Mankiw ch5
Mankiw ch5
Mankiw ch5
Numerically,
P1
P2
P falls Q
by 10% Q1
Q changes
by 0%
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 13
“Inelastic demand”
Price elasticity % change in Q < 10%
= = <1
% change in P 10%
of demand
D curve: P
is relatively steeper - change in prices is
proportionately higher than the change in quantity
demanded.
P1
P2
D
P falls Q
by 10% Q1 Q2
Q rises less
than 10%
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 14
“Unit elastic demand”
Price elasticity % change in Q 10%
= = =1
% change in P 10%
of demand
P
D curve
change in prices is equal to
the change in quantity P1
demanded.
P2
D
P falls Q
by 10% Q1 Q2
Q rises by 10%
P1
P2 D
P falls Q
by 10% Q1 Q2
Q rises more
than 10%
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 16
“Perfectly elastic demand” (the other extreme)
Price elasticity % change in Q any %
= = = infinity
% change in P 0%
of demand
D curve: P
horizontal
P2 = P1 D
P changes Q
by 0% Q1 Q2
Q changes
by any %
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 17
Elasticity of a Linear Demand Curve
P The slope
200% of a linear
$30 E = = 5.0 (Elastic)
40% demand
67% curve is
20 E = = 1.0 (Unit
constant,
67% elastic)
but its
40%
10 E = = 0.2 elasticity
200%
(Inelastic)
is not.
$0 Q
0 20 40 60
P1
P rises Q
by 10% Q1
Q changes
by 0%
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 28
“Inelastic”
Price elasticity % change in Q < 10%
= = <1
% change in P 10%
of supply
S curve: P
S
relatively steeper
P2
P1
P rises Q
by 10% Q1 Q2
Q rises less
than 10%
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 29
“Unit elastic”
Price elasticity % change in Q 10%
= = =1
% change in P 10%
of supply
S curve: P
intermediate slope S
P2
P1
P rises Q
by 10% Q1 Q2
Q rises
by 10%
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 30
“Elastic”
Price elasticity % change in Q > 10%
= = >1
% change in P 10%
of supply
S curve: P
relatively flatter S
P2
P1
P rises Q
by 10% Q1 Q2
Q rises more
than 10%
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 31
“Perfectly elastic” (the other extreme)
Price elasticity % change in Q any %
= = = infinity
% change in P 0%
of supply
S curve: P
horizontal
P2 = P1 S
P changes Q
by 0% Q1 Q2
Q changes
by any %
CHAPTER 5 ELASTICITY AND ITS APPLICATION 32
The Determinants of Supply Elasticity
The more easily sellers can change the quantity
they produce, the greater the price elasticity of
supply.
Example: Supply of beachfront property is
harder to vary and thus less elastic than
supply of new cars.
For many goods, price elasticity of supply is
greater in the long run than in the short run,
because firms can build new factories, or
new firms may be able to enter the market.
P Supply
Supply often
often
S
elasticity becomes
becomes
$15 <1 less
less elastic
elastic
as
as Q
Q rises,
rises,
12 due
due to
to
elasticity capacity
capacity
>1 limits.
limits.
4
$3
Q
100 200
500 525
• Does this discovery make farmers better off? To answer this question, you
need to consider what happens to the total revenue received by farmers.
Farmers’ total revenue is P * Q, the price of the wheat times the quantity sold.
The discovery affects farmers in two conflicting ways. The hybrid allows
farmers to produce more wheat (Q rises), but now each bushel of wheat sells
for less (P falls).
• Whether total revenue rises or falls depends on the elasticity of demand. In
practice, the demand for basic foodstuffs such as wheat is usually inelastic
because these items are necessity and have few good substitutes. When the
demand curve is inelastic, a decrease in price causes total revenue to fall.
Thus, the discovery of the new hybrid lowers the total revenue that farmers
receive from the sale of their crops.