Results 281 to 290 of about 2,106,647 (348)
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Elasticity and Journal Pricing

The Acquisitions Librarian, 1989
Over the last ten years, academic libraries have begun to spend nearly half of their annual budgets on journals. This figure has risen from an earlier 28% share at the same time that total library budgets have quadrupled. What is the cause of such a trend? This article deals with the economic concepts of elasticity and inelasticity of demand as applied
Mark Bebensee   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Price Elasticity of Supply and Productivity: An Analysis of Natural Gas Wells in Wyoming

Energy Journal, 2018
Using a large dataset of well-level natural gas production from Wyoming, we evaluate the respective roles played by market signals and geological characteristics in natural gas supply.
C. Mason, Gavin Roberts
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Third Degree Price Discrimination and Price Elasticities

SSRN Electronic Journal, 1999
According to conventional wisdom, if a monopolist operates in two separate markets whose respective demand functions can be ordered by elasticity, he will charge more on the market with the less elastic demand. In this paper we debunk the widespread canard that this follows from the first order profit maximization conditions.
Thomas D. Jeitschko, Dominique Thon
openaire   +1 more source

Price Elasticities for Local Telephone Calls

Econometrica, 1983
Price elasticities are estimated for local telephone calls and minutes of conversation using data from a pricing experiment in central Illinois conducted by General Telephone and Electronics. The experiment charges separately for calls and for minutes.
Park, Rolla Edward   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Estimating Security Price Risk Using Duration and Price Elasticity

The Journal of Finance, 1982
IN THIS PAPER WE have developed a model which uses duration and price elasticity to estimate security price risk. The focus is on the volatility of security prices, and how this affects the return to the investor. The investor's return is made up of the dividend yield and the proportional change in the asset price.
Williams, Alex O, Pfeifer, Phillip E
openaire   +1 more source

Estimating demand elasticities using nonlinear pricing

International Journal of Industrial Organization, 2012
Nonlinear pricing is prevalent in industries such as health care, public utilities, and telecommunications. However, nonlinear pricing in these sectors causes bias when estimating elasticities for welfare analysis or policy changes. This paper develops a local elasticity estimation method that takes advantage of nonlinear price schedules to isolate ...
openaire   +1 more source

Location-Price Competition with Delivered Pricing and Elastic Demand

Networks and Spatial Economics, 2019
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
openaire   +2 more sources

Price Elasticities and Joint Products

Journal of Farm Economics, 1964
The price elasticity of a commodity from which two or more joint products are obtained in fixed proportions is, in general, a weighted harmonic average of the price elasticities of the joint products. The weights are the proportions of the basic commodity's total value attributable to sales of each joint product.
openaire   +2 more sources

Three price elasticities of demand

Omega, 1983
Abstract Elasticity of demand is a measure of market response to a change in price. Three definitions of elasticity of demand are commonly found in the literature: (1) e p = point elasticity, defined for a given point on the demand function and relies on the derivative of the function at that point; (2) e a = arc elasticity, defined for the
openaire   +1 more source

Price Elasticity—One More Time

Journal AWWA, 1980
This presentation disputes the logic of price elasticity as it relates to rate increases and decreased water consumption.
openaire   +1 more source

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