Transcript Lecture 8
PPA 723: Managerial
Economics
Lecture 8:
Deriving Demand Curves
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Outline
Deriving Demand Curves
Income Elasticities of Demand
Income and Substitution Effects
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Deriving Demand Curves
Trace out the demand curve for Good B
from a household-maximization diagram by
holding income and the price of Good A
constant
and varying the price of Good B
Then plot the price-quantity pairs in a new
graph.
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Pulling Out Price and Quantity Combinations
B, Burritos
per semester
Price of Pizza Doubles
25
L 1 (p Z = $1)
Price-Consumption
Curve
L 2 (pZ = $2)
0
15
25 27
50
Z, Pizzas per semester
Managerial Economics
Deriving Demand Curves
(a) Indifference Curves and Budget Constraints
Wine, Gallons
per year
12.0
Price-consumption curve
Figure 5.1 Deriving
an Individual’s
Demand Curve
e3
5.2
e2
4.3
2.8
I3
e1
I2
I1
L 1 (pb = $12)
0
26.7
44.5
L2 (pb = $6)
58.9
p b, $ per unit
12.0
Beer, Gallons per year
(b) Demand Curve
E1
E2
6.0
E3
4.0
0
L 3 ( pb = $4)
D1, Demand for beer
26.7
44.5
58.9
Beer, Gallons per year
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
How Income Changes Shift Demand Curves
In household-maximization diagram,
hold prices fixed and vary income.
The increase in income causes
movement along the incomeconsumption curve,
shift of the demand curve,
movement along the Engel curve.
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Income-Consumption Curve
An increase in income shifts the budget
line outward.
An income-consumption curve plots
combinations of Good A and Good B at
different income levels.
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Shifts in the Demand Curve
Recall that a demand curve plots pricequantity combinations for one good.
A change in income changes the
quantity for a good, holding price
constant.
So at each price, plot how quantity
consumed increases with income.
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Engle Curves
An Engle curve plots quantity
consumed for a good (X-axis) against
income (Y-axis), holding prices
constant.
It shows how consumption of a good
changes as income changes.
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Pulling Out Income and Quantity Combinations
Income Doubles
B, Burritos
per semester
50
L 3 (Y = $100)
Income-Consumption
Curve
25
L 1 (Y = $50)
0
25
50 55
100
Z, Pizzas per semester
Indifference Curves and Budget Constraints
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8:(a)
Deriving
Demand Curves
Wine, Gallons
per year
L3
L2
Income-consumption
curve
L1
e3
Figure 5.2 Effect of a Budget
Increase on an Individual’s
Demand Curve
7.1
4.8
2.8
e2
e1
I1
0
26.7 38.2 49.1
I3
Beer, Gallons per year
(b) Demand Curves
Price of beer,
$ per unit
12
I2
E1
E2
E3
D3
D2
D1
0
26.7 38.2 49.1
Beer, Gallons per year
(c) Engel Curve
Y, Budget
Engel curve for beer
Y3 = $837
E3*
Y2 = $628
Y1 = $419
0
E2*
E 1*
26.7 38.2 49.1
Beer, Gallons per year
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Income Elasticities
Income elasticity:
percentage change in quantity demanded
percentage change in income
Q / Q
Y / Y
Normal good: > 0
Inferior good: 0
Note: is Greek xi (pronounced ks-eye).
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Income-Consumption Curves
and Income Elasticities
The shape of the income-consumption
curve for 2 goods reveals the sign of the
income elasticities.
Some goods must be normal; not all
goods can be inferior.
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Figure 5.3 Income-Consumption Curves and Income Elasticities
Housing, Square feet
per year
Food inferior,
housing normal
L2
ICC 1
a
Food normal,
housing normal
ICC 2
b
L1
e
c
ICC 3
Food normal,
housing inferior
I
Food, Pounds per year
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Applications to Policy
Policy makers may care about the
consumption of particular goods, such
as health care or housing.
If we know income elasticities, we can
predict the extent to which people buy
more of these goods when
they receive a cash grant
incomes in general rise.
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
The Effects of a Price Change
As price of Good A goes up (all else the
same), there are two impacts in the
quantity of Good A that is consumed:
the substitution effect
the income effect
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Substitution Effect
Consumers substitute other, now
relatively cheaper, goods for the good
subject to a price increase.
The direction of the substitution effect is
unambiguous: It is always negative!
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Income Effect
An increase in the price of Good A reduces
a consumers' buying power, thereby
reducing his or her real income.
A change in real income is equivalent to a
change in money income holding prices
constant, so
The direction of the income effect depends
on the income elasticity of Good A
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Income and Substitution Effects
price rise
income effect
normal good
substitution
effect
negative
inferior good
negative
positive
negative
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Figure 5.5 Substitution and Income Effects with Normal Goods
Wine, Gallons
per year
12.0
L2
L1
e2
5.5
L*
I2
e1
e*
I1
0
26.7 30.6
Substitution
effect
58.9
Income effect
Total effect
Beer, Gallons per year
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Income and Substitution Effects with
an Inferior Good
The substitution effect and the price change
still have opposite signs.
The income effect and the price change have
the same signs.
A Giffen good: good for which a decrease in its
price causes the quantity demanded to fall
(because the positive income effect is so large!)
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Basketball,
Tickets per year
Figure 5.6 Giffen Good
L2
L1
e2
I2
L*
e1
e*
I1
Substitution effect Movies, Tickets per year
Total effect
Income effect
Managerial Economics, Lecture 8: Deriving Demand Curves
Income and Substitution Effects: Lessons
Income and substitution effects help identify
consumer’s responses to changes in prices.
As we will see next time, they are very useful in
predicting consumer’s responses to government
programs that alter prices (as many do!).