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Elasticities of Demand 2

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Perfectly Elastic Demand vs Perfectly Inelastic Demand

The effect of things like government intervention and changes in income may have different impacts on a market if demand is perfectly elastic or perfectly inelastic.

Perfectly elastic demand

Perfectly elastic demand

  • Perfectly elastic demand - PED = +/- infinity.
    • Any price increase will cause demand to drop to zero.
Perfectly inelastic demand

Perfectly inelastic demand

  • Perfectly inelastic demand - PED = zero.
    • Any price change won't affect demand.
'I' for inelastic!

'I' for inelastic!

  • A perfectly inelastic demand curve would look vertical on a diagram as the quantity demanded would be the same regardless of the price.
  • An easy way to remember this is that the more inelastic demand is, the more the demand curve looks like an 'i' for 'inelastic'.

What Affects the Elasticity of Demand?

There are a number of factors that affect the elasticity of demand.

Availability of substitute goods/services

Availability of substitute goods/services

  • The more substitutes there are available, the more price elastic a good is.
  • This is because it is easy to find an alternative product as a replacement if the price of one good rises.
    • E.g. washing detergents are fairly price elastic. If the price of one goes up, you can easily swap it for an alternative.
Percentage of income and time

Percentage of income and time

  • The higher the proportion of income spent, the more elastic the good or service is. People are more sensitive to the price of a TV vs a Mars bar.
  • Goods tend to be more price elastic in the long run because time can be devoted to searching for appropriate alternatives.
Type of good

Type of good

  • The nature of the good can influence how elastic the demand is.
  • Addictive goods tend to be more price inelastic because a change in price is unlikely to affect quantity significantly (if users feel they have a need for the product).
    • E.g. cigarettes.
  • But items that are not absolutely essential are more elastic.
    • E.g. kitchen roll.

Impact of indirect taxes

  • The impact of an indirect tax depends on the PED of the good or service.
  • Picture a tax as effectively shifting supply to the left. This leads to a fall in demand.
  • However, if the good has inelastic demand, the reduction in consumption will be small. The consumer burden is significantly higher than the producer burden.
  • The reverse is true for an indirect tax on a good or service with elastic demand.
  • Therefore PED is central to the impact of an indirect tax.
Impact of subsidies

Impact of subsidies

  • The impact of a subsidy depends on the PED of the good or service.
  • Effectively, a subsidy shifts the supply curve to the right. This means demand should increase.
  • If the good or service has an inelastic demand, the price will drop more than the quantity increases.
  • If the good or service has an elastic demand, the price will drop less than the quantity increases.
  • Therefore PED is central to the impact of a subsidy.
Jump to other topics
1

Introduction to Markets

2

Market Failure

3

The UK Macroeconomy

4

The UK Economy - Policies

5

Business Behaviour

6

Market Structures

7

A Global Perspective

8

Finance & Inequality

9

Examples of Global Policy

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