4.8: elasticity of supply

Cards (23)

  • The elasticity of supply measures how responsive the quantity supplied of a good is to changes in its price.
  • supply elasticity = % ∆ Quantity supplied / % ∆ price
  • Understanding Supply Elasticity:
    • Positive Elasticity:
    • The supply curve is upward sloping, meaning as prices increase, the quantity supplied also increases. Therefore, the elasticity of supply is always positive.
  • Elastic Supply: If supply is elastic, a small price increase leads to a large percentage increase in the quantity supplied. Elastic supply curves are relatively flat.
  • Inelastic Supply: If supply is inelastic, a price increase leads to only a small increase in quantity supplied. Inelastic supply curves are relatively steep.
  • Vertical supply curve: This indicates zero elasticity of supply. No matter how much the price increases, the quantity supplied does not change.
  • Horizontal supply curve: This represents infinite supply elasticity. Any small price increase leads to an unlimited increase in quantity supplied.
    • The elasticity of supply for housing varies greatly between the short run and long run.
    • In the short run, supply is almost inelastic (vertical) because it takes time to build houses.
    • In the long run, housing supply becomes more elastic, meaning that housing markets can respond to price changes more flexibly.
  • Own-Price Elasticity of Demand: Measures how quantity demanded changes when the price of the same good changes.
  • Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand: Measures how the demand for one good changes when the price of a related good changes.
  • Income Elasticity of Demand: Measures how demand changes when consumer income changes.
  • Elasticity of Supply: Measures how quantity supplied changes in response to price changes.
  • Supply elasticity reflects how quickly producers can adjust their output in response to price changes.
    • Highly elastic supply curves are flat, meaning producers can easily increase output when prices rise.
    • Inelastic supply curves are steep, meaning producers cannot easily increase output even if prices go up.
  • price elasticity of supply measures the responsiveness of quantity supplied given a change in price
  • PES = %∆Qs/%∆P
  • PES is always positive due to law of supply
  • PES > 1 supply is price elastic
  • PES < 1 supply is price inelastic
  • 0 supply is perfectly price inelastic
  • if PES = infinity, perfectly price elastic
  • If PES = 1 supply is unit price elastic
  • Determinants of the PES:
    • production lag, the longer the production lag the more inelastic PES
    • stocks : larger the stocks the more elastic PES
    • spare capacity : the more spare capacity the more price elastic
    • substitutability of Factors of production: the more substitutable the more price elastic it is
    • Time: long run price elastic, short run price elastic (land & capital can't be varied in short run)