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crosselasticity

Crosselasticity, commonly referred to as the cross-price elasticity of demand, measures how the quantity demanded of one good responds to a change in the price of another good. It is defined as E_xy = (%ΔQ_x) / (%ΔP_y), or equivalently as the ratio of the percentage change in Q_x to the percentage change in P_y. The concept assumes other factors remain constant (ceteris paribus).

Interpretation: If E_xy > 0, the goods are substitutes; if E_xy < 0, they are complements; if E_xy

Examples: Substitutes: a rise in the price of tea raises the quantity demanded of coffee, yielding a

Applications and limitations: XED helps with pricing strategy, competitive analysis, and demand forecasting by indicating how

≈
0,
they
are
unrelated.
The
magnitude
indicates
the
strength
of
the
relationship:
larger
absolute
values
reflect
stronger
responsiveness.
The
estimates
can
vary
by
product,
market,
and
time
period.
positive
XED.
Complements:
a
rise
in
the
price
of
milk
lowers
the
quantity
demanded
of
cereal,
yielding
a
negative
XED.
Calculation
example:
a
5%
price
increase
for
good
Y
causing
a
2%
decrease
in
Q_x
gives
E_xy
=
-0.40.
In
practice,
arc
elasticity
or
log
changes
are
often
used
to
reduce
bias
in
larger
changes.
tightly
related
two
goods
are.
Limitations
include
dependence
on
the
price
range
observed,
possible
changes
in
substitution
patterns
over
time,
and
the
assumption
that
other
factors
stay
constant.
Data
quality
and
model
specification
also
affect
estimates.
See
also:
price
elasticity
of
demand,
income
elasticity
of
demand,
substitutes
and
complements.