Elasticity in Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Elasticity
Microeconomics: The unit of analysis is focused on the individual behaviors
Macroeconomics: It is about the aggregate, how the whole economy behaves
Main Determinants of Demand
- Price of de good
The higher price the lower demand depends on elasticity.
- Income
Normal goods: More income, more demand.
Inferior goods: More income, less demand.
- Ethic
- Quality
- Substitute
Understanding Elasticity
- How much the demand reacts to any type of changes
- How it will change depending on the price
- Level of responsiveness of price - demand
There exist different types of elasticity
Negative: Higher price, less demand (change because of the price)
Possible Results of Elasticity
- Perfectly inelastic (elasticity = 0): It doesn't matter how much the price changes, the
quantity of demand doesn't
- Eg: Water in a emergency, people would buy the same amount of water. A
monopoly
- Inelastic (elasticity < 1): Consumers still buy practically the same quantity even the
price changes a lot
- Eg: People stills buy meds even the price rises
- Elastic (elasticity > 1): A change in the price makes the same change in the quantity
of demand. If the price rises a 10% the change in demand will decrease a 10%.
- Eg: If the price of ice creams rises a bit a lot of people stops buying them,
that means the demand is elastic
- Perfectly elastic elasticity = infinite): A small rise of prices changes the demand
completely
Factors Determining Elasticity
- Close substitutes available (amount of goods): much options and alternatives easier
to you to change
- Price of the product in relation to total income: you will be unwilling to consume it
because it will take more of your income
- Cost of substituting between different products (changing of one good to another):
The higher cost of substituting goods. If changing it is too expensive: Inelastic
- Eg: Si estas en una telefonia movil y suben el precio querrás ir a otra, pero, al
cambiarte te hacen pagar (net cost), por lo tanto decides no cambiar aunque
pagues mas
- Brand loyalty: The more loyal the more inelastic
- Degree of necessity / luxury
- The more necessity the more inelastic
- The more luxury depends on the group of consumers (status)
- Less price on something luxury = it transforms in a vulgar good
- More price on something luxury = it gives more status, people will buy
it
Dynamic Surge Pricing
Dynamic surge pricing
The price is very flexible and volatile.
- Depending on the time (moment of buying ... )
- Strategi followed to set different prices, depending on the consumers and the time
Budget Revenues
Budget revenues
Budget (government)
- Capital Receipts
- Revenue Receipts
- Non-tax Revenue:
- Interest receipts
- Profits and dividend
- Fees and fines
- Externar grants
- Special assessment
Tax and Fee Distinction
Tax: will cover all the expenditures
Fee: will cover a specific expenditure
Tax Revenue Types
- Tax Revenue
- Direct Taxes (progressive: the more I have, the more taxes I pay): They
are taken from the income, taxing the income
- Indirect Taxes (regressive: I'm paying the same tax even if I have more
money): Taxing indirectly the income trough consumption
Direct Taxes Examples
Direct taxes
- Income taxes: the more you have, the more you pay
- Corporation tax:
- Expenditure tax:
- Wealth tax:
- Estate duty:
Indirect Taxes Examples
Indirect taxes
- Sales tax:
- Custom duty:
- Excise duty:
- Service tax:
- Value added tax:
Budget Spending Categories
Budget spending
- Capital spending: you expect to receive something in exchange, but not exactly in a
material way, more in a social way
- Current spending: the government needs public services, civil servants (salaries),
make the administration work, also buildings, cars. Every expenditure the
government needs to work currently
- Transfer payment: Subsidies, grants, pensioners
Budget Deficit Analysis
Budget deficit
A budget surplus (deficit) occurs when revenue exceeds current spending. In situations in
which the inflows equal the outflows, the budget is said to be balanced.
- Revenue deficit: expenditure - revenue
- Fiscal deficit: the same but you will not consider the borrowing
- Primary deficit: fiscal deficit (no borrowing) - interest payments
Correcting Budget Deficits
How to correct the deficit:
- Correct: increase taxes
- Cover: borrowing (debt) or monetization (limited), print more money -> value of the
money decrease
You will have to save more money the next year to pay the debt
The higher interest rate, the more appealing but it has a consequence -> the credits will
become more expensive -> crowding out effect
- Crowding-out: when the government spends or borrows a lot of money, leaving less
available for people and businesses to use. This can make it harder for them to
borrow money for their own projects.
Reading on Budget Deficit
Reading
- How the article address the issue of the budget deficit
- Relation between crowding
- European union countries, Eu fiscal rules sets for national budget deficits to ensure
sound public finances
Fiscal and Budgetary Policy
Fiscal and budgetary policy
Economy authority has goals:
- Foreign balance
- Price stability
- Economic growth
- Employment
- Satisfy public needs (redistribute income)
Quasi Goals of Policy
Quasi goals
- Debt
- Budget deficit
Policy Instruments
Instruments
- Conjunctural: situation in a given moment
- Fiscal policy/Budgetary policy
- Trade policy
- Monetary policy
- Exchange rate: value of one currency in terms of another currency
Value of
- Structural: to modify the economic structure
- Sectorial policy
- Regulatory policies
- R + D+I
Fiscal Policy Definition
Fiscal policy
Refers to the budgetary policy, the government, which involves the government
manipulating its level of spending and tax rates within the economy.
The government uses these two tools to monitor and influence the economy:
- Increase/decrease the Aggregate Demand
- Redistribute income and wealth
Fiscal Policy and Aggregate Demand
Fiscal policy expands or contracts the aggregate demand
GDP: Calculated as consumption (all agents in economy)
C (fam consumption)+ I (investment private companies) + G (government expenditure) + X -
M (net export)
Questions on Fiscal Policy
Questions:
Which are the adequate fiscal policies to foster employment?
- Reducing taxes to companies
- Increasing public spending
- Incentives to exports
How to confront inflation?
- Increasing fiscal pressure to families and companies
- Reducing public spending -> less investment in the economies, less consumption
from the families and also less investment from the private companies
- Reducing transfers
- Increase taxes -> reduce the aggregate demand
Types of Fiscal Policies
Types of fiscal policies
- Automatic stabilizers
Measures that work automatically, once they are applied there is no need for intervention
by the government.
- Work by their own
- Countercyclical: does the opposite of the cycle
- Prevents the overheating or slams in economy:
- When the economic aggregate demand goes up, automatic stabilizers
maintains economy in a lower level so it doesn't appear inflation
- When the economy collapses, stabilizers support it to avoid overshooting.
E.g:
- Tax system (progressive) in expansionary periods
- Transfers to families in contradictory periods: unemployment benefits
- Discretionary measures
Measures that you use to discriminate against the people or the moment, it is done on
purpose.
- Deliberates changes in the budgetary policy:
- Volum, structure, composition of public expenditures
- Volum, structure and type of taxes
- Level of transfers
- Level of deficit
Reading on Fiscal Policy
Reading
Which type of fiscal policy is seen in the article
- Contractionary. Because it contracts the aggregate demand by raising taxes
What is the purpose of this fiscal policy
- Cover the gap, the incomes are lower and the expenditure higher. They are covering
by increasing taxes
Is the article mentioning an alternative for this purpose
- Additional borrowing, debt
How is the UK tax burden compared to other countries
- Raising but stills lower if we compare it to other countries as US
How this fiscal policy has been implemented
- Raising taxes to the wealthier ones
Inflation and Price Stability
Inflation
It is a tool, with the one we achieve the price stability
Inflation: is the rate of increase in prices over a given period of time. The opposite is called
deflation
Measuring Inflation
How is it measured (indicators)
- Consumer Price Index: Measures the average price change over time for a fixed
basket of consumer goods and services, indicating inflation's impact on consumers'
cost of living.
- Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices: A standardized CPI for EU countries,
enabling cross-country inflation comparisons within the European Union.
It is made to compare prices between different European countries, using the
same shopping list.
- GDP Deflator: Reflects price changes for all goods and services in an economy,
adjusting nominal GDP to real GDP for a clearer economic growth picture.
- Use the same variables = Nominal GDP / Real GDP . 100
- Nominal GDP: is the total value of all goods and services produced in an
economy at current prices (including inflation).
- Real GDP: is the value of all goods and services produced, adjusted to remove
the effects of inflation (using base year prices).
- Core inflation: Tracks long-term inflation by excluding volatile items like food and
energy, focusing on persistent price trends.
E.g: Flood that has destroyed the crops ...
Inflation Goal and Importance
The goal
Price stability = 2-3%
Inflation shows how the economy evolves.
0 would mean that is not going well, because people will not be spending
Why? (inflation control and economic stability are crucial)
- Distortions and Arbitrary Redistributions: High inflation makes prices confusing and
unpredictable. This can hurt savers because their money loses value, but it helps
borrowers who repay loans with money that's worth less.
E.g: can arbitrarily shift wealth-like from savers (who lose value) to borrowers (who
pay back loans with cheaper money).
- Strengthen Expectations: Stable inflation helps people and businesses plan for the
future. If they trust that prices will stay steady, they're more likely to invest and
spend confidently, leading to healthier economic growth.
- Re-allocation of Resources: When inflation is under control, resources like money,
labor, and materials are used more efficiently. High inflation makes businesses focus
on protecting their money instead of improving or growing their businesses.
Methods for Economic Stability
How? (these are methods used to achieve economic stability)
- Predominance of Monetary Policy: Central banks control interest rates and the
money supply to manage inflation. This is seen as the primary tool to stabilize the
economy because it directly impacts spending, borrowing, and saving.
- Independent Central Banks: Central banks in many countries are independent so
they can focus on the economy, not politics. This helps keep inflation under control
because they base decisions on data, not political goals.
- Little Use of (Counter-Cyclical) Fiscal Policy (Monetarist School): According to
Monetarist thinking, fiscal policy (government spending and taxes) should not be
heavily relied on for economic stability. Instead, controlling the money supply
through monetary policy is preferred, as it is seen as more effective and less prone
Types of Inflation
Types of inflation
- Demand pull inflation: Inflation caused when demand exceeds supply, leading to
higher prices.
- It happens when people have more money or confidence, increasing
spending.
E.g: A booming economy causes higher demand for cars, pushing prices up
as supply can't keep up.
- Cost push inflation: Inflation that occurs when rising production costs lead to
increased prices.
- Higher costs for wages or raw materials make businesses raise prices.
E.g: A spike in oil prices increases transportation costs, leading to higher
prices for goods.
- Structural inflation: Inflation due to persistent structural issues in the economy, like
supply-demand mismatches
- Certain sectors face chronic shortages or rigidities in the market
E.g: A reliance on imported goods with supply chain disruptions consistently
raises prices in that sector.