The Allocation of Resources – Price Elasticity of Supply (PES)
Definition of PES
📈 Price Elasticity of Supply (PES) measures how much the quantity supplied of a good changes in response to a change in its price. It is calculated as the percentage change in quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price.
| Formula |
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\${\displaystyle PES = \frac{\%\ \text{change in quantity supplied}}{\%\ \text{change in price}}}\$ |
🔍 Interpretation:
- PES > 1 – Supply is elastic; producers can quickly increase output when price rises.
- PES < 1 – Supply is inelastic; output changes little even if price changes.
- PES = 1 – Supply is unit elastic; quantity changes proportionally to price.
Analogy: The Faucet of Production
Imagine a faucet that controls how much water (output) flows out.
- 🔧 If the faucet is very responsive (turning the knob a little lets a lot of water out), that’s like a highly elastic supply.
- 🚰 If the faucet barely changes flow no matter how much you turn it, that’s like an inelastic supply.
Practical Example: Pizza Supply
- Suppose a pizza shop sells 100 pizzas at £10 each.
- The price rises to £12, and the shop now sells 130 pizzas.
- Calculate the percentage changes:
- Price change: \${\displaystyle \frac{12-10}{10} \times 100\% = 20\%}\$
- Quantity change: \${\displaystyle \frac{130-100}{100} \times 100\% = 30\%}\$
- Compute PES:
- \${\displaystyle PES = \frac{30\%}{20\%} = 1.5}\$
- Interpretation: Since PES > 1, the pizza supply is elastic – the shop can quickly increase production when the price rises.
Key Takeaway
💡 PES tells us how flexible producers are. A higher PES means producers can respond more readily to price changes, which is crucial for understanding market dynamics and resource allocation in the economy.