Over the last year your boss has noticed that it would be useful for your firm to understand how consumers behave when variables in the market change and how these changes affect the total revenue for your product. You have been asked to do an analysis for your product, Good A, by addressing the following questions and reporting the results to your boss in a formal paper.
Questions:
- Define the price elasticity of demand? What information
does it provide? How is it calculated?
- Define the income elasticity of demand? What
information does it provide? How is it calculated?
- Define the cross-price elasticity of demand? What
information does it provide? How is it calculated?
- What is total revenue? How is it calculated?
- Define elastic, inelastic, and unitary elasticity
means. How are these related to total revenue? Explain your answers.
- With respect to the price elasticity of demand,
construct a graph using the data in Figure1. Illustrate the ranges on the
demand curve that indicate elastic, inelastic, and unitary elasticity.
Explain your answers. Enter non-numerical responses in the same worksheet
using textboxes.
- Calculate the total revenue for each level of demand
and post into the table, Figure 1. (Copy and paste this table into the
Microsoft Word document that will form part of your submission.)
- Using the midpoints formula presented in the textbook,
calculate the price elasticity coefficient for each price level, starting
with the coefficient for the $4 to $6 level. For each coefficient, indicate
each type of elasticity: elastic demand, inelastic demand, or unitary
demand. Post your answers into the table, Figure 1.
- Assume that the income of consumers changes by 10%, and
as a result the quantity demanded for Good A changes by 8%. What is the
income elasticity of demand for Good A? What does this mean for your
company?
- Assume that the price of competing Good B decreases by
5% and as a result, the quantity demand for Good A decreases by 8%. What
is the cross-price elasticity for your product? What type of goods are
Good A and Good B?
Figure 1: The Demand
Schedule for Barbeque Dinners
Price |
Quantity Demanded
|
Total Revenue
|
Elasticity Coefficient
|
Elastic or Inelastic
|
|
$4
|
100
|
__________
|
XXXX
|
XXXX
|
|
6
|
80
|
__________
|
__________
|
__________
|
|
8
|
60
|
__________
|
__________
|
__________
|
|
10
|
40
|
__________
|
__________
|
__________
|
|
12
|
20
|
__________
|
__________
|
__________
|
|
14
|
1
|
__________
|
__________
|
__________
|
Required:
Prepare an analysis by
answering the above-noted questions. Your analysis will consist of two
documents as follows:
- Microsoft Word document: Questions 1-5, 7-10.
- Microsoft Excel worksheet: Question 6
1 comments:
it is common sense question that when the price of an item will decrease the demand of item will automatic increase and when the price of an will increase the demand will automatically increase. i study this case in economics, many website copywriters share this information with graph on their sites.
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