Advertising Elasticity of Demand
Advertising Elasticity of Demand
EFFECTIVE DEMAND
There are an unlimited number of human wants and needs - but in the
market place these can only be bought / purchased if there is sufficient
purchasing power.
LAW OF DEMAND
“Quantity Demanded for a commodity varies inversely with its price,
not necessarily proportionately, ceteris paribus.”
OR
“A rise in the price of a commodity or service is followed by a
reduction in quantity demanded for that commodity or service ad fall in the
price of a commodity or service is followed by an increase in quantity
demanded for that commodity or service, if the conditions of demand
remains constant.”
We can also show the functional relationship b/w price and quantity
demanded I the following way:
Qd = f(P)
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
FORMULA
ed = ( Q / P)*(P/Q)
1. PERCENTAGE METHOD
2. TOTAL OUTLAY METHOD
3. GRAPHIC METHOD
Q/P * P/Q
d
Price $
Avg.
responsiveness
P 2
P
1 D
Q
Q2 Q1
Price is important for a firm, but most firms with market power have
another important decision to make: how much to advertise. Now we will
have to see how firms with market power can make profit-maximizing
advertising decisions, and how those decisions depends on the
characteristics of demand for the fir’s product.
For simplicity, we will assume that the firm sets only one price for its
product. We will also assume that having done sufficient market research, it
knows how its quantity demanded depends on both its price P and its
advertising expenditures in dollars A: that is, it knows Q (P, A). Figure
shows the firm’s demand and cost curves with and without advertising. AR
and MR are the firm’s average and marginal revenue curves when it does not
advertise, and AC and MC are the firm’s average and marginal cost curves.
It produces a quantity Q0, where MR=MC, and receive a price P0. its profit
per unit is the difference b/w P0 and average cost, so its total profit o is
given by the gray-shaded rectangle.
Now suppose the firm advertises. This causes its demand curve to
shift out and to the right: the new average and marginal revenue curves are
given by AR` and MR`. Advertising is a fix cost, so the firm’s average cost
curve raises Marginal cost, however remain the same. With advertising, the
firm producessQ1 and receives a price P1. Its total profit 1 is given by the
purple shaded rectangle, its now much larger.
While the firm in Figure is clearly better off advertising, the figure does not
help us determine how much advertising it should do. It must choose its
price P and advertising expenditure A to maximize profit. Which is now
given by:
= PQ/(P,A) – C(Q) – A
Given a price, more advertising will result in more sales and thus
more revenue. But what is the firm’s profit maximizing advertising
expenditure? You might be tempted to say that firm should increase its
advertising expenditure until the last dollar of advertising just brings forth ad
additional dollar of revenue—
That is until the marginal revenue from advertising, P,Q)/A, is
just equal to 1. But as figure shows, this reason omits an important element.
Remember that advertising tends to increase output in turn means increased
production coasts, and extra dollar of advertising.
The correct decision is to increase advertising until the marginal
revenue from and additional dollar if advertising, MRads, just equals the full
marginal cost of that advertising. The full marginal cost is the sum of the
dollar spent directly on the advertising and the marginal production cost
resulting from the increased sales that advertising brings about. Thus the
firm should advertise up t0o the point that:
( P - MC )Q /A = 1
Now multiply both sides of this equation by A/PQ, the advertising to sale
ratio:
P – MC [ A/Q. Q /A ] = A
P PQ
A/PQ = -( EA / Ep ) (2)
FIGURE
$/Q
1 MC
P1
AC`
AR`
Po
AC
0
MR`
AR
Quantit
Qo Q1 y