Reference no: EM13395936 
                                                                               
                                       
Economists  use elasticity to measure consumer responsiveness to changes in the  various determinants associated with demand. Elasticity addresses  percentage changes i.e. a percentage change in quantity demanded divided  by a percentage change in (own price, the price of another good, or  income). Understanding elasticity is important to businesses and policy  makers alike as they consider how a potential change will impact markets  when consumers adjust their purchasing behaviors.
Task:
A. Discuss elasticity of demand as it pertains to elastic, unit, and inelastic demand.
B. Discuss cross price elasticity as it pertains to substitute goods and complementary goods.
C. Discuss income elasticity as it pertains to inferior goods and to normal goods (sometimes also called superior goods).
D.  Use an example to discuss why demand tends to be relatively elastic in a  situation where "Availability of Substitutes" exists.
E. Discuss the "Proportion of Income Devoted to a Good" concept by contrasting two products purchased.
1. Address, in your discussion, specific examples of how the same  percentage change in the price of both goods affects the percentage  change in the quantity demanded for each of the two goods.
F.  Contrast how a person would initially respond to a relatively large  increase in the price of a product in the short run as opposed to how  that same person might react to that same price increase over a longer  time horizon (i.e., the long run), using the "Consumer's Time Horizon"  concept.
G. Identify  by price range the areas on the demand curve where demand is elastic,  inelastic, and unit elastic using the attached "Graphs for Elasticity of  Demand, Total Revenue."
1. Explain the corresponding impact on total revenue for each of the three price ranges indentified in part G.