In economics, the income elasticity of demand (YED) is the responsivenesses of the quantity demanded for a good to a change in consumer income. It is measured as the ratio of the percentage change in quantity demanded to the percentage change in income. For example, if in response to a 10% increase in income, quantity demanded for a good or service were to increase by 20%, the income elasticity of demand would be 20%/10% = 2.0.
Mathematical definition
:
The point elasticity version, which defines it as an instantaneous rate of change of quantity demanded as income changes, is as follows. For a given
Marshallian demand function
In microeconomics, a consumer's Marshallian demand function (named after Alfred Marshall) is the quantity they demand of a particular good as a function of its price, their income, and the prices of other goods, a more technical exposition of the s ...
with arguments income and a vector of prices of various goods,
:
This can be rewritten in the form
:
For discrete changes the elasticity is (using the
arc elasticity)
:
where subscripts 1 and 2 refer to values before and after the change.
Interpretation

The most commonly used elasticity in economics, the price elasticity of demand, is almost always negative, but many goods have positive income elasticities, many have negative.
* A negative income elasticity of demand is associated with
inferior good
In economics, inferior goods are those goods the demand for which falls with increase in income of the consumer. So, there is an inverse relationship between income of the consumer and the demand for inferior goods. There are many examples of infe ...
s; an increase in income will lead to a fall in the quantity demanded.
* A positive income elasticity of demand is associated with
normal goods; an increase in income will lead to a rise in quantity demanded.
**If income elasticity of demand of a commodity is less than 1, it is a
necessity good.
**If the elasticity of demand is greater than 1, it is a
luxury good or a
superior good.
* A zero income elasticity of demand means that an increase in income does not change the quantity demanded of the good.
Income elasticity of demand can be used as an indicator of future consumption patterns. For example, the "selected income elasticities" below suggest that as incomes increase over time, an increasing portion of consumers' budgets will be devoted to purchasing automobiles and restaurant meals and a smaller share to tobacco and margarine.
Selected income elasticities
* Aluminum 1.5
* A person's own life (also called "
value of statistical life") 0.50 to 0.60
* Automobiles 2.98
* Base metals 0.9
* Copper 1.0
* Books 1.44
* Energy 0.7
* Margarine −0.20
* Public transportation −0.36
* Restaurant meals 1.40
* Tobacco 0.42
* Water demand 0.15
Income elasticities of demand for gasoline and diesel have been studied extensively, however, elasticities vary widely between studies. Estimates for income elasticities of demand for gasoline in developed economies range from 0.66 to 1.26.
Income elasticities and budget shares
Being a normal good (elasticity > 0) means that with higher income, consumption of the good will rise, but it does not mean that the good's share of the consumer's budget will rise with income. That depends on whether the elasticity is below or above +1. If the elasticity is negative, such as margarine's -.20 (from the
"Selected income elasticities" section of this article), then it is obvious that margarine's share of the consumer's budget will fall if his income rises 10%. If the elasticity is tobacco's +.42, however, an income increase of 10% generates a spending increase of 4.2%, so tobacco's share of the budget falls. The consumer's purchases of books, with an elasticity of +1.44, will rise 14.4%, however, and so will have a higher budget share after his income rises.
In aggregate, food has an income elasticity of demand between zero and one, so expenditure increases with income, but not as fast as income does. This observation is known as
Engel's law.
Income elasticities are closely related to the population
income distribution
In economics, income distribution covers how a country's total GDP is distributed amongst its population. Economic theory and economic policy have long seen income and its distribution as a central concern. Unequal distribution of income causes e ...
and the fraction of the product's sales attributable to buyers from different
income brackets. If buyers in a certain income bracket get a pay raise, the income elasticity can be used to predict how much more the market will consume of that product. If the income share elasticity is defined as the negative percentage change in individuals given a percentage increase in income bracken the income-elasticity, after some computation, becomes the expected value of the income-share elasticity with respect to the income distribution of purchasers of the product. When the income distribution is described by a
gamma distribution, the income elasticity is proportional to the percentage difference between the average income of the product's buyers and the average income of the population.
Income-varying elasticities of demand
Income elasticities can vary as household income changes, particularly in the case of goods and commodities such as food and energy.
At low levels of per capita income, elasticities of demand for food, energy, or other products can be high. As per capita income increases, however, income elasticities fall. At high levels, the marginal elasticities may go to zero, or even negative. These differences can be observed by comparing countries at different income levels. For example, estimates of the income elasticity of cereals ranges from 0.62 in Tanzania to 0.47 in Georgia, 0.28 in Slovenia, and 0.05 in the United States.
The decline in elasticities as income increases is a form of
Kuznets' curve. As economies industrialize and get wealthier, consumer demand changes. At low levels of income, demand for energy or other goods increases very rapidly. However, as income rises further, consumption requirements (e.g. for food or energy) are increasingly satisfied. In addition, consumption patterns shift toward services rather than goods, which require fewer commodities to produce.
See also
*
cross elasticity of demand
In economics, the cross (or cross-price) elasticity of demand (XED) measures the effect of changes in the price of one good on the quantity demanded of another good. This reflects the fact that the quantity demanded of good is dependent on not on ...
(XED)
*
price elasticity of demand
A good's price elasticity of demand (E_d, PED) is a measure of how sensitive the quantity demanded is to its price. When the price rises, quantity demanded falls for almost any good ( law of demand), but it falls more for some than for others. Th ...
(PED)
*
price elasticity of supply (PES)
Notes
References
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{{Microeconomics
Demand
Elasticity (economics)