CIE AS Economics Chapter 9≡ Contents

Chapter 9 — Price Elasticity of Supply

Cambridge International AS & A Level Economics (9708) · Unit 2.3 · 4th edition coursebook

Learning objectives

  • Define and calculate price elasticity of supply (PES).
  • Interpret elastic, inelastic, unit elastic, perfectly elastic and perfectly inelastic supply.
  • Identify the determinants of PES.
  • Apply PES to explain the speed and depth of market adjustment.

Key terms

price elasticity of supply (PES)
The responsiveness of quantity supplied to a change in price, measured as %ΔQs / %ΔP.
elastic supply
PES > 1 — supply responds more than proportionately to price changes.
inelastic supply
PES < 1 — supply responds less than proportionately to price changes.
perfectly elastic supply
PES = ∞ — horizontal supply curve.
perfectly inelastic supply
PES = 0 — vertical supply curve. Quantity does not respond to price.
spare capacity
Unused productive capacity that firms can deploy quickly without major investment.

9.1Defining and calculating PES

Price elasticity of supply is calculated as %ΔQs / %ΔP. Because both quantity and price move in the same direction (law of supply), PES is positive.

Categories:

Quantity supplied Price ($)aSP₁PQQ₁ Quantity supplied Price ($)bSP₁PQQ₁
Figure 9.2: Inelastic and elastic supply curves
Quantity supplied Price ($)aSQ Quantity supplied Price ($)bSP
Figure 9.3: (a) Perfectly inelastic supply (b) Perfectly elastic supply
Practice — after §9.1LO 2.3.2 · P1 | 2023 | s May/Jun | V1 | Q7
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 1)

9.2Determinants of PES

Supply tends to be more elastic when:

Practice — after §9.2LO 2.3.3 · P1 | 2023 | s May/Jun | V3 | Q12
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 2)

9.3Why PES matters for market adjustment

When demand shifts in a market with elastic supply, most of the adjustment occurs through quantity — price moves little. When supply is inelastic, most of the adjustment occurs through price — quantity barely changes.

Agricultural markets often show inelastic short-run supply (crops take months or years to grow), making them price-volatile. Manufacturing markets typically have more elastic supply (factories scale up faster), so price absorbs less of the demand shock. Figure 9.4 shows the same demand shift applied to supply curves of different PES, making the split between price and quantity adjustment visible.

Quantity Price ($)aSDD₁PQP₁Q₁ Quantity Price ($)bSDD₁PQP₁Q₁
Figure 9.4: Demand shift with different PES
Practice — after §9.3LO 2.3.3 · P1 | 2022 | w Oct/Nov | V2 | Q9
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 3)

End-of-chapter practice

Past-paper questions from CIE 9708. Pick A, B, C or D. Answers are saved on this device — press Download report (PDF) at the top to save them.

End-of-chapter Q1LO 2.3.1 · P1 | 2022 | s May/Jun | V1 | Q9
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 4)
End-of-chapter Q2LO 2.3.3 · P1 | 2021 | w Oct/Nov | V2 | Q12
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 5)
End-of-chapter Q3LO 2.3.4 · P1 | 2021 | s May/Jun | V2 | Q5
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 6)
End-of-chapter Q4LO 2.3.2 · P1 | 2020 | s May/Jun | V3 | Q11
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 7)
End-of-chapter Q5LO 2.3.4 · P1 | 2019 | w Oct/Nov | V3 | Q6
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 8)
End-of-chapter Q6LO 2.3.3 · P1 | 2019 | s May/Jun | V2 | Q5
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 9)
End-of-chapter Q7LO 2.3.1 · P1 | 2018 | w Oct/Nov | V2 | Q8
CIE 9708 Economics multiple-choice question on Price Elasticity of Supply (image 10)
Your score for Chapter 9
0 / 10

Attempt the practice questions above to build your score.

Self-evaluation checklist

After studying this chapter, you should be able to:

  • Calculate PES from data and classify the supply curve.
  • Identify the determinants of PES.
  • Predict the price and quantity effects of a demand shift given the elasticity of supply.