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Midpoint Method Formula
ΔX = X2 − X1 | Xavg = (X1 + X2) / 2
Model Assumptions
- Demand/supply curves are locally linear between the two observed points
- All other factors held constant (ceteris paribus)
- Midpoint method gives a direction-independent elasticity estimate
- Midpoint averages prevent endpoint bias
For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Calculation Result
Formula Breakdown
Elasticity Classification
| Classification | |E| Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Perfectly Inelastic | = 0 | No response to price |
| Inelastic | 0 < |E| < 1 | Weak response |
| Unit Elastic | = 1 | Proportional response |
| Elastic | |E| > 1 | Strong response |
| Perfectly Elastic | = ∞ | Infinite response |
| Inferior Good | YED < 0 | Demand falls as income rises |
| Neutral Good | YED ≈ 0 | Income has no effect on demand |
| Normal Good | 0 < YED ≤ 1 | Demand rises with income |
| Luxury Good | YED > 1 | Demand rises faster than income |
| Complements | XED < 0 | Price B↑ → Demand A↓ |
| Unrelated Goods | XED ≈ 0 | No cross-price relationship |
| Substitutes | XED > 0 | Price B↑ → Demand A↑ |
Understanding Price Elasticity of Demand
What Is Price Elasticity of Demand?
Price elasticity of demand (PED) measures how sensitive the quantity demanded of a good is to a change in its price. A higher absolute elasticity means consumers respond more strongly to price changes. The midpoint method produces a consistent elasticity value regardless of whether price rises or falls.
Source: Mankiw, Principles of Microeconomics, Ch. 5
The Total Revenue Test
The total revenue test reveals how a price change affects a firm's revenue depending on elasticity:
- Elastic demand (|PED| > 1): Price increase → total revenue falls; price decrease → revenue rises.
- Inelastic demand (|PED| < 1): Price increase → total revenue rises; price decrease → revenue falls.
- Unit elastic (|PED| = 1): Price changes leave total revenue unchanged.
Determinants of Elasticity
Several factors determine whether demand is elastic or inelastic:
- Availability of substitutes: More substitutes → more elastic.
- Necessities vs. luxuries: Necessities tend to be inelastic; luxuries elastic.
- Time horizon: Demand becomes more elastic over longer time periods as consumers adjust.
- Share of budget: Goods taking a larger share of income tend to be more elastic.
PED = (−2/9) ÷ (0.20/2.10) = −22.2% ÷ 9.52% = −2.33 (Elastic)
Key Assumptions
- Demand/supply curves are locally linear between two observed data points
- All other factors (income, preferences, related goods) held constant (ceteris paribus)
- Midpoint method removes directional bias in arc elasticity calculations
- Results are point estimates for the arc between two price–quantity pairs
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Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. Results are based on the midpoint arc elasticity formula between two observed price-quantity pairs. Real-world demand and supply relationships may be nonlinear and are influenced by many factors not captured here. This tool should not be used for business, investment, or policy decisions.