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In economics, the Total Revenue Test is a means for determining whether demand is elastic or inelastic. If an increase in price causes an increase in total revenue, then demand can be said to be inelastic, since the increase in price does not have a large impact on quantity demanded. If an increase in price causes a decrease in total revenue, then demand can be said to be elastic, since the increase in price has a large impact on quantity demanded.
Contents
Different commodities may have different elasticity depending on whether people need them (necessities) or want them (accessories).
Examples:
1. Product A currently sells for $10. The seller decides to increase the price to $15, but finds that he ends up making less money. This is because he is selling fewer of the product due to the increased price, and his total revenue has fallen. The demand for this product must be elastic.
2. Product A currently sells for $10. The seller decides to increase the price to $15, and finds that his revenue ends up increasing. The demand for this product must be inelastic.
Mathematical explanation
The mathematical link between them comes from the formula of the price elasticity of demand:
where
Using the idea of limits for infinitesimal changes in price and therefore in quantity, the formula becomes
Total revenue is given by
Since quantity demanded Q is a function of price P,
The derivative of total revenue with respect to P is thus:
But
After both multiplying and dividing by
The last step is to substitute the elasticity of demand for
To find the elasticity of demand using the mathematical explanation of the total revenue test, it’s necessary to use the following rule:
If demand is elastic,
Graphical explanation
Total revenue, the product price times the quantity of the product demanded, can be represented by a rectangle formed by connecting the following four points on the demand graph: Price (P), Quantity demanded (Q), Point on the Demand Curve (A or B) and the origin zero (0) (the intersection of the price axis and the quantity axis).
In the diagram, the area of the rectangle anchored by point A or B is the measure of total revenue.
When the price changes the rectangle changes. The change in revenue caused by the price change is called the price effect, and the change In revenue in the opposite direction caused by the resulting quantity change is called the quantity effect.
When the price changes from
So, if the area of the rectangle giving the price effect is greater than the area of the rectangle giving the quantity effect, demand is inelastic: