Economics HL
Economics HL
4
Chapters
117
Notes
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
IB Resources
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 2 - Microeconomics

Understanding Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

Word Count Emoji
674 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

What is price elasticity of demand (PED)

PED measures how much the quantity demanded of a good or service changes in response to a change in its price. Think of it as the rubber band of economics - just how stretchy or elastic is our demand for a certain product if its price changes? Now, to get a bit technical, we use the following formula to calculate it

 

PED = % change in Quantity Demanded / % change in Price

 

Just like how the response of a rubber band is different based on how hard you pull, PED can be different based on the magnitude and direction of the price change.

Positive or negative

PED has a funny trait - it's usually negative. Why? Because of the Law of Demand, which says when the price of a product increases, the demand for that product decreases, and vice versa. But economists, like a lot of people, prefer positive numbers. So, we ignore the negative sign and look at the magnitude of PED.

 

(Remember, though, when you're doing the math, don't forget the minus sign!)

Degrees of PED - The elasticity spectrum

PED values can tell us a lot about how a product's demand responds to price changes. Let's imagine it as a spectrum.

 

Price Elastic (PED > 1): Imagine an extremely stretchy rubber band. This is when a small price change leads to a big change in demand. For instance, if the price of avocados increases by 10%, and the demand drops by 20%, we have an elastic demand. Why? People can just switch to other fruits.

 

Price Inelastic (0 < PED < 1): Think of a rather stiff rubber band. Here, even a big price change leads to a small change in demand. For example, if the price of insulin increases by 10%, and demand only drops by 2%, we have an inelastic demand. Why? People need insulin for survival, there's no good alternative.

 

Unit Elastic (PED = 1): This is the Goldilocks zone - not too stretchy, not too stiff. Here, a change in price results in an equal change in demand. For example, if a 10% rise in the price of coffee leads to a 10% decrease in demand, the PED is unit elastic.

 

Perfectly Elastic (PED = ∞): This is like the finest spider silk - any price increase leads to a drop in demand to zero.

 

Perfectly Inelastic (PED = 0): The rubber band has now become a steel rod - no matter how the price changes, demand stays the same.

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IB Resources
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 2 - Microeconomics

Understanding Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

Word Count Emoji
674 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

What is price elasticity of demand (PED)

PED measures how much the quantity demanded of a good or service changes in response to a change in its price. Think of it as the rubber band of economics - just how stretchy or elastic is our demand for a certain product if its price changes? Now, to get a bit technical, we use the following formula to calculate it

 

PED = % change in Quantity Demanded / % change in Price

 

Just like how the response of a rubber band is different based on how hard you pull, PED can be different based on the magnitude and direction of the price change.

Positive or negative

PED has a funny trait - it's usually negative. Why? Because of the Law of Demand, which says when the price of a product increases, the demand for that product decreases, and vice versa. But economists, like a lot of people, prefer positive numbers. So, we ignore the negative sign and look at the magnitude of PED.

 

(Remember, though, when you're doing the math, don't forget the minus sign!)

Degrees of PED - The elasticity spectrum

PED values can tell us a lot about how a product's demand responds to price changes. Let's imagine it as a spectrum.

 

Price Elastic (PED > 1): Imagine an extremely stretchy rubber band. This is when a small price change leads to a big change in demand. For instance, if the price of avocados increases by 10%, and the demand drops by 20%, we have an elastic demand. Why? People can just switch to other fruits.

 

Price Inelastic (0 < PED < 1): Think of a rather stiff rubber band. Here, even a big price change leads to a small change in demand. For example, if the price of insulin increases by 10%, and demand only drops by 2%, we have an inelastic demand. Why? People need insulin for survival, there's no good alternative.

 

Unit Elastic (PED = 1): This is the Goldilocks zone - not too stretchy, not too stiff. Here, a change in price results in an equal change in demand. For example, if a 10% rise in the price of coffee leads to a 10% decrease in demand, the PED is unit elastic.

 

Perfectly Elastic (PED = ∞): This is like the finest spider silk - any price increase leads to a drop in demand to zero.

 

Perfectly Inelastic (PED = 0): The rubber band has now become a steel rod - no matter how the price changes, demand stays the same.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Economics HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟