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Unit 4: Elasticity of Demand




          If X and Y (say butter and bread) are complements, e  will be negative. If the price of bread rose   Notes
                                                    c
          (assuming that all other factors are held constant), there would be a decrease in the quantity
          demanded of bread and a decrease in the quantity demanded of butter. Thus, for complements,
          a change in price of one good causes the quantity demanded of the complements to move in the
          opposite direction (assuming that all other factors are held constant).
          If there is a percentage increase in the price of bread, the denominator in the formula would be
          positive. Similarly, if there is a percentage decrease in the quantity of butter, the numerator in the
          formula would be negative. Hence, e  is negative for complements.
                                       c
          If X and Y (say tea and coffee) are substitutes, e  will be positive. If the price of coffee rose
                                                  c
          (assuming that all other factors are held constant), there would be a decrease in the quantity
          demanded of coffee and an increase in the quantity demanded of tea as consumers would readily
          “substitute” tea for coffee. Thus, for substitutes the price change of one good (assuming that all
          other factors are held constant) causes the quantity demanded of the substitute to move in the
          same direction. If there is a percentage increase in the price of coffee, the denominator in the
          formula would be positive. Similarly, if there is a percentage increase in the quantity demanded
          of tea, the numerator in the formula would be positive. Hence, e  is positive for substitutes.
                                                             c
          The higher the numerical magnitude of cross elasticity, the greater is the degree of complementarity/
          substitution between the two goods. Thus, theoretically the value of cross elasticity ranges from
          minus infi nity (– ∞) for perfect complements to plus infi nity (+∞) for perfect substitutes.
                     dQ x  dP x
                 e  =    ÷
                  c   Q x  P x
                     dQ    P
                     =   x  ×  x
                     dP   Q
                       x    x



             Case Study    Student’s Dilemma

                   small state university is faced with a critical financial problem. At present tuition
                   rates, the university is loosing ` 5 crores per year. The head of the university urges
             A that there should be a 25% increase in tuition fee. Based on the total students
             enrolled, he projects that this increase would cover the  ` 5 crores deficit in revenues.

             Student leaders protest but it falls on deaf ears. Students realise that their only hope is to
             demonstrate that the tuition hike is not in the best interest of the university. What can they
             do?


             Students  find a journal article that discusses the price elasticity of demand for college
             education. The author estimates that the elasticity of enrollment at state universities is –1.3
             with respect to tuition charges. That is, a 1% increase in tuition would decrease enrollments
             by 1.3%. The data are current. Based on the elasticity estimate, the students calculate that
             the proposed tuition hike of 25% would decrease enrollment by 32.5%. This would result
             in a decrease in total revenue even after tuition increase.
             The university is given this information and it is forced to withdraw its proposed hike and

             find alternative ways to meet the defi cit.
             Question
             Evaluate the ultimate decision of the university to withdraw the proposed hike.
          Source: Atmanand, Managerial Economics, 2nd Edition, Excel Books.







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