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Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Understanding Demand
• What is the law of demand?
• How do the substitution effect and income effect
influence decisions?
• What is a demand schedule?
• What is a demand curve?
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Law of Demand
• Demand – the desire to own something and ability to
pay for it
• Law of Demand
– Price goes down = demand goes up
– Price goes up = demand goes down
– Price of a good strongly influences the decision to
buy it
– Example
• How many pieces of pizza would you buy at $1?
• Same piece at $2, $3, and so on
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Law of Demand
• Two separate patterns overlap b/c of Law of Demand
– Substitution Effect and Income Effect
• They describe 2 different ways that a consumer can
change their spending patterns
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Substitution Effect
• When the price of the pizza rises, more people will start
buying other products
– Drops the demand for pizza
– Change in spending is known as the substitution
effect
• Eating pizza on Mondays and Fridays now turns
into pizza on only Mondays and something else
on Fridays
– Reacting to the price change of one good and
substituting it for another
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
The Income Effect
• Price of the goods you buy go up, you start to make cut
backs on the purchases you make
– Cut back on buying pizza, clothes, etc.
• Buying fewer products w/o increasing your purchases
of other goods is the Income Effect
• Economists measure consumption in the amount of a
good that is bought, not the price on the good
– Spending more on pizza but you are consuming less
• People spend more money on pizza, the demand still
goes down
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Understanding Demand
• To have demand for a good you must be willing and
able to pay for it at a specified price
– Might want a new car, but you can’t afford it so you
do not demand it
• Demand Schedule
– Table that lists the quantity of a good that a person
will purchase at each price in a market
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Market Demand Schedules
• Adding up the demand schedules for every buyer in the
market, this is creating a Market Demand Schedule
– Shows the quantities demanded at each price by all
consumers in the market
– Businesses use these to predict the total sale of a
product at different prices
• This schedule shows the Law of Demand in play
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Demand Schedules
Individual Demand Schedule
Price of a
slice of pizza
Quantity demanded
per day
Market Demand Schedule
Price of a
slice of pizza
Quantity demanded
per day
$.50
$1.00
$1.50
$2.00
$2.50
$3.00
5
4
3
2
1
0
$.50
$1.00
$1.50
$2.00
$2.50
$3.00
300
250
200
150
100
50
The Demand Schedules
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Market Demand Curve
3.00
2.50
2.00
1.50
1.00
.50
0
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
Slices of pizza per day
Priceperslice(indollars)
Demand
The Demand Curve
• A demand curve is a
graphical representation of
a demand schedule.
• Reading a demand curve
–Only price and quantity
are taken into account
–Slopes downward and
right
–Prices rise, quantity
drops
–Prices decrease, quantity
raises
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Limits of a Demand Curve
• Only accurate for one very specific set of market
conditions
• Does not take any other factors into account
– Pizza place near a factory that has layoffs will lose
business b/c those workers will stop coming in
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Shifts of the Demand Curve
• What is the difference between a change in quantity
demanded and a shift in the demand curve?
• What factors can cause shifts in the demand curve?
• How does the change in the price of one good affect
the demand for a related good?
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Changes in Demand
• Demand curves are accurate as long as there are no
other changes other than price that affects decisions
• Ceteris Paribus
– “all other things held constant”
– This was used on the Demand Curve w/ pizza
– Does not take into account any other factors (only
price and quantity)
• When price changes we move along the curve
– Change in quantity demanded
– Up or down the curve
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Changes in Demand
• Get rid of the ceteris paribus rule then we no longer
move along the curve
– The entire curve shifts left or right
• A shift in the demand curve means that at every price,
consumers buy a diff. amount than before
– Called Change in Demand
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Causes for Shifts - Income
• Normal Goods – goods that consumers demand more
of when their income increases
– This would move the curve to the right to show more
demand at each price
• Increase in Demand
• Decrease in Demand – if the curve shifts to the
left
– Inferior Goods – an increase in income causes us to
buy less of these
• Buy name brand stuff once your income rises
instead of store brand
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Causes - Consumer Expectations
• Expectations of a higher price will affect your
immediate demand of the product
– Example
• Go into Best Buy to buy a laptop and the sales
person tells you the price will go up in a week
• Your demand for the product raises and you
would probably purchase it then b/c you expect a
higher price
• Your immediate demand will drop if the laptop
would be on sale next week
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Causes - Population
• Rise in population obviously raises the demand for
food, shelter, etc.
• After WWII
– Record number of men and women married and had
children (“baby boom”) from mid 1940s – 1964
– Initial demand grew w/ baby products, then it
thousands of schools were needed and built
(universities also expanded later)
– Now that they are retiring, the demands among
senior citizens will rise
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Causes – Consumer Tastes and Advertising
• Trends change over periods of time (clothes, music,
etc.)
• Advertising and publicity play an important role
– Companies spend large amounts of money on
advertising to try and raise the demand for their
products
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Prices of Related Goods
• Demand curve for one good can be affected by a
change in the demand for another good
– Complements
• Two goods that are bought and used together
• Buy new skis, need ski boots
• If the price of skis go up, the demand for both
products go down
– Substitutes
• Goods used in place of another
• Price of skis goes up, some people will switch to
snowboarding
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Elasticity of Demand
• What is elasticity of demand?
• How can a demand schedule and demand curve be
used to determine elasticity of demand?
• What factors affect elasticity?
• How do firms use elasticity and revenue to make
decisions?
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Elasticity of Demand
• Elasticity of Demand - Dictates how drastically buyers
will cut back or increase their demand for a good when
price rises or falls
• Inelastic – demand for a good that you will keep buying
no matter the rise in price
– Not too responsive to price change
• Elastic – buy much less of a good when the price
increases
– Very responsive to price change
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Price Range
• Demand for a good can be highly elastic at one price
and inelastic at another
– Example:
• Price of a bottle of Coke goes from $1.00 to $1.50
– Raises 50%, most people will keep buying
almost the same amount
– Inelastic
• If the price went from $2.00 to $3.00
– Still 50% rise, however the demand will go
down more than the first example
– Highly elastic
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Values of Elasticity
• If the elasticity of demand for a good at a certain price
is LESS than 1 it is INELASTIC
• Elasticity is GREATER than 1 it is ELASTIC
• Elasticity = 1, it is called Unitary Elastic
– % change in quantity demanded is exactly equal to
the % change in the price
– Example: Demand for a magazine at $2 is unitary
• Price rises to $3 (50% rise)
• The newsstand will sell exactly half as many
copies as before
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Values of Elasticity
• Pizza Example from before
– Demand schedule showed that when the price rose
from $1 to $1.50, her demand fell from 4 to 3 slices
– Change in price was 50% and the quantity decreased
by 25%
– Dividing 25% by 50% you get .5
– Less than 1 so it is inelastic
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Elasticity of Demand
Elasticity is determined using the following formula:
Elasticity =
Percentage change in quantity demanded
Percentage change in price
Percentage change =
Original number – New number
Original number
x 100
To find the percentage change in quantity demanded or price, use the following formula:
subtract the new number from the original number, and divide the result by the original
number. Ignore any negative signs, and multiply by 100 to convert this number to a
percentage:
Calculating Elasticity
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
If demand is elastic, a small change in price
leads to a relatively large change in the quantity
demanded. Follow this demand curve from left to
right.
Price
Quantity
$7
$6
$5
$4
$3
$2
$1
Elastic Demand
0
5 10 15 20 25 30
Demand
The price decreases from $4 to $3, a decrease
of 25 percent.
$4 – $3
$4
x 100 = 25
The quantity demanded increases from
10 to 20. This is an increase of 100
percent.
10 – 20
10
x 100 = 100
Elasticity of demand is equal to 4.0.
Elasticity is greater than 1, so demand is
elastic. In this example, a small decrease
in price caused a large increase in the
quantity demanded.
100%
25%
= 4.0
Elastic Demand
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Price
Quantity
$7
$6
$5
$4
$3
$2
$1
Inelastic Demand
0
5 10 15 20 25 30
Demand
If demand is inelastic, consumers are not very
responsive to changes in price. A decrease in
price will lead to only a small change in quantity
demanded, or perhaps no change at all. Follow
this demand curve from left to right as the price
decreases sharply from $6 to $2.
The price decreases from $6 to $2, a decrease
of about 67 percent.
$6 – $2
$6
x 100 = 67
The quantity demanded increases from
10 to 15, an increase of 50 percent.
10 – 15
10
x 100 = 50
Elasticity of demand is about 0.75. The
elasticity is less than 1, so demand for this
good is inelastic. The increase in quantity
demanded is small compared to the
decrease in price.
50%
67%
= 0.75
Inelastic Demand
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Factors Effecting Elasticity
• Availability of Substitutions
– No good substitutions for a product means when the
price rises for one, you will probably still buy it
• Want to see your favorite band in concert,
probably buy the tickets b/c there is no good sub
(inelastic)
– Lots of substitutes make some products elastic
• Foods at grocery store, just switch brands based
on price
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Factors continued
• Relative Importance
– If you buy a lot of one good and price goes up, you
must make tough decisions
• Reduce consumption of that good or cut back
drastically on other goods in order to keep budget
in control
• Higher the jump, more adjustments
• Spend half of budget on clothes, price goes up,
large cut backs = elastic demand
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Factors continued
• Necessities vs. Luxuries
– Necessities – food, water, gas, clothes, etc.
• Things we buy no matter the price (inelastic)
– Some people feel that Starbucks is a luxury
• Price goes down more people will buy it
• Price its at now and especially if it rises, people
will buy cheaper coffee
• Elastic
• Everyone has different idea of what necessities and
luxuries are
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Change Over Time
• Consumers shopping habits do not change quickly
when prices increase
– Takes time to find substitutes
– Inelastic in the short term, but becomes elastic over
time
• Example
– Person buys an SUV that takes a lot of gas to run
– Work is far away and so is the grocery store
– Factors can’t be changed very easily
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Change Over Time
• Gasoline Example continued
– 1970s – gas prices rose, but at first people kept
buying gas
– Over time the prices stayed high so people bought
more fuel efficient cars or car pooled
– Demand for gas went down
– Inelastic in short term, became elastic over time
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Computing a Firm’s Total Revenue
• Total Revenue – the total amount of money a firm
receives by selling goods/services
– Need to know the price of goods and the amount
sold
– Pizzeria sells 125 slices/day at $2 a slice
– Total revenue is $250/day
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Total Revenue and Elastic Demand
• When a good has an elastic demand (price of each
good raises 20% and the quantity sold drops by 50%)
– Quantity sold drops enough to reduce the total
revenue
• Pizzeria Example
– $2.50/slice will sell 100 slices/day making total
revenue $250
– Increase the price to $3/slice and you only sell 50
slices/day
• Total revenue is now only $150
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Total Revenue and Elastic Demand
• Elastic Demand comes from one or more of these
factors
– 1. Availability of substitute goods
– 2. a limited budget that does not allow price changes
– 3. the perception of the good as a luxury item
• If these are present, then the firm may find a price
increase reduces total revenue
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Total Revenue and Inelastic Demand
• Firm raises its price by 25% and the amount sold falls
by less than 25%
– Firm has greater total revenues
– Higher price makes up for the firm’s lower sales
• A decrease in price will lead to an increase in quantity
demanded (if demand is inelastic)
– Demand will not rise much (in %) as price fell
– Firms total revenue will decrease
Chapter 4 Section Main
Menu
Elasticity and Revenue
• Elastic Demand
– Price is lowered = total revenue rises
– Price raised = total revenue falls
• Inelastic Demand
– Price lowered = total revenue falls
– Price raised – total revenue rises

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Econ ch04

  • 1. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Understanding Demand • What is the law of demand? • How do the substitution effect and income effect influence decisions? • What is a demand schedule? • What is a demand curve?
  • 2. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Law of Demand • Demand – the desire to own something and ability to pay for it • Law of Demand – Price goes down = demand goes up – Price goes up = demand goes down – Price of a good strongly influences the decision to buy it – Example • How many pieces of pizza would you buy at $1? • Same piece at $2, $3, and so on
  • 3. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Law of Demand • Two separate patterns overlap b/c of Law of Demand – Substitution Effect and Income Effect • They describe 2 different ways that a consumer can change their spending patterns
  • 4. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Substitution Effect • When the price of the pizza rises, more people will start buying other products – Drops the demand for pizza – Change in spending is known as the substitution effect • Eating pizza on Mondays and Fridays now turns into pizza on only Mondays and something else on Fridays – Reacting to the price change of one good and substituting it for another
  • 5. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu The Income Effect • Price of the goods you buy go up, you start to make cut backs on the purchases you make – Cut back on buying pizza, clothes, etc. • Buying fewer products w/o increasing your purchases of other goods is the Income Effect • Economists measure consumption in the amount of a good that is bought, not the price on the good – Spending more on pizza but you are consuming less • People spend more money on pizza, the demand still goes down
  • 6. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Understanding Demand • To have demand for a good you must be willing and able to pay for it at a specified price – Might want a new car, but you can’t afford it so you do not demand it • Demand Schedule – Table that lists the quantity of a good that a person will purchase at each price in a market
  • 7. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Market Demand Schedules • Adding up the demand schedules for every buyer in the market, this is creating a Market Demand Schedule – Shows the quantities demanded at each price by all consumers in the market – Businesses use these to predict the total sale of a product at different prices • This schedule shows the Law of Demand in play
  • 8. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Demand Schedules Individual Demand Schedule Price of a slice of pizza Quantity demanded per day Market Demand Schedule Price of a slice of pizza Quantity demanded per day $.50 $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 5 4 3 2 1 0 $.50 $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 300 250 200 150 100 50 The Demand Schedules
  • 9. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Market Demand Curve 3.00 2.50 2.00 1.50 1.00 .50 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Slices of pizza per day Priceperslice(indollars) Demand The Demand Curve • A demand curve is a graphical representation of a demand schedule. • Reading a demand curve –Only price and quantity are taken into account –Slopes downward and right –Prices rise, quantity drops –Prices decrease, quantity raises
  • 10. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Limits of a Demand Curve • Only accurate for one very specific set of market conditions • Does not take any other factors into account – Pizza place near a factory that has layoffs will lose business b/c those workers will stop coming in
  • 11. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Shifts of the Demand Curve • What is the difference between a change in quantity demanded and a shift in the demand curve? • What factors can cause shifts in the demand curve? • How does the change in the price of one good affect the demand for a related good?
  • 12. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Changes in Demand • Demand curves are accurate as long as there are no other changes other than price that affects decisions • Ceteris Paribus – “all other things held constant” – This was used on the Demand Curve w/ pizza – Does not take into account any other factors (only price and quantity) • When price changes we move along the curve – Change in quantity demanded – Up or down the curve
  • 13. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Changes in Demand • Get rid of the ceteris paribus rule then we no longer move along the curve – The entire curve shifts left or right • A shift in the demand curve means that at every price, consumers buy a diff. amount than before – Called Change in Demand
  • 14. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Causes for Shifts - Income • Normal Goods – goods that consumers demand more of when their income increases – This would move the curve to the right to show more demand at each price • Increase in Demand • Decrease in Demand – if the curve shifts to the left – Inferior Goods – an increase in income causes us to buy less of these • Buy name brand stuff once your income rises instead of store brand
  • 15. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Causes - Consumer Expectations • Expectations of a higher price will affect your immediate demand of the product – Example • Go into Best Buy to buy a laptop and the sales person tells you the price will go up in a week • Your demand for the product raises and you would probably purchase it then b/c you expect a higher price • Your immediate demand will drop if the laptop would be on sale next week
  • 16. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Causes - Population • Rise in population obviously raises the demand for food, shelter, etc. • After WWII – Record number of men and women married and had children (“baby boom”) from mid 1940s – 1964 – Initial demand grew w/ baby products, then it thousands of schools were needed and built (universities also expanded later) – Now that they are retiring, the demands among senior citizens will rise
  • 17. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Causes – Consumer Tastes and Advertising • Trends change over periods of time (clothes, music, etc.) • Advertising and publicity play an important role – Companies spend large amounts of money on advertising to try and raise the demand for their products
  • 18. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Prices of Related Goods • Demand curve for one good can be affected by a change in the demand for another good – Complements • Two goods that are bought and used together • Buy new skis, need ski boots • If the price of skis go up, the demand for both products go down – Substitutes • Goods used in place of another • Price of skis goes up, some people will switch to snowboarding
  • 19. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Elasticity of Demand • What is elasticity of demand? • How can a demand schedule and demand curve be used to determine elasticity of demand? • What factors affect elasticity? • How do firms use elasticity and revenue to make decisions?
  • 20. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Elasticity of Demand • Elasticity of Demand - Dictates how drastically buyers will cut back or increase their demand for a good when price rises or falls • Inelastic – demand for a good that you will keep buying no matter the rise in price – Not too responsive to price change • Elastic – buy much less of a good when the price increases – Very responsive to price change
  • 21. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Price Range • Demand for a good can be highly elastic at one price and inelastic at another – Example: • Price of a bottle of Coke goes from $1.00 to $1.50 – Raises 50%, most people will keep buying almost the same amount – Inelastic • If the price went from $2.00 to $3.00 – Still 50% rise, however the demand will go down more than the first example – Highly elastic
  • 22. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Values of Elasticity • If the elasticity of demand for a good at a certain price is LESS than 1 it is INELASTIC • Elasticity is GREATER than 1 it is ELASTIC • Elasticity = 1, it is called Unitary Elastic – % change in quantity demanded is exactly equal to the % change in the price – Example: Demand for a magazine at $2 is unitary • Price rises to $3 (50% rise) • The newsstand will sell exactly half as many copies as before
  • 23. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Values of Elasticity • Pizza Example from before – Demand schedule showed that when the price rose from $1 to $1.50, her demand fell from 4 to 3 slices – Change in price was 50% and the quantity decreased by 25% – Dividing 25% by 50% you get .5 – Less than 1 so it is inelastic
  • 24. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Elasticity of Demand Elasticity is determined using the following formula: Elasticity = Percentage change in quantity demanded Percentage change in price Percentage change = Original number – New number Original number x 100 To find the percentage change in quantity demanded or price, use the following formula: subtract the new number from the original number, and divide the result by the original number. Ignore any negative signs, and multiply by 100 to convert this number to a percentage: Calculating Elasticity
  • 25. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu If demand is elastic, a small change in price leads to a relatively large change in the quantity demanded. Follow this demand curve from left to right. Price Quantity $7 $6 $5 $4 $3 $2 $1 Elastic Demand 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Demand The price decreases from $4 to $3, a decrease of 25 percent. $4 – $3 $4 x 100 = 25 The quantity demanded increases from 10 to 20. This is an increase of 100 percent. 10 – 20 10 x 100 = 100 Elasticity of demand is equal to 4.0. Elasticity is greater than 1, so demand is elastic. In this example, a small decrease in price caused a large increase in the quantity demanded. 100% 25% = 4.0 Elastic Demand
  • 26. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Price Quantity $7 $6 $5 $4 $3 $2 $1 Inelastic Demand 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Demand If demand is inelastic, consumers are not very responsive to changes in price. A decrease in price will lead to only a small change in quantity demanded, or perhaps no change at all. Follow this demand curve from left to right as the price decreases sharply from $6 to $2. The price decreases from $6 to $2, a decrease of about 67 percent. $6 – $2 $6 x 100 = 67 The quantity demanded increases from 10 to 15, an increase of 50 percent. 10 – 15 10 x 100 = 50 Elasticity of demand is about 0.75. The elasticity is less than 1, so demand for this good is inelastic. The increase in quantity demanded is small compared to the decrease in price. 50% 67% = 0.75 Inelastic Demand
  • 27. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Factors Effecting Elasticity • Availability of Substitutions – No good substitutions for a product means when the price rises for one, you will probably still buy it • Want to see your favorite band in concert, probably buy the tickets b/c there is no good sub (inelastic) – Lots of substitutes make some products elastic • Foods at grocery store, just switch brands based on price
  • 28. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Factors continued • Relative Importance – If you buy a lot of one good and price goes up, you must make tough decisions • Reduce consumption of that good or cut back drastically on other goods in order to keep budget in control • Higher the jump, more adjustments • Spend half of budget on clothes, price goes up, large cut backs = elastic demand
  • 29. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Factors continued • Necessities vs. Luxuries – Necessities – food, water, gas, clothes, etc. • Things we buy no matter the price (inelastic) – Some people feel that Starbucks is a luxury • Price goes down more people will buy it • Price its at now and especially if it rises, people will buy cheaper coffee • Elastic • Everyone has different idea of what necessities and luxuries are
  • 30. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Change Over Time • Consumers shopping habits do not change quickly when prices increase – Takes time to find substitutes – Inelastic in the short term, but becomes elastic over time • Example – Person buys an SUV that takes a lot of gas to run – Work is far away and so is the grocery store – Factors can’t be changed very easily
  • 31. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Change Over Time • Gasoline Example continued – 1970s – gas prices rose, but at first people kept buying gas – Over time the prices stayed high so people bought more fuel efficient cars or car pooled – Demand for gas went down – Inelastic in short term, became elastic over time
  • 32. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Computing a Firm’s Total Revenue • Total Revenue – the total amount of money a firm receives by selling goods/services – Need to know the price of goods and the amount sold – Pizzeria sells 125 slices/day at $2 a slice – Total revenue is $250/day
  • 33. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Total Revenue and Elastic Demand • When a good has an elastic demand (price of each good raises 20% and the quantity sold drops by 50%) – Quantity sold drops enough to reduce the total revenue • Pizzeria Example – $2.50/slice will sell 100 slices/day making total revenue $250 – Increase the price to $3/slice and you only sell 50 slices/day • Total revenue is now only $150
  • 34. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Total Revenue and Elastic Demand • Elastic Demand comes from one or more of these factors – 1. Availability of substitute goods – 2. a limited budget that does not allow price changes – 3. the perception of the good as a luxury item • If these are present, then the firm may find a price increase reduces total revenue
  • 35. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Total Revenue and Inelastic Demand • Firm raises its price by 25% and the amount sold falls by less than 25% – Firm has greater total revenues – Higher price makes up for the firm’s lower sales • A decrease in price will lead to an increase in quantity demanded (if demand is inelastic) – Demand will not rise much (in %) as price fell – Firms total revenue will decrease
  • 36. Chapter 4 Section Main Menu Elasticity and Revenue • Elastic Demand – Price is lowered = total revenue rises – Price raised = total revenue falls • Inelastic Demand – Price lowered = total revenue falls – Price raised – total revenue rises