Elasticity (economics): Difference between revisions

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- and E will vary in value with different values of P and Q  because as  P increases the fraction P/Q will increase.
- and E will vary in value with different values of P and Q  because as  P increases the fraction P/Q will increase.


The terms "''elastic''" and "''inelastic''" are applied to commodities for which  E is respectively ''numerically'' (ie ignoring the sign) greater or less than 1. If the elasticity of demand for a product is greater than 1,  a price increase will lead to a fall in the amount PQ spent on the product, because demand Q will fall more than the rise in P. Conversely, if its elasticity is less than 1, a price rise will result in a rise in the amount spent on it.
The terms "''elastic''" and "''inelastic''" are applied to commodities for which  E is respectively ''numerically'' (ie ignoring the sign) greater or less than 1. If the elasticity of demand for a product is greater than 1,  a price increase will lead to a fall in the amount PQ spent on the product, because demand Q will fall more than the rise in P. Conversely, if its elasticity is numerically less than 1, a price rise will result in a rise in the amount spent on it.


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>

Revision as of 12:08, 5 January 2008

In economics, elasticity is defined as the proportional change of a dependent variable divided by the proportional change of a related independent variable at a given value of the independent variable. Elasticity is a factor in the operation of the law of supply and demand. The concept was introduced by Alfred Marshall and is explained with great clarity in his Principles of Economics [1]

Price elasticity of demand

The best-known application of the concept of elasticity is to the effect of a price change on the demand for a marketed product. Supposing that Q is the quantity of a product that would be bought by by consumers when its price is P, and that - to take an artificially simple linear case - Q is related to P by the equation:

- then the elasticity of demand, E, for the product is given by:

, or
,

- where dQ and dP are small changes in the values of Q and P.

It can be shown that, for the simplified linear example,:

so that

- and E will vary in value with different values of P and Q because as P increases the fraction P/Q will increase.

The terms "elastic" and "inelastic" are applied to commodities for which E is respectively numerically (ie ignoring the sign) greater or less than 1. If the elasticity of demand for a product is greater than 1, a price increase will lead to a fall in the amount PQ spent on the product, because demand Q will fall more than the rise in P. Conversely, if its elasticity is numerically less than 1, a price rise will result in a rise in the amount spent on it.

References