Calculation of PED
Example: A firm raises the price of its products from £10 to £15. Its sales fall from 100 to 40 units per day. Calculate the PED of its products
Step 1: Calculate the % change in QD
Step 2: Calculate the % change in P
Step 3: Insert the above values in the PED formula
PED = -60/50
PED = -1.2
The PED value will always be negative so economists ignore the sign and present the answer as 1.2
The Size of PED Varies From 0 To Infinity (∞) & Is Classified As Follows
The Determinants of PED
An illustration of price elastic demand where a small decrease in price from P1→P2 causes a large increase in quantity demanded from Q1→ Q2
Diagram Analysis
An illustration of price inelastic demand where a large increase in price from P1→P2 causes a small decrease in quantity demanded from Q1→ Q2
Diagram Analysis
Example: A firm raises the price of its products from £10 to £15. Its sales have fallen from 100 to 40 units per day. Explain if they made the correct decision
Step 1: Calculate the initial sales revenue
Sales Revenue = Price of product X Quantity sold
= £ 10 x 100
= £ 1,000Step 2: Calculate the sales revenue after the price change
Sales Revenue = Price of product X Quantity sold
= £ 15 x 40
= £ 600Step 3: Explain the decision
By raising the price, the total revenue has fallen by £400. This indicates that the product is price elastic in demand and the firm should have lowered their price in order to maximise revenue
The Implications of PED for Stakeholders
23 videos|11 docs
|
|
Explore Courses for Grade 12 exam
|