Elasticity of Demand- Micro Topic 2.3 - YouTube

Channel: Jacob Clifford

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Hey,
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you already know the law demands says there's an inverse relationship between price and quantity
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So the price goes up for a product people buy less the price goes down people buy more
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but the question now is how much less or how much more they buy and that's the idea of elasticity
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Elasticity shows how sensitive quantity is to a change in price what happens to quantity when there's a change in price depends a lot on
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the type of product first we are gonna talk about the idea of
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inelastic let's talk about Gasoline gasoline has inelastic demand this means when there's an increase in the price of gasoline
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the quantity demanded decreases, but just a little bit
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So when the demand is inelastic the quantity is insensitive to a change in price
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And it goes the other direction when the price falls the quantity demanded goes up
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But just a little bit. Right, you don't jump in your car when the price goes down and grab your engine
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At stop signs that's not what you do
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So when the price goes down you buy a little bit more when the price goes up you buy a little bit less
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insensitive to a change in price. the reason for this is because
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Products that have an inelastic demand have very few substitutes. When it comes to gasoline. There's nothing else
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I can put my car and God knows, I'm not walking
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I'm American. That was a joke to all you guys who are environmentalist. I apologize. I don't want to hurt your feelings
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I love trees. I will hug one. I love you.
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I love you so much
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In addition to having few substitutes gasoline is also a necessity, and it has elasticity coefficient that is less than one (<1)
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whoa coefficient! no math! can't stand math! listen,
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There's Gonna be a little bit of math in microeconomics
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But it's nothing crazy. One of the things you got to watch out for is freaking out when you hear things like coefficient
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It's not that hard. The elasticity of demand coefficient is the percent change in quantity,
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divided by the percent change in price
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Which is not hard at all is trying to say is that when there's a small
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Change in quantity when there's a big change in price, this number is less than 1 and if it's less than 1 its inelastic demand
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Real quick, we're talking about absolute value remember when the price goes up the quantity always goes down
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so we're talking about the absolute value of the elasticity of demand coefficient. The point is when there's an inelastic demand the
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Quantity is insensitive to a change in price. So what if demand is elastic?
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that means quantity is sensitive to a change in price, so right here when the price goes up
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the quantity decreases a whole lot, and when the price goes down the quantity demand goes up a whole lot
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So when the demand is elastic it means that these products have many substitutes
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Or they're luxuries, or they have elasticity coefficient
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Greater than one (>1) a big change in quantity as a result of a small change in price
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now, what if the percent change in quantity is exactly equal to percent change in price?
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Well that's something called unit elastic. unit elastic is the idea if the price goes up 20 percent, then the quantity goes down 20 percent
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this pops out a 1. A 1 means unit elastic
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What if the demand is a vertical straight line or something called perfectly inelastic?
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well that means an
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Increase in price has no effect on quantity. the quantity doesn't change so the percent change in quantity is zero whenever there's a percent change in price
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And so the elasticity demand coefficient is zero
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That's the idea perfectly inelastic
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And if the demand curve is horizontal
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Where a firm cannot change the price at all. they change the price no one's going to buy that would mean that the elasticity demand
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Coefficient would be infinite. all this will make more sense when you see them side by side
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So take a look at this. what you're looking at is five different demand curves perfectly inelastic,
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relatively inelastic, unit elastic, relatively elastic and perfectly elastic and you can see the
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elasticity coefficient is zero,
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Less than one, one, greater than one and infinite. this shows you
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the more substitutes a product has, the more sensitive it is to a change in price, the greater the elasticity demand coefficient
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Does it make sense? bonus round!
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One of the most important topics you're going to see is something called the total revenue test
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So this tells you what happens to total revenue when there's a change in price if the demand curve is inelastic or elastic
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It'll make more sense on a graph over here on the left
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We have inelastic demand. Right here on the right,
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We have elastic demand. the total revenue is the price times the quantity it's this box right here
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Notice how the box on both graphs starts exactly the same size. when supply shifts to the left
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that causes the price to go up. notice that on both curves the price goes up and the
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Quantity goes down. remember, the law of demand is at play here. when the price goes up the quantity goes down
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We're not analyzing that but we're analyzing is the total revenue
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The size of the box. so for inelastic demand the price went up a whole lot, but quantity decrease
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Just a little bit and so the size of the box got bigger that means when the demand
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is inelastic the price goes up the total revenue goes up
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or when the price goes down the total revenue goes down and that explains why gas stations never have sales
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Right, there's no reason for a gas station to have like a half off gas sale
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Because they lower their price the total revenue is not going to increase
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But let's take a look at elastic demand
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When the price goes up a whole lot of people don't want to buy it and so the size of the total revenue box gets
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Smaller so when the price goes up total revenue falls and when the price goes down, total revenue goes up
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That's why products that have
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elastic demand will have sales all the time. now what you're going to see on a test is a question that says if there's a
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Given product, Product X, and the price goes up and the total revenue goes down
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What must be true? The answer is it's elastic demand. right, if the price goes up and the total revenue, the box gets smaller,
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That's elastic demand
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Bonus bonus round!! one of the things I do to help students understand the total revenue test is given this thing to do with their hands
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so if the price goes up for product and the total revenue goes up, I look like an "I"
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I look like an "I" the demand is "I"nelastic
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right, price goes up total revenue goes up
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The other way to look like an "I" is when the price goes down and total revenue goes down. I look like an "I"
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I'm "I"nelastic demand. if the price goes up and total Revenue goes down. I don't look like an "I".
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I'm elastic demand. if price goes down and total revenue goes up
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I'm not an "I" it must be elastic demand
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So this is going to help you on a test if they say the price goes up for a product and the total revenue went
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up, you look at yourself. You look like an "I", inelastic demand. I hope this video helped you understand
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the idea of elasticity and the total revenue test. And make sure to subscribe
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And take a look at the next video that explain cross price and income elasticity. Also, check out my series of videos called
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Econ Movies, alright? Till next time!
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ENG CC By: Tammie Ng Lin Ern