Chapter 4 Consumer Decision Making and Consumer Reaction to Price Changes.

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Chapter 4 Consumer Decision Making and Consumer Reaction to Price Changes

Transcript of Chapter 4 Consumer Decision Making and Consumer Reaction to Price Changes.

Page 1: Chapter 4 Consumer Decision Making and Consumer Reaction to Price Changes.

Chapter 4

Consumer Decision Making and Consumer Reaction to Price Changes

Page 2: Chapter 4 Consumer Decision Making and Consumer Reaction to Price Changes.

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Learning Objectives

• Distinguish between total and marginal utility.

• Distinguish between elastic and inelastic demand.

• Define the price elasticity of demand and state the formula for measuring it.

• List and describe three determinants of the price elasticity of demand.

• Explain the relationship between price elasticity of demand and consumer expenditures.

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If It Doesn’t Have Utility, You Won’t Buy It

• Everything for which you have a demand must generate satisfaction.

• Another way of describing satisfaction is utility, defined as want-satisfying power.

• The concept of utility is purely subjective.

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Measuring Utility

• In order to understand utility better, we arbitrarily define units of utility as utils.

• A util is an abstract concept that is defined as a representative unit by which utility is measured.

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Of Total and Additional Utility

• By definition, everything that you consume gives you some amount of satisfaction, or utility. If you watch ten movies a month, you get a certain amount of total utility from that activity over the month.

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Of Total and Additional Utility (cont.)

• But what about the additional utility you receive when you see another movie?

• We call this additional utility marginal utility, for which the word marginal means additional or incremental.

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Figuring Out Marginal Utility

• Marginal utility is the change in total utility as you increase your consumption rate.

• Assume your total utility from consuming two units of a given item is 16 utils, and your total utility from consuming three units is 19 utils. Then, the marginal utility of consuming the third unit is 19 minus 16, or 3 utils.

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Diminishing Marginal Utility

• According to the law of diminishing marginal utility, after you consume a good or service, the marginal utility you receive for yet more of that same good or service will start falling.

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Measuring Consumer Responsiveness

• If the price of salt goes down 50 percent, how much more salt would you purchase in a year? Probably not very much.

• In contrast, if you normally buy fast food dinners, and the price of fast food were to drop by 50 percent, you would probably increase the number of fast-food dinners you buy quite a bit.

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The Price Elasticity of Demand

• The official term for consumer responsiveness to price changes is price elasticity of demand.

• If consumers react a lot to a given percentage change in price, we say they have an elastic demand. If they do not react very much, we say they have an inelastic demand.

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Elasticity Calculations

• We measure the price elasticity of demand by comparing the percentage change in price with the percentage change in quantity demanded.

dPercentage change in QPrice elasticity of demand =

Percentage change in price

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Elasticity Calculations (cont.)

• For example, a price elasticity of demand for oil of –1 means that a 1 percent increase in the price of oil would lead to a 1 percent decrease in the quantity demanded of oil.

• Because of the law of demand, price elasticity of demand will always be negative.

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How We Actually Calculate Elasticity

• To calculate the price elasticity of demand, we have to compute percentage changes in quantity demanded and in relative price.

• However, there is an arithmetic problem when we calculate percentage changes with respect to the starting point. The percentage change from 2 to 3—50 %—is not the same as the percentage change from 3 to 2—33.3 %.

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Using Average Formulas

• A way out of this dilemma is to use average values.

• For relatively small changes in price, the formula for computing the price elasticity of demand then becomes

1 2 1 2

change in change in Price elasticity of demand =

( + ) 2 ( + ) 2

Q P

Q Q P P

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Price Elasticity Ranges

• Whenever the price elasticity of demand is numerically greater than one, we say that it is an elastic demand.

• If the price elasticity of demand is numerically less than one, we say that we are dealing with an inelastic demand.

• When demand is neither elastic nor inelastic, it is said to be unit-elastic demand.

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Factors that Determine the Price Elasticity of Demand

1. The Existence of Substitutes: The more substitutes that exist for a good, the more responsive consumers will be to a change in its price.

2. The Percentage of a Person’s Total Budget Devoted to the Purchase of that Good: The larger the percentage of your budget devoted to an item, the more price elastic will its demand be.

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Factors that Determine the Price Elasticity of Demand (cont.)

3. The Time Allowed for Adjustment: The longer the time allowed for adjustment to a price change, the more that consumers will react.

The longer any price change persists, the greater the elasticity of demand, other things held constant.

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Figure 4-3: Short-Run and Long-Run Price Elasticity of Demand

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Table 4-1: Selected Estimated Short and Long Run Price Elasticities of Demand

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Price Elasticity of Demand and Consumer Expenditures

• Suppose that you are in charge of the pricing decision for a cellular telephone service company. How would you know when it is best to raise or not to raise prices?

• The answer depends in part on the effect of your pricing decision on consumer expenditures—which become your total revenues or receipts—on your services.

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Price Elasticity of Demand and Consumer Expenditures (cont.)

• It is commonly thought that the way to increase total revenues is to increase price per unit.

• Is this always the case? Or is it possible that a price increase could lead to a decrease in consumer expenditures?

• The answers to these questions depend on the price elasticity of demand.

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Price Elasticity of Demand and Consumer Expenditures (cont.)

• When the firm faces a demand that is elastic, if it raises its price, total consumer expenditures will fall.

• When facing a unit-elastic demand, any small changes in price do not change consumer expenditures.

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Price Elasticity of Demand and Consumer Expenditures (cont.)

• When the firm is facing a demand that is inelastic, if it raises its price, consumer expenditures will go up; if it lowers its price, consumer expenditures will fall.

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Key Terms and Concepts

• elastic demand • elasticity • inelastic demand• marginal utility • price elasticity of

demand

• principle of diminishing marginal utility

• unit-elastic demand• utility • utils