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Econ: What is Income Elasticity? 14 Views
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Transcript
- 00:00
and finance Allah shmoop What is income Elasticity All right
- 00:07
people when you get a pay raise you feel like
- 00:10
you're on top of the world King of a fatter
- 00:13
wallet With all that dough you're starting to feel more
- 00:15
flexible Income elasticity also known as income Elasticity of demand
Full Transcript
- 00:21
is a way to measure how changes an income change
- 00:23
Consumer demand like incoming elasticity is calculated by taking the
- 00:28
percent change in demand Numinous old over old and dividing
- 00:32
it by the percent change in income Yeah that's what
- 00:35
it looks like So back to that pay raise of
- 00:37
yours as income rises while we can expect to see
- 00:40
the demand for normal goods to rise Actually that's kind
- 00:43
of the definition of normal goods like normal goods aren't
- 00:46
things you normally buy right there Just goods you want
- 00:50
more of when you have more money in your pocket
- 00:53
A normal good for you might be gourmet coffee I
- 00:56
gotta love that For your sister a normal good might
- 00:59
be more quality fashionable clothes with intentional holes ripped in
- 01:04
them for your weird uncle Well more income might mean
- 01:07
artistic statues in his backyard Yeah to each his own
- 01:11
But as long as you start demanding more of a
- 01:13
good in response to more money to pay for it
- 01:15
you then have a positive income elasticity for that good
- 01:19
which means it's a normal good For instance let's say
- 01:22
you got a ten percent raise which caused you to
- 01:24
buy five percent more coffee Well that would mean five
- 01:27
percent increase in demand divided by ten percent increase in
- 01:29
income or a positive income Elasticity of demand of a
- 01:33
positive point five Yeah we can smell the freshly ground
- 01:36
Kona right now Well let's say that a month later
- 01:39
your boss said psych no raise for you Bummer Well
- 01:43
we'd simply switch the signs It's negative five percent then
- 01:46
divided by that negative ten percent Ten It's still equals
- 01:49
a positive zero point five incoming elasticity on a graph
- 01:53
where quantity demand it is on the X axis right
- 01:56
there and income is on the Y axis well normal
- 01:59
goods r sloping upward The more money we have the
- 02:02
more of that normal good will want to buy And
- 02:04
the opposite of normal goods are in theory your goods
- 02:08
which our goods that have a negative income elasticity like
- 02:11
inferior goods or goods You can live without my goods
- 02:14
You demand less as income rises It may or may
- 02:17
not be true for you but for many people fast
- 02:20
food is an inferior good right Not because it's made
- 02:23
out of chicken parts in the intestine and pig hooves
- 02:26
but because it has negative incoming elasticity Like remember when
- 02:30
your boss took back that pay raise will it meant
- 02:33
less gourmet Kona coffee a normal good and mohr fastfood
- 02:37
coffee and inferior good Well the initial ten percent pay
- 02:40
raise had led to an eight percent decrease in your
- 02:43
consumption of watery Mickey D's coffee So then you calculate
- 02:48
the net number to you as a negative eight percent
- 02:51
They're divided by a positive ten percent so that gives
- 02:54
you a negative zero point eight income elasticity When your
- 02:58
boss took back to pay raise grumble grumble your income
- 03:01
went down and consumption of bitter burn fast food coffee
- 03:04
went back up positive Eight percent divided by negative ten
- 03:08
percent is negative point eight Okay well on the graph
- 03:11
inferior goods or downward sloping The more money we have
- 03:14
the less you know french fries that we really want
- 03:16
to buy What about goods you buy the same amount
- 03:19
of no matter what your income like things like water
- 03:22
and toilet paper Well on the graph If the queue
- 03:24
stays the same regardless of a change in income than
- 03:27
the curve for that good would be a straight line
- 03:30
upward Twenty percent raise ten percent pay cut Doesn't matter
- 03:34
Still the same amount of toilet paper demanded That makes
- 03:36
our percent change in demand on top zero since well
- 03:40
there was no change if you went from buying one
- 03:42
bundle of TP before a raise and one bundle of
- 03:45
TP after a raise Yeah it's a change of zero
- 03:48
and zero divided by anything in California and any other
- 03:50
state in the nation is zero Which makes sense since
- 03:53
the line is vertical But hey what about luxury goods
- 03:56
Well as it turns out luxury goods or just a
- 03:58
type of normal good except more expense usually a luxury
- 04:02
good is a normal good because it has a positive
- 04:04
income elasticity What makes it different Well it has to
- 04:07
have an incoming elasticity greater than one For example let's
- 04:11
say a ten percent increase in your weird uncles income
- 04:13
resulted in a twenty percent increase in demand for his
- 04:16
weird yard art In our formula that would mean positive
- 04:20
Twenty percent is on top and positive Ten percent is
- 04:22
on the bottom for an income elasticity of two Well
- 04:25
think about what an incoming elasticity of at least one
- 04:29
means Your increase in demand for good must be the
- 04:32
same as the increase in your income or greater What
- 04:35
makes luxury goods luxury is being able to afford to
- 04:38
buy more of something than the proportion of your increase
- 04:42
in income Well there are a lot of things you'd
- 04:44
rather by then those odd things your uncle is decorating
- 04:47
his yard with but well different strokes for different folks
- 04:50
As they say luxury is in the eye of the 00:04:52.965 --> [endTime] consumer here
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