1. Compute the price elasticity of demand between these two points. Let quantity demanded = Q‚ Q1= 400 meals/day‚ and Q2= 450 meals/day Let price = P‚ P1= $20‚ and P2= $18 The change in quantity demanded = Q2-Q1 = 450-400= 50 The change in price = P2-P1= $18-$20= -2 The average in demand = (Q2+Q1)/2= (450+400)/2= 850/2=425 The average in price = (P2+P1)/2 = (18+20)/2 =38/2= 19 The percentage change in quantity demand = change in quantity demanded/the average in quantity demand =50/425 = 0.1174 =
Premium Supply and demand Price elasticity of demand Elasticity
dream of fame and popularity‚ they are often jealous of celebrities whose pictures appear on the covers of magazines and newspapers. However they do not realize that famous people who are always in the public eye do not have easy lives. There is a price to pay for fame. First of all‚ I would like to say that when a person becomes famous‚ he or she does not have much freedom. Normally‚ a celebrity is being managed by an agent. Celebrities have to follow what the agent has arranged for them. They
Premium Celebrity English-language films People
Price Controls Econ 360-002 Sonia Parsa Sparsa1@gmu.edu G00509808 Word Count: 1540 Abstract This paper examines how‚ in the United States‚ the government imposes several forms of taxes and price controls and how all individuals are required to pay direct and indirect taxes. It looks at how the approach of taxation and how the constraints of taxation on goods and price controls affect the U.S. economy. Introduction Regulations have played a huge role in the political and economic world
Premium Supply and demand Minimum wage
disadvantages of price wars for different social groups By Nelson Rodriguez Price war is a situation in which rivals companies try to increase the number of consumers by attracting those who are buying from other companies through price lowering (This is common for commodity products that are so similar that price reduction may look as the only alternative to gain more customers).After each reduction there is a period of stability in which all afferents have the same price‚ but this equilibrium
Premium Competition Marketing Pricing
Price levels of the textile products Although the production cost of textile products is normally low‚ the price of them may be cheap‚ but some may be very expensive. The price levels of the textile products in different area thus depend on what kinds of clothing are sold. So there are some differences in the price levels of the textile products sold in different area because the clothing sold are heterogeneous. Cheung Sha Wan Road The textile products sold in Cheung Sha Wan are mainly come from
Premium Marketing Hong Kong Economics
Agricultural Prices The recent announcement of Mad Cow disease ignited fears about the safety of U.S. beef‚ largely because the disease is not well understood. The fatal disease known as mad cow (bovine spongiform encephalopathy or BSE) has been found in a country’s cattle affect both supply and demand curves. Research indicates that the impact on domestic demand could be small because consumers respond differently to food safety concerns than to long-run health concerns. Research has shown that
Premium Supply and demand Bovine spongiform encephalopathy Beef
Price hike:- Price rise send family budgets haywire NEW DELHI: Even as India’s economy is said to boom‚ millions of its citizens are groaning under soaring prices of vegetables and food grains and | | wish the government would do something about this‚ reports from across the country say. From Chandigarh in the north‚ to Ranchi in the east and from Bhopal in central India to Kerala in the south‚ a cacophony of voices has been raised against the relentless price rise‚ with the common man
Premium Inflation Monetary policy Fractional-reserve banking
Why Did Global Food Prices Rise? For the last 25 years global food prices have been falling‚ driven by the increased productivity and output of the farm sector worldwide. In 2007‚ this came to an abrupt end as global food prices soared. By September 2007‚ the world price of wheat rose to over $400 a ton-the highest ever recorded and up from $200 a ton in May. The price of corn (maize) surged to $175 a ton‚ some 60 percent above its average for 2006. An index of food prices‚ adjusted for inflation
Premium Food security Poverty Food
PRICE HIKE To understand this term we divide this term into two parts; Price and Hike and explain both the parts separately. Price is the value paid by the provider or supplier in the form of currency for rendering goods & services. While Hike is an abrupt increase or rise. It means that there is rise in prices of the goods/services required by the people living in the world. These goods/services belong to following sectors; 1. Agriculture 2. Health and Medicine 3. Education 4. Manufacturing/Industries
Premium Energy development World energy resources and consumption Fuel cell
Rising prices Rising Prices is becoming an acute problem these days. One has to live from hand to mouth. It has made difficult for everyone to meet both ends. It has forced people to live a miserable life. Necessities are being sold at a great price. The hardest hit is the common man‚ that is‚ the average consumers and the below average consumers or we can say the middle class people and the poor people. Due to price rise‚ the purchase of essential commodities like pulses‚ rice‚ sugar or medicines
Premium World population Petroleum Food