Inelastic

Inelastic

Table of Contents What Is Inelastic? Inelastic means that when the price goes up, consumers’ buying habits stay about the same, and when the price goes down, consumers’ buying habits also remain unchanged. Inelastic means that a 1 percent change in the price of a good or service has less than a 1 percent change in the quantity demanded or supplied. By way of contrast, an elastic good or service is one for which a 1 percent price change causes more than a 1 percent change in the quantity demanded or supplied. For example, if the price of an essential medication changed from $200 to $202, a 1 percent increase, and demand changed from 1,000 units to 995 units, a less than 1 percent decrease, the medication would be considered an inelastic good. For instance, if a smartphone producer knows that lowering the price of its newest product by 5 percent will result in a 10 percent increase in sales, the decision to lower prices could be profitable.

What Is Inelastic?

Inelastic is an economic term referring to the static quantity of a good or service when its price changes. Inelastic means that when the price goes up, consumers’ buying habits stay about the same, and when the price goes down, consumers’ buying habits also remain unchanged.

Understanding Inelastic

Inelastic means that a 1 percent change in the price of a good or service has less than a 1 percent change in the quantity demanded or supplied.

For example, if the price of an essential medication changed from $200 to $202, a 1 percent increase, and demand changed from 1,000 units to 995 units, a less than 1 percent decrease, the medication would be considered an inelastic good. If the price increase had no impact whatsoever on the quantity demanded, the medication would be considered perfectly inelastic. Necessities and medical treatments tend to be relatively inelastic because they are needed for survival, whereas luxury goods, such as cruises and sports cars, tend to be relatively elastic.

The demand curve for a perfectly inelastic good is depicted as a vertical line in graphical presentations because the quantity demanded is the same at any price. Supply could be perfectly inelastic in the case of a unique good such as a work of art. No matter how much consumers are willing to pay for it, there can never be more than one original version of it.

Perfectly Inelastic Goods

There are no examples of perfectly inelastic goods. If there were, that means producers and suppliers would be able to charge whatever they felt like and consumers would still need to buy them. The only thing close to a perfectly inelastic good would be air and water, which no one controls. 

But there are some products that come close to being perfectly inelastic. Take gasoline, for instance. These prices change frequently, and if the supply drops, prices will jump. People need gas to drive their cars, and they’ll still need to buy it because they may not be able to alter their driving habits, such as commuting to work, going out with friends, taking the kids to school or going shopping. These could change, like changing your job for something closer, but people will still purchase gas — even at a higher price — before making any sharp, drastic changes to their lifestyles. 

Elasticity of Demand

By way of contrast, an elastic good or service is one for which a 1 percent price change causes more than a 1 percent change in the quantity demanded or supplied. Most goods and services are elastic because they are not unique and have substitutes. If the price of a plane ticket increases, fewer people will fly. A good would need to have numerous substitutes to experience perfectly elastic demand. A perfectly elastic demand curve is depicted as a horizontal line because any change in price causes an infinite change in quantity demanded.

The inelasticity of a good or service plays a significant role in determining a seller's output. For instance, if a smartphone producer knows that lowering the price of its newest product by 5 percent will result in a 10 percent increase in sales, the decision to lower prices could be profitable. However, if lowering smartphone prices by 5 percent only results in a 3 percent increase in sales, then it is unlikely that the decision would be profitable.

Related terms:

Comparative Advantage

Comparative advantage is an economy's ability to produce a particular good or service at a lower opportunity cost than its trading partners. read more

Consumer Surplus

A consumer surplus occurs when the price that consumers pay for a product or service is less than the price they're willing to pay. read more

Demand Curve

The demand curve is a representation of the correlation between the price of a good or service and the amount demanded for a period of time.  read more

Demand

Demand is an economic principle that describes consumer willingness to pay a price for a good or service.  read more

Economic Equilibrium

Economic equilibrium is a condition or state in which economic forces are balanced. read more

Elasticity & Explanation

Elasticity is an economic term describing the change in the behavior of buyers and sellers in response to a price change for a good or service. read more

Elasticity

Elasticity is a measure of a variable's sensitivity to a change in another variable. read more

Income Effect

Income effect is the change in demand for a good or service caused by a change in a consumer's purchasing power due to a change in real income. read more

Indifference Curve

An indifference curve is a graph representing two goods that give a consumer equal satisfaction and utility. read more

Inelastic

Inelastic is a term used to describe the unchanging quantity of a good or service when its price changes.  read more

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