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Tuesday, 27 October 2009

Successful advertising - Supply, demand and price.

Clic on the icon and see this years 'Christmas Toy'. It just shows how a successful ad campaign can help create a revenue phenomenon!

Business Studies - Meerkat finds marketing “simples”



Check out one of the ads....



Mr Bentley


Monday, 26 October 2009

Electricity Markets & Regulation

Extension activity; the following powerpoint presentation discusses why & how any countries electricity is regulated. Please take some time over the weekend to have a look at the slides so we can discuss in next weeks lessons.

Microeconomics - Privatisation & De-regulation

Lesson Plan for Y13 - Regulation

Learning Objectives: To embed knowledge of regulation and apply this to real world examples.

Watch the clip on water regulation...



The clip highlights the difficulties faced by the government watchdogs.

The following tag will provide further real world examples. I advise all year 13 students to print out the following. It is something we will refer to in class over the next few weeks as we attempt the many past case studies on this topic.

Microeconomics - Privatisation & De-regulation

Mr Bentley

Unit 1: Market forces are forcing up the price of chocolate

There is an excellent article in the Times today (Struggles of Ivory Coast’s cocoa farmers are set to force up the price of chocolate - Times Online) about the surge in the world price of cocoa.
Cocoa prices have hit a 30-year high as poor weather threatens to drive the price of chocolate up again for Western consumers.



Cocoa has reached $3,412 a tonne in New York as concerns deepened about demand outstripping supply for the first time since 1968.

This is a really good article to use to consolidate students’ understanding of how shifts in supply and demand can lead to price volatility. And also the importance of price elasticity of demand and supply in shaping price changes.

“The surge in price also indicates that cocoa is increasingly being used for financial investment rather than merely sold to industry”

* What factors are limiting cocoa supply?
* Why is demand from western economies rising - even though many are still in recession?
* Will cocoa farmersd necessarily gain from higher world prices?


Mr Bentley

BAA agrees Gatwick airport sale (Regulation and Efficiency)

It finally looks like Gatwick Airport has been sold. Click on the link below for more information.

BBC NEWS Business BAA agrees Gatwick airport sale




This could easily be an article in the A2 Unit 3 paper in January. Points for discussion;

1. What are the issues with BAA having 'a monopoly over so much airport capacity in the south east'?

2. What advantages will the customer expect to see with the break up of this 'Monopoly'? (specifically, what sort of efficiency gains could you expect to see?)

3. What are the possible disadvantages of forcing BAA to sell Gatwick?


Mr Bentley

The role of advertising in determining price elasticity of demand | Welker's Wikinomics Blog

An excellent article from an external blog discussing how advertising can impact on elasticity of demand.

The role of advertising in determining price elasticity of demand Welker's Wikinomics Blog

Y12 Elasticity and its applications

This week we will be using the knowledge you have learnt and applying this to real life situations, an essential skill for examination success.

Lesson 1: Review of elasticity, definitions, equations and diagrams.

Highlight any issues you have on the 'elasticity mind map' I have handed out.

Price Elasticity of Demand

The quantity demanded of a good is affected by changes in the price of the good, changes in prices of other goods, changes in income and changes in other relevant factors. Elasticity is a measure of just how much the quantity demanded will be affected by a change in price, income, price of other goods etc..

If the price of steak increases by 1% and the quantity demanded then falls by 20% we can see there has been a very large drop in the amount demanded in comparison to the change in price. The price elasticity of demand for steak is said to be high.

If the quantity of steak demanded was to only fall by 0.01%, we can see this is a fairly insignificant fall in quantity in response to the 1% increase in price. In this case the price elasticity of demand for steak is low.

It can be calculated using the following formula:

percentage change in quantity demanded
percentage change in price

(To help you remember quantity is on top of price think of the football team QPR). The table below shows a number of calculations of price elasticity of demand.

Demand is price elastic, if the value of elasticity is greater than one. If demand for a good is price elastic then a percentage change in price will lead to an even larger percentage change in the quantity demanded. For example if a 10% rise in the price of CDs leads to a 20% fall in the demand, then price elasticity is 20% / 10% or 2 and the demand for CDs is therefore elastic.

Demand is price inelastic, if the value of elasticity is less than one. If the demand for a good is inelastic then a percentage change in the price will bring about a smaller percentage change in the quantity demanded. For example if a 10% rise in price by rail company resulted in a 1% fall in train journeys made then price elasticity would be 1% / 10% or 0.1 and the demand for rail journeys is therefore inelastic.

Special Cases of Elasticity

Demand is infinitely inelastic if the value of elasticity is zero (zero divided by any number). Any change in price would have no effect on the quantity demanded.

Demand has unitary elasticity if the value of elasticity is exactly 1. This means that a percentage change in the price of a good will lead to an exact and opposite change in the quantity demanded. For example a good would have unitary elasticity if a 10% increase led to a 10% fall in the quantity demanded.

Demand is infinitely elastic if the value of elasticity is infinity (any number divided by zero). A fall in price would lead to an infinite increase in quantity demanded (i.e. increasing from zero), whilst an increase in price would lead to the quantity demanded falling to zero.

The case of unitary elasticity is the curve (known as a rectangular hyperbola). The perfectly inelastic curve looks like an I and the perfectly elastic curve looks like an E (without the top!).

Knowing these special cases it makes it easier to spot whether a demand curve is relatively elastic or inelastic. The demand curve on the left is relatively elastic (as it looks more like the E) and the demand in the centre is relatively inelastic (as it looks more like an I).


Changes in Elasticity Along the Demand Curve

We mentioned earlier that a good is infinitely elastic if a fall in price leads to an infinite rise in quantity. This must occur if quantity was previously zero and rises to in response to a fall in price - this can be seen at the top of the demand curve.

The opposite occurs at the bottom of the demand curve leading to an elasticity of zero.

Also shown on the diagram is the point where elasticity is unitary (equal to one), this by definition occurs exactly halfway along the demand curve.

If elasticity is infinite where the demand curve crosses the price axis, but is equal to zero when it crosses the quantity axis, then elasticity must change as you move along the demand curve. Demand is price inelastic if it has a value less than 1 and elastic if greater than 1, these regions are shown above.

Importance of elasticity for a business

If the business is producing on the price elastic section of the demand curve, a small percentage change in price leads to a large percentage change in quantity demanded. Lowering the price will have the effect of increasing total revenue and raising the price will decrease total revenue, e.g., if the price of Mars Bars increased by 25% ceteris paribus, we would expect their sales to fall dramatically as consumers shift to other chocolate bars. This would have the effect of reducing their total revenue.

If the business is producing on the unitary price elasticity section of the demand curve, small changes in price do not change total revenue as a percentage change in price will be exactly offset by an inverse change in quantity.

If the business is producing on the price inelastic section of the demand curve, a small percentage change in price leads to a small percentage change in quantity demanded. This will have the effect of decreasing total revenue when the price is increased and increasing total revenue when the price falls. For example if a firm invented a miracle cure for the common cold and decided upon a price of 50p a pack. The firm sold 10 million packs in the first year of sales. Next year they decide to raise prices by 25% and sales fall to 9 million (10% fall), the level of sales have dropped, but the total revenue has increased.

It is important to note that the revenue maximising level of production occurs when elasticity is unitary, but this isn't necessarily the level where profit is maximised. We don't know the firm's costs at different levels of output. Furthermore elasticities are notoriously difficult to calculate and errors in the elasticity figures could lead to incorrect pricing decisions.

Factors Affecting the Price Elasticity of Demand

Two factors are usually highlighted by economists:

The availability of substitutes. If a product has many substitutes then its price elasticity is likely to be high. An increase in price will lead to consumers shifting demand to one of its many substitutes (e.g., chocolate bars). However if the good has few substitutes, consumers will find it harder to replace that good, so its price elasticity is likely to be low (e.g. salt).The more widely a product is defined the fewer substitutes it is likely to have. Spaghetti has many substitutes, but food has none.

Time. The longer the period of time, the more price elastic is the demand for the product. For example if the price of leaded petrol was to increase by 50% my demand for it would not change in the shirt run. However as time goes on I would change my car to one that used unleaded petrol, therefore in the longrun elasticity becomes greater.

Monday, 12 October 2009

Attention all Economists!!

Click on the clip..essential material for all economists;



Mr Bentley

Assessment Objectives and Command Words - Study Skills

Click on the link below to access an excellent piece on study skills and examination technique. Excellent for Business & Economics at all levels.

Wednesday, 7 October 2009

Year 12 - Consumer surplus notes

Following on from the work we completed in class, here are some notes on consumer surplus.

Applying the concept:

Having completed the exercise, discuss in groups the following questions.

How could the concept of consumer surplus contribute to arriving at a decision to build a new by-pass through an area of outstanding natural beauty or a site of special scientific interest?

How might consumer surplus help us to understand why companies who exercise market power and maintain price above the equilibrium level be deemed as being 'against the public interest'?

How might a government or the EU attempt to justify paying subsidies to a business or industry?

What might be the limitations of using a concept like consumer surplus in decision making - try to think of relevant examples.

Mr Bentley

Monday, 5 October 2009

Year 13 - Contestable markets

You need to fully understand why firms decide on strategies other than 'Profit Maximisation'. We will be covering the following in class;

Thursday, 1 October 2009