In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Price elasticity of demand
2281 O-Level — PED, YED, XED, revenue and elasticity with GeoGebra supply-demand shift model.
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PED Formula: % Change in Quantity Demanded / % Change in Price.
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The negative sign is ignored by convention; the absolute value is used for interpretation.
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PED > 1: Demand is price elastic (responsive).
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PED < 1: Demand is price inelastic (unresponsive).
Explore the concept
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PED = (% ΔQd)/(% ΔP)
PED = (% ΔQd)/(% ΔP) — elastic if |PED| > 1.
Key formulas
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At a glance — side by side
Compare key properties side by side — ideal for exam contrasts.
Comparison of Price Elastic and Price Inelastic Demand
| Characteristic | Price Elastic Demand | Price Inelastic Demand |
|---|---|---|
| PED Value | Greater than 1 (> 1) | Less than 1 (< 1) |
| Responsiveness | Quantity demanded is highly responsive to a change in price. | Quantity demanded is not very responsive to a change in price. |
| Demand Curve Shape | Relatively flat | Relatively steep |
| Effect of Price Rise on Total Revenue | Total revenue falls | Total revenue rises |
| Effect of Price Fall on Total Revenue | Total revenue rises | Total revenue falls |
| Typical Goods | Luxuries, goods with many substitutes (e.g., a specific brand of car, restaurant meals). | Necessities, addictive goods, goods with few substitutes (e.g., petrol, salt, tap water). |
PED Value
Price Elastic Demand
Price Inelastic Demand
Responsiveness
Price Elastic Demand
Price Inelastic Demand
Demand Curve Shape
Price Elastic Demand
Price Inelastic Demand
Effect of Price Rise on Total Revenue
Price Elastic Demand
Price Inelastic Demand
Effect of Price Fall on Total Revenue
Price Elastic Demand
Price Inelastic Demand
Typical Goods
Price Elastic Demand
Price Inelastic Demand
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
Understanding and Calculating Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)
Price elasticity of demand (PED) measures the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good to a change in its own price. It is a crucial concept for firms in setting prices and for governments in levying taxes. The formula for calculation is the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price. Due to the inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded (the law of demand), the result will always be negative. However, economists typically use the absolute value (ignoring the minus sign) for interpretation. This value allows us to classify demand into categories: elastic (PED > 1), inelastic (PED < 1), unitary elastic (PED = 1), perfectly inelastic (PED = 0), and perfectly elastic (PED = infinity).
PED Formula: % Change in Quantity Demanded / % Change in Price.
The negative sign is ignored by convention; the absolute value is used for interpretation.
PED > 1: Demand is price elastic (responsive).
PED < 1: Demand is price inelastic (unresponsive).
PED = 1: Demand is unitary elastic (proportionally responsive).
The Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand
Several factors determine whether the demand for a good is price elastic or inelastic. The most important is the availability of close substitutes; the more substitutes available, the more elastic the demand, as consumers can easily switch. The proportion of income spent on the good also matters; goods that constitute a large part of a consumer's budget, like a car, tend to have more elastic demand. The nature of the good is another key factor; necessities (e.g., bread, water) have inelastic demand, while luxuries (e.g., designer watches) have elastic demand. Addictive goods, such as cigarettes, tend to be very price inelastic. Finally, the time period considered is significant; demand becomes more elastic over time as consumers have more opportunity to find alternatives.
Substitutes: More substitutes lead to higher elasticity.
Proportion of Income: Higher proportion leads to higher elasticity.
Luxury vs Necessity: Luxuries are more elastic; necessities are more inelastic.
Addictiveness: Addictive goods have very inelastic demand.
Time: Demand becomes more elastic over a longer time period.
Visualising PED on the Demand Curve
The gradient of a demand curve provides a visual clue to its elasticity, though they are not the same thing. A relatively steep demand curve indicates that demand is price inelastic, as a large change in price leads to only a small change in quantity demanded. Conversely, a relatively flat demand curve indicates price elastic demand. It is a common misconception that elasticity is constant along a straight-line demand curve. In fact, for a standard downward-sloping linear demand curve, PED varies along its length. Demand is price elastic on the upper part of the curve, becomes unitary elastic at the midpoint, and is price inelastic on the lower part. The two extreme cases are a perfectly inelastic curve (vertical line, PED=0) and a perfectly elastic curve (horizontal line, PED=infinity).
A steep demand curve represents relatively inelastic demand.
A flat demand curve represents relatively elastic demand.
PED is not the same as the gradient; it changes along a straight-line demand curve.
Perfectly inelastic demand is a vertical line (PED=0).
Perfectly elastic demand is a horizontal line (PED=∞).
The Relationship between PED and Total Revenue
Understanding PED is vital for a firm's pricing strategy as it directly impacts total revenue (TR = Price x Quantity). When demand is price elastic (PED > 1), a decrease in price will lead to a proportionally larger increase in quantity demanded, causing total revenue to rise. If a firm with elastic demand raises its price, its total revenue will fall. In contrast, when demand is price inelastic (PED < 1), a firm can increase its price, and the resulting fall in quantity demanded will be proportionally smaller, leading to an increase in total revenue. If demand is unitary elastic (PED = 1), any change in price will be exactly offset by a proportional change in quantity, leaving total revenue unchanged.
PED = (ΔQ/Q)/(ΔP/P) | Total revenue TR = P × Q | Elastic: P and TR move in opposite directions
If demand is elastic (PED > 1), a price fall increases total revenue (P↓ → TR↑).
If demand is inelastic (PED < 1), a price rise increases total revenue (P↑ → TR↑).
If demand is unitary elastic (PED = 1), a price change does not affect total revenue.
Firms can use knowledge of PED to maximise their revenue.
In an exam question asking for advice on pricing strategy to increase revenue, your first step must be to identify or deduce the PED of the product. Your recommendation to raise or lower the price depends entirely on whether demand is price elastic or price inelastic. Always justify your answer by explaining the proportional changes in quantity demanded versus price.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
Price rises from £4 to £5; quantity falls from 200 to 160. Find PED.
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ΔP = +25%, ΔQ = −20%
A cinema reduces its ticket price from 12. Consequently, the number of tickets sold per screening rises from 80 to 120. Calculate the PED and advise the cinema on its pricing decision.
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Step 1: Calculate the percentage change in price. %ΔP = [(New Price - Old Price) / Old Price] × 100 %ΔP = [(15) /
How it all connects
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Glossary
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Quick check
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Revision flashcards
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What is the formula for Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)?
Percentage Change in Quantity Demanded / Percentage Change in Price.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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PED Formula: % Change in Quantity Demanded / % Change in Price.
- ✓
The negative sign is ignored by convention; the absolute value is used for interpretation.
- ✓
PED > 1: Demand is price elastic (responsive).
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PED < 1: Demand is price inelastic (unresponsive).
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PED = 1: Demand is unitary elastic (proportionally responsive).
Practice — then mark it
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