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Methods of Measuring Price Elasticity of Demand

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Topics

  • Total Expenditure Method
  • Example: Total Expenditure Method
  • Proportionate (Percentage) Method
  • Example Table: Proportionate (Percentage) Method
  • Point Elasticity Method
  • Elasticity at Different Points
  • Arc Elasticity Demand
  • Example: Arc Elasticity Method
  • Revenue Method
  • Example: Revenue Method
  • Real-Life Applications
  • Key Points: Methods of Measuring Price Elasticity of Demand
CISCE: Class 12

Total Expenditure Method

This method, developed by Dr Marshall, looks at how total spending by consumers changes when price changes.

  • Total Expenditure Formula:
    Total Expenditure (TE) = Price (P) × Quantity Demanded (Q)

How to Interpret:

When Price Falls And TE... Then Elasticity is... Symbol
Falls Rises Elastic (more responsive) Ed > 1
Falls Falls Inelastic (less responsive) Ed < 1
Falls Unchanged Unitary (equally responsive) Ed = 1
CISCE: Class 12

Example: Total Expenditure Method

Elastic Demand Example (Ed > 1):

  • Price of jeans falls from ₹1000 to ₹700
  • Quantity bought increases from 10 to 25 units
  • Total Expenditure changes from ₹10,000 to ₹17,500 (increases!)
  • Conclusion: When price fell, people bought so much more that total spending increased → Elastic Demand

Inelastic Demand Example (Ed < 1):

  • Price of salt falls from ₹20 to ₹15
  • Quantity bought increases from 5 kg to 6 kg only
  • Total Expenditure changes from ₹100 to ₹90 (decreases!)
  • Conclusion: When price fell, people didn't buy much more → Inelastic Demand

Data Table:

Price (₹) Quantity Demanded Total Expenditure (₹) What Changed? Elasticity Type
10 1 10 Start -
9 2 18 TE increased -
8 3 24 TE increased Elastic (>1)
7 4 28 TE increased Elastic (>1)
6 5 30 TE increased Elastic (>1)
5 6 30 TE same Unitary (=1)
4 7 28 TE decreased Inelastic (<1)
3 8 24 TE decreased Inelastic (<1)
2 9 18 TE decreased Inelastic (<1)
1 10 10 TE decreased Inelastic (<1)
CISCE: Class 12

Proportionate (Percentage) Method

This method, also called Ratio MethodPercentage Method, or Arithmetic Method, measures elasticity as the ratio of percentage changes.

  • Formula:
    \[\mathrm{Ed}=\frac{\text{Percentage change in Quantity demanded}}{\text{Percentage change in Price}}\]
    \[\mathrm{Ed}=\frac{\%\triangle\mathrm{Q}}{\%\triangle\mathrm{P}}\]

Where:

  • ΔQ = Change in Quantity Demanded
  • Q = Original Quantity
  • ΔP = Change in Price
  • P = Original Price
CISCE: Class 12

Example Table: Proportionate (Percentage) Method

Original Price (P) New Price Original Qty (Q) New Qty ΔP ΔQ Ed = (ΔQ/ΔP)×(P/Q) Elasticity Type
₹50 ₹40 100 units 150 -10 +50 2.5 Elastic
₹100 ₹90 20 units 22 -10 +2 0.1 Inelastic
₹200 ₹150 60 units 80 -50 +20 0.48 Inelastic
CISCE: Class 12

Point Elasticity Method

This method measures elasticity at a specific point on the demand curve. It's best for understanding how elastic demand is at different price levels.

1) Elasticity On a Straight-Line Demand Curve:


\[\text{ep at point R}=\frac{\text{Lower line segment}}{\text{Upper line segment}}=\frac{\mathrm{RB}}{\mathrm{RA}}\]

2) Elasticity On the Non-linear Demand Curve:


\[\mathrm{e_{P}~at~R=\frac{Lower~line~segment}{Upper~line~segment}=\frac{BR}{RA}}\]

CISCE: Class 12

Elasticity at Different Points

Position on Demand Curve Segment Comparison Elasticity Value Demand Type
At Y-axis (price axis) Lower = ∞, Upper = 0 Ed = ∞ Perfectly Elastic
Above Midpoint Lower > Upper Ed > 1 Elastic
At Midpoint Lower = Upper Ed = 1 Unitary Elastic
Below Midpoint Lower < Upper Ed < 1 Inelastic
At X-axis (quantity axis) Lower = 0, Upper = ∞ Ed = 0 Perfectly Inelastic
CISCE: Class 12

Arc Elasticity Demand

This method measures elasticity between two points on the demand curve. It's called "average elasticity" and is especially useful when there are large price and quantity changes.

  • Formula:
    \[\mathrm{E=\frac{Q_{2}-Q_{1}}{Q_{2}+Q_{1}}\div\frac{P_{1}-P_{2}}{P_{1}+P_{2}}}\]

Where:

  • Q1 = Original Quantity
  • Q2 = New Quantity
  • P1 = Original Price
  • P2 = New Price
CISCE: Class 12

Example: Arc Elasticity Method

  • Original Price (P1) = ₹60
  • New Price (P2) = ₹50
  • Original Quantity (Q1) = 10 units
  • New Quantity (Q2) = 13 units

Step 1: Calculate Changes

Step 2: Calculate Averages

Step 3: Apply Formula

CISCE: Class 12

Revenue Method

This method, developed by Mrs. Joan Robinson, relates elasticity to revenue concepts used by businesses. It connects elasticity with Average Revenue (AR) and Marginal Revenue (MR).

  • Formula:
    Ed = AR / (AR - MR)
    or
    Ed = Average Revenue / (Average Revenue - Marginal Revenue)
  • How It Works:

    When MR Value AR vs MR Ed Value
    Demand is elastic. Positive but less than AR AR > MR > 1
    Demand is unitary. Equals AR/2 AR = 2(MR) = 1
    Demand is inelastic. Can be zero or negative AR < 2(MR) < 1
CISCE: Class 12

Example: Revenue Method

If at a point:

  • AR = ₹100
  • MR = ₹60

Then:
Ed = 100 / (100 - 60) = 100 / 40 = 2.5 (Elastic)

CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Applications

Example 1: Coffee Shop Pricing

  • If coffee is elastic (Ed > 1): A price drop will increase sales significantly
  • Strategy: Reduce price to boost revenue

Example 2: Hospital Medicines

  • If a medicine is inelastic (Ed < 1): People will buy regardless of price change
  • Strategy: Price increase doesn't hurt sales much

Example 3: Fast Fashion vs Luxury Brands

  • Fast fashion: Often elastic (many substitutes available)
  • Luxury brands: Often inelastic (brand-loyal customers)
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Methods of Measuring Price Elasticity of Demand

  • Total Expenditure Formula:
    Total Expenditure (TE) = Price (P) × Quantity Demanded (Q)
  • Revenue Method Formula:
    Ed = AR / (AR - MR)
    or
    Ed = Average Revenue / (Average Revenue - Marginal Revenue)
  • Arc Elasticity Demand Formula:
    \[\mathrm{E=\frac{Q_{2}-Q_{1}}{Q_{2}+Q_{1}}\div\frac{P_{1}-P_{2}}{P_{1}+P_{2}}}\]
  • Proportionate Method Formula:
    \[\mathrm{Ed}=\frac{\text{Percentage change in Quantity demanded}}{\text{Percentage change in Price}}\]
    \[\mathrm{Ed}=\frac{\%\triangle\mathrm{Q}}{\%\triangle\mathrm{P}}\]

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