ECON 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Margarine, Demand Curve

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The midpoint method: if you try calculating the price elasticity of demand* between two points on a demand curve, you will quickly notice an annoying problem. The elasticity from point a to point b seems different from the elasticity from point b to point a. Instead of using the values for point a or point b in the denominator when using the formula, you use the midpoint so that the direction doesn"t matter. Xnew xold = where xaverage is the sum of xnew and xold divided by two to get the average. Xaverage this for the values of both price and quantity to get percentages. Economists classify demand curves according to their elasticity. Demand is elastic when the elasticity is greater than 1, so that the quantity demanded moves proportionately more than the price. Perfectly elastic will look like a straight horizontal line.

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