KEY TERMS

constant unitary elasticity  when a given percent price change in price leads to an equal percentage change in quantity demanded or supplied

cross-price elasticity of demand  the percentage change in the quantity of good A that is demanded as a result of a percentage change in good B

elastic demand  when the elasticity of demand is greater than one, indicating a high responsiveness of quantity demanded or supplied to changes in price

elastic supply  when the elasticity of either supply is greater than one, indicating a high responsiveness of quantity demanded or supplied to changes in price

elasticity  an economics concept that measures responsiveness of one variable to changes in another variable

elasticity of savings  the percentage change in the quantity of savings divided by the percentage change in interest rates

inelastic demand  when the elasticity of demand is less than one, indicating that a 1% increase in price paid by the consumer leads to less than a 1% change in purchases (and vice versa); this indicates a low responsiveness by consumers to price changes

inelastic supply  when the elasticity of supply is less than one, indicating that a 1% increase in price paid to the firm will result in a less than 1% increase in production by the firm; this indicates a low responsiveness of the firm to price increases (and vice versa if prices drop)

infinite elasticity  the extremely elastic situation of demand or supply where quantity changes by an infinite amount in response to any change in price; horizontal in appearance

perfect elasticity  see infinite elasticity

perfect inelasticity  see zero elasticity

price elasticity  the relationship between the percent change in price resulting in a corresponding percentage change in the quantity demanded or supplied

price elasticity of demand  percentage change in the quantity demanded of a good or service divided the percentage change in price

price elasticity of supply  percentage change in the quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price

tax incidence  manner in which the tax burden is divided between buyers and sellers

unitary elasticity  when the calculated elasticity is equal to one indicating that a change in the price of the good or service results in a proportional change in the quantity demanded or supplied

wage elasticity of labor supply  the percentage change in hours worked divided by the percentage change in wages

zero inelasticity  the highly inelastic case of demand or supply in which a percentage change in price, no matter how large, results in zero change in the quantity; vertical in appearance

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

UH Microeconomics 2019 Copyright © by Terianne Brown; Cynthia Foreman; Thomas Scheiding; and Openstax is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book