ELASTICITIES OF DEMAND
There are as many elasticities of demand as its determinants. The most
important of these elasticities are (a) the price elasticity, (b) the income
elasticity, (c) the cross-elasticity of demand.
The price elasticity of demand
The price elasticity is a measure of
the responsiveness of demand to changes in the commodity's own price. If the
changes in price are very small we use as a measure of the responsiveness of
demand the point elasticity of demand. If the changes in price are not small we
use the arc elasticity of demand as the relevant measure.
The point elasticity of demand is defined as the proportionate change in
the quantity demanded resulting from a very small proportionate change in
price. Symbolically we may write
which implies that the elasticity changes at the various points of the
linear-demand curve. Graphically the point elasticity of a linear-demand curve
is shown by the ratio of the segments of the line to the right and to the left
of the particular point. In figure 2.33 the elasticity of the linear-demand
curve at point F is the ratio
Figure 2.33
The basic determinants of the elasticity of demand of a commodity with
respect to its own price are:
(I) The availability of substitutes; the demand for a commodity is more
elastic if there are close substitutes for it.
(2) The nature of the need that the commodity satisfies. In general, luxury
goods are price elastic, while necessities are price inelastic.
(3) The time period. Demand is more elastic in the long run.
(4) The number of uses to which a commodity can be put. The more the
possible uses of a commodity the greater its price elasticity will be.
(5) The proportion of income spent on the particular commodity.
The above formula for the price elasticity is applicable only for
infinitesimal changes in the price. If the price changes appreciably we use the
following formula, which measures the arc elasticity of demand:
The arc elasticity is a measure of the average elasticity, that is, the
elasticity at the midpoint of the chord that connects the two points (A and B)
on the demand curve defined by the initial and the new price levels (figure
2.38). It should be clear that the measure of the arc elasticity is an
approximation of the true elasticity of the section AB of the demand curve,
which is used when we know only the two points A and B from the demand curve,
but not the intermediate ones. Clearly the more convex to the origin the demand
curve is, the poorer the linear approximation attained by the arc elasticity
formula.
The income elasticity of demand
The income elasticity is defined as the proportionate change in the
quantity demanded resulting from a proportionate change in income. Symbolically
we may write
The income elasticity is positive for normal goods. Some writers have used
income elasticity in order to classify goods into `luxuries' and `necessities'.
A commodity is considered to be a `luxury' if its income elasticity is greater
than unity. A commodity is a `necessity' if its income elasticity is small
(less than unity, usually).
The main determinants of income elasticity are:
1.The nature of the need
that the commodity covers: the percentage of income spent on food declines as
income increases (this is known as Engels Law and has sometimes been used as a
measure of welfare and of the development stage of an economy).
2.The initial level of
income of a country. For example, a TV set is a luxury in an underdeveloped,
poor country while it is a `necessity' in a country with high per capita
income.
3.The time period, because consumption patterns adjust with a time-lag to
changes in income. Over the long-run, the consumption patterns of the people
may change with changes in income with the result that a luxury today may
become a necessity after the lapse of a few years.
4.Again, the demonstration effect also plays an important role in changing
the tastes, preferences and choices of the people and hence the income
elasticity of demand for different types of goods.
5.Last but not the least, it is the frequency of increase in income which
determines income elasticity of demand for goods. If the frequency is greater,
income elasticity will be high because there will be a general tendency to buy
comforts and luxuries.
The cross-elasticity of demand
The cross-elasticity of demand is defined as the proportionate change in
the quantity demanded of x resulting from a proportionate change in the price
of y. Symbolically we have
The sign of the cross-elasticity is negative if x and y are complementary
goods, and positive if x and y are substitutes. The higher the value of the
cross-elasticity the stronger will be the degree of substitutability or
complementarity of x and y.
The main determinant of the cross-elasticity is the nature of the
commodities relative to their uses. If two commodities can satisfy equally well
the same need, the cross elasticity is high, and vice versa.
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