastic demand
A change in price leads to a proportionately smaller change in the quantity demanded. 0 < PED < 1
Primary Commodities
goods that come directly from natural resources or 'land'. They tend to be unprocessed raw materials. e.g. food.
Manufactured goods
man-made goods that have been produced from raw materials, which have been transformed through a production process.
Effects of increased price of inelastic goods on revenue
Increase in price causes a smaller decrease in quantity so total revenue for firms are increased.
PED formula
% change in quantity demanded / % change in price
Determinants of PED (PANTDP)
-Number of close substitutes -Degree of necessity -Addictiveness -Proportion of income - Time period - Peak and off peak
Perfectly Elastic Demand
A tiny change in price would lead to an infinite change in the quantity demanded. PED = ∞
PED of manufactured goods
High elasticity because high product differentiation and lots of substitutes for the manufactured good.
PED of primary commodities
Low PED (Inelastic) because goods like food are necessities that have no substitutes. Also small portion of income.
Effects of increased price of elastic good on revenue
Small increase in price causes a large decrease in quantity so total revenue for firms are reduced.
Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)
a measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good or service to changes in its price.
Total Revenue (TR)
the amount of money received by firms for selling a good or service. Price of the good (P) multiplied by the quantity sold (Q): P × Q