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Title: Microeconomics: Supply and Demand including Elasticity and Taxation
Description: Theres are college level notes taken from an intro level microeconomics class. These notes focus on supply and demand with market examples and graphs, elasticities (equations and graphs included), and taxes (sales tax, specific tax, etc...) These notes are geared towards students who are in AP (Advanced Placement) high school economics or intro level college economics courses.
Description: Theres are college level notes taken from an intro level microeconomics class. These notes focus on supply and demand with market examples and graphs, elasticities (equations and graphs included), and taxes (sales tax, specific tax, etc...) These notes are geared towards students who are in AP (Advanced Placement) high school economics or intro level college economics courses.
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Supply and Demand (w/partial derivatives)
○ Graphing a market (graphing supply and demand)
○ Graphs are statistical representations of dynamic markets under the following
assumptions
■ Product: uniform definition of a commodity, service, etc
...
derived demand
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Law of Demand
○ Stated: the price of a good varies inversely with its quantity, all else held constant
■ Partial differentiation
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Q = D(p,p sub s, p sub c, Y)
○ p is the price of the good
○ p sub s is the price of substitutes
○ P sub c is the price of compliments
○ Y is income
■ p sub s might be beef or chicken
■ p sub c might be BBQ sauce
Ex: Q sub d = 171 - 20p + 20p sub b + 3p sub f + 2Y
○ p is pork, b is beef, f is fish, Y is income
○ Beef = 4$/kg, fish = 3
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33)) + ((2)(125))
Q sub d = 286 - 20p
○ Endogenous variable - a variable that’s within the model p in the above equation
○ Exogenous variable - the other variables outside the model
- in above equation: p sub b, p sub f, Y
Del Q sub d/del p = -20 (Endogeneous effect)
Del Q sub d/del Y = 2 (Exogenous effect)
Law of Supply
○ Stated: the price of a good varies directly with its quantity, all else held constant
■ Partial Equilibrium Effect
Partial Equilibrium Effect
● Q = S(p,p sub f)
○ p is price
○ p sub f is production factors
● Ex: Q sub s = 178 + 40p - 60p sub h
○ p is pork
○ p sub h is hogs
○ Assume p sub h = 1
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30
○ Q sub e = 220
What if P sub h is now = $1
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30
■ Q* = 220
○ E = -20(3
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3
Classifying elasticities
○ Shapes of demand (supply) curves indicate their elasticity
■ Elastic (E < -1), unitary elastic (E = -1), or inelastic (0 > E > -1)
● Perfectly inelastic (E = 0)
● Perfectly elastic (E = -infinity)
Special Cases
○ Linear demand curve
■ The usual depiction, but really only a special case
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“Instantaneous” comparative statics show equilibrium responses
for small changes in exogenous variables
Also more general: useful when supply & demand curves are
nonlinear
○ Q sub d = D(p)
○ Q sub s = S(p, a)
■ a is p sub h in our example
■ a represents a supply variable (shock)
○ D(p*(a)) = S(p*(a), a)
■ dp/da = ??? ← what question is asking/what we
need to find out/ what we are looking for
■ (dD/dp*)(dp*/da) = (del S/del p*)(dp*/da)+(del s/ del
a)
■ dp*/da = (del s/ del a)/ ((dD/dp*) - (del S/ del p*))
● dp*/dp sub h = -60/ ((-20) - (40)) = 1
Constant elasticity of demand curve
■ Regardless of supply curve, E sub Q,d is constant
● Q = ap^-b, E = (delQ/delp)(p/Q) = (-bap^(-b-1))(p/Q) =
-b((ap^-b)/p)(p/Q) = -b(Q/p)(p/Q) = -b
○ Revenue = (p)(Q) = p time Q(p)
■ delR/delp = p (dQ/dp) + Q(dp/dp) = p(dQ/dp) + Q
● Convert to elasticity
○ = Q(p/Q)(dQ/dp) + Q = QE + Q = Q(E +1)
Related Elasticities, etc
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5psubjuice + 2psubmilk + 5Y
■ Q sub s = 100 - 20p - 30psubHFCS(high fructose corn syrup)
■ Q is millions of oz of SSB
■ p is price (pennies) per oz
● The equilibrium: p* = 5
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33
● n(aeda) = (dQ/dp)(p/Qsubs) = (20)(5
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33) = 0
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17/218
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2366
● dp/dtao = 0
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4733-(-0
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66667 = ⅔
Tax incidence on consumers
■ On producers = 1-⅔ = ⅓
Specific tax effect described
■ Specific tax effect features
● Depends on both the price elasticity of demand and the price
elasticity of supply
● Can separately calculate its effects on consumers and producers
■ Tax effects are shared:
● Between consumers and producers
● If levied on producers, the tax incidence on consumers is equal to
dp/dtao, and tax incidence on producers is 1-(dp/dtao)
Ad valorem tax
■ Represented by a rotation, rather than a shift, of the demand curve, but
comparative static approach is similar
● See graph in lecture 2 (second to last slide)
Binding price ceiling creates excess demand
Binding price floor creates excess supply
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Title: Microeconomics: Supply and Demand including Elasticity and Taxation
Description: Theres are college level notes taken from an intro level microeconomics class. These notes focus on supply and demand with market examples and graphs, elasticities (equations and graphs included), and taxes (sales tax, specific tax, etc...) These notes are geared towards students who are in AP (Advanced Placement) high school economics or intro level college economics courses.
Description: Theres are college level notes taken from an intro level microeconomics class. These notes focus on supply and demand with market examples and graphs, elasticities (equations and graphs included), and taxes (sales tax, specific tax, etc...) These notes are geared towards students who are in AP (Advanced Placement) high school economics or intro level college economics courses.