Marko Tskitishvili, an economist, has been studying the drop in the price of the average household computer in the U.S. and wonders if computers should still be considered a luxury good or if it has now become a normal good. He conducts a survey of 500 people and finds the following:
|
1998 |
2005 |
Avg. Household Income |
$41,000 |
$53,000 |
Avg. Computers Purchased per Household |
0.42 |
0.57 |
*Assume that 1998 is the base rate.
Based on the above data, Tskitishvili would conclude that a computer is a:
A) |
luxury good with income elasticity of 1.18. | |
B) |
luxury good with income elasticity of 1.01. | |
C) |
normal good with income elasticity of 0.84. | |
% change in computers demanded = ( 0.57- 0.42) / 0.495 = 30.30% % change in income = ($53,000 - $41,000) / $47,000 = 25.53% 30.30% / 25.53% = 1.18
1.18 > 1 so Tskitishvili would conclude that computers are a luxury good.
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