Market Supply and Elasticity
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Transcript Market Supply and Elasticity
AAEC 3315
Agricultural Price Theory
Chapter 9
Market Supply and Elasticity
Objectives
To learn:
How Market Supply is determined.
Elasticity of Supply
Price Elasticity of Supply
Cross-Price Elasticity of Supply
Market Supply
Earlier, we discussed
that the individual
firm’s supply curve was
the firm’s MC curve
above AVC
The total offered by all
firms in the market can
then be derived by
aggregating each firm’s
supply curve.
Market Supply
As with demand, the supply
curve for a good in the
market is the horizontal sum
of all individual firm’s
supply curves.
Market Supply - is the
various amounts of a good
that producers are willing &
able to produce and supply
at different price levels
during a specified period of
time.
P
S1
S2
Market Supply
P2
P1
Q11 Q21 Q12 Q22
Q1M Q2M
Q
Elasticity of Supply (Es)
Managers are interested in two types of supply
elasticity measures:
Own-price elasticity of supply - measures the responsiveness
of quantity supplied of a good to a change in the price of that
good.
Cross-price elasticity of supply - measures the responsiveness
of quantity supplied of a good to a change in the price of a
related good.
Elasticity of Supply (Es)
Price Elasticity of Supply is defined as the
percentage change in the quantity supplied
relative to the percentage change in price.
It is a measure of responsiveness of quantity
supplied to changes in price.
Calculating Own Price Elasticity of Supply from a
Supply Function:
Using calculus: Esy
Qsy
Py
Py Qsy
Elasticity of Supply (ES)
Given a supply function:
Qsy = -900 + 150 P, where, Qsy = Quantity supplied of
product Y and Py = Price of product Y ($30 per unit).
Qsy = -900 + 150*(30) = 3600 units
Taking partial derivative of the supply function with
respect to price and substituting values for P and Qs:
Qsy
Py
30
Esy
(150)
1.25
Py Qsy
3600
Elasticity of Supply (Es)
Interpretation
Es = 3: If the price of the product changes by 1%
then the quantity supplied of the product changes by
3%
Es = 1: If the price of the product changes by 1%
then the quantity supplied of the product changes by
1%
Es = 0.37: If the price of the product changes by 1%
then the quantity supplied of the product changes by
0.37%
Elasticity of Supply (Es)
Classifications:
Inelastic supply (Es < 1): a change in price brings
about a smaller change in quantity (we are less
responsive to price)
Unitary Elastic supply (Es = 1): a change in price
brings about an equivalent change in quantity.
Elastic supply (Es >1): a change in price brings
about a relatively larger change in quantity.
Cross-price Elasticity of Supply
Measures the effect of a change in the price of good X
on the quantity supplied of Y.
Using Calculus from a Supply function:
Esyx
Qsy
Px
Px Qsy
Read this as the cross-price of elasticity of supply for
product Y with respect to price of product X.
Interpretation & Classification of
Cross-price elasticity of Supply
Interpretation:
ESYX=1.5 implies that as price of X changes by 1%, the
quantity supplied of Y changes by 1.5%.
Classification:
Complements in production (ESYX>0): implies that as the
price of X increases, the quantity of Y supplied by the firm
will increase.
Substitutes in production (ESYX <0): implies that as the
price of X increases, the quantity of Y supplied by the firm
will decrease.