Friday, October 25, 2019
An Investigation into the P.e.d, Y.e.d and X.p.e.d of The Sony Playstat
 An Investigation into the P.e.d, Y.e.d and X.p.e.d of The Sony Playstation1       I have chosen the Sony Playstation1 as my product. The Playstation1     went on sale in 1995 in Britain. It quickly sold all its stock     completely due to very high demand, as it was a 'new thing' at the     time. It cost à £200 in the shops and stayed at this price for a whole     two years however demand started to decrease rapidly after this. This     could be because of new arrivals to the console world i.e. Nintendo     64. So they dropped their price to à £130 and again huge demand for the     product begun and they sold out. However after a year, demand for the     Playstation1 dropped, so they dropped their price again down to à £100.     There was still little demand, so they dropped their price even     further to just à £70 and brought it out in a new smaller design.     However things never picked up as the Playstation2 was released and so     no one wanted the somewhat dated Playstation1. Prices remain at à £70     today in all major shopping stores.       P.e.d (Price elasticity of demand) is divined as the responsiveness of     the quantity demanded of a good to changes in its own price. It is     calculated by the equation :-       P.e.d = % change in quantity demanded       % change in price       As I have found information figures when the Plastation1 went on sale     and more recent figures, I have worked out the P.e.d for the Sony     Plastation1.           P.e.d = 0.91     ============       The result shows the Sony Playstation1 is inelastic. This means the     consumers are aware of changes in the price and reflect on them to     whether or not they buy the product. Because of the quite neutral     result of P.e.d it shows a balance ...              ...le, an increase     in the price of coffee will increase the demand for tea. This, I would     not expect to be true for the consoles we are talking about. Goods in     joint demand however will have negative cross elasticities. For     instance, an increase in the price of record players will reduce the     demand for records. This I would expect to be true for the     Playstation1 and Nintendo 64. The coefficient will be high for goods     that are very close substitutes or complements and low when they are     neither substitutes nor complements.       Uses of cross elasticity of demand       à · Firms can estimate the effect on their demand of a competitors price     cut.       à · Firms can estimate impact on demand for their product if they cut     the price of a complement e.g. if they cut the price of the computer,     how much will demand for software increase?                        
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