Elasticity of Demand – Explained

1. What is Demand?

First, imagine this:

You go to a shop with ₹50.
You see chocolates.

  • If chocolate costs ₹10 → you buy 5
  • If chocolate costs ₹5 → you buy 10

So, when price falls → you buy more
When price rises → you buy less

This is called Demand.


2. What is Elasticity of Demand?

Now comes the main idea.

Elasticity of Demand = How much demand changes when price changes

In simple words:
👉 “If price changes, how strongly do people react?”


3. Real-Life Story (Case)

Case 1: Ice Cream

  • Price = ₹20 → you buy 2 ice creams
  • Price = ₹10 → you buy 6 ice creams

Big change in buying!

👉 Demand changed a lot → Elastic Demand


Case 2: Salt

  • Price = ₹20 → you buy 1 packet
  • Price = ₹40 → you still buy 1 packet

No big change!

👉 Demand hardly changed → Inelastic Demand


4. Bujho & Paheli Time

Bujho asks:
“If the price of pizza increases, will everyone stop eating pizza?”

Paheli says:
“No, some people will still buy it, but maybe less.”

👉 So demand changes, but not always equally

5. Types of Elasticity (Very Simple)

(1) Elastic Demand (Very Sensitive)

  • Small price change → Big change in demand
  • Example: ice cream, clothes, toys

(2) Inelastic Demand (Not Sensitive)

  • Big price change → Small change in demand
  • Example: salt, medicines, petrol

6. Why Does This Happen?

Let’s understand with reasons:

(a) Necessity vs Luxury

  • Salt → necessary → you must buy → inelastic
  • Ice cream → optional → can skip → elastic

(b) Availability of Substitutes

  • Tea has coffee → you can switch → elastic
  • Petrol has no easy substitute → inelastic

(c) Money spent

  • Chocolate → small expense → elastic
  • Car → big expense → think more → elastic

7. Simple Formula (Don’t Fear)

Elasticity =
Change in Quantity ÷ Change in Price

Meaning:
👉 Compare how much buying changed vs price change


8. Mini Case Study

A shopkeeper increases price of chips:

  • Before: 10 packets sold
  • After: 4 packets sold

Big drop → Elastic demand

Now milk price increases:

  • Before: 5 litres
  • After: 4.8 litres

Small drop → Inelastic demand


9. Final Easy Summary

  • Elasticity tells: “How strongly people react to price change”
  • If demand changes a lot → Elastic
  • If demand changes very little → Inelastic

10. One Last Bujho-Paheli Question

Bujho:
“If the price of water doubles, will people stop drinking water?”

Think like Paheli:
No, because water is necessary.

👉 So water has inelastic demand

Higher Demand Elasticity

“Higher demand elasticity means customers are more conscious (aware and reactive) to changes in that variable.”

👉 Variable usually means price, but it can also be income or other factors.


2. Simple Meaning

  • Higher elasticity = people react a lot when something changes
  • Lower elasticity = people react very little

👉 So, “more conscious” means:
They quickly notice the change and change their buying behavior


3. Real-Life Example (Case)

Case: Price of Burgers

  • Price = ₹50 → you buy 2 burgers
  • Price = ₹80 → you buy 0 burgers

👉 Big change in buying

So customers are:

  • noticing the price increase
  • reacting strongly

👉 This means high elasticity


4. Opposite Case

Case: Medicine

  • Price = ₹100 → you buy it
  • Price = ₹150 → you still buy it

👉 You cannot avoid it

So customers:

  • notice price change
  • but cannot react much

👉 This means low elasticity


5. Bujho & Paheli Style

Bujho asks:
“If the price of your favorite chocolate increases a little, will you reduce buying?”

Paheli says:
“Yes, I might buy less or switch to another brand.”

👉 That means:

  • Paheli is very conscious of price changes
  • Demand is elastic

6. Key Idea in One Line

👉 Higher elasticity = customers are very sensitive and quickly change their demand when something changes


7. Easy Comparison Table

SituationReactionElasticity
Stop buying quicklyStrong reactionHigh elasticity
Continue buyingWeak reactionLow elasticity

8. Final Understanding

So the statement means:

👉 When elasticity is high,
customers are:

  • alert
  • sensitive
  • responsive

to changes like price, income, etc.


9. One Thinking Question

If petrol price increases slightly and people still buy almost same quantity,
are they very conscious of price change?

👉 Think carefully:
They notice it, but don’t change behavior much → Low elasticity

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