# Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand (XED)
Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand (XED)
Definition
Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand (XED) measures how sensitive the quantity demanded of one good is to a change in the price of another good.
It is used to determine whether two goods are Substitutes or complements.
Formula
Interpretation
-
XED > 0 → Substitutes (direct relationship)
-
XED < 0 → Complements (inverse relationship)
Asymmetry
XED is directional – generally not symmetric.
These two values are not equal in most real-world cases.
Why asymmetric?
- Market power, brand loyalty, search costs, habit formation, adjustment costs
- Only under very restrictive conditions (e.g., homogeneous goods with symmetric consumer preferences) would they be equal.
Example: Coffee (C) & Tea (T)
| Scenario | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Price of tea ↑ 20% → Quantity of coffee ↑ 10% | $$ \text{XED}_{\text{Coffee, Tea}} = \frac{10%}{20%} = 0.5 $$ | Substitutes |
| Price of coffee ↑ 20% → Quantity of tea ↑ 30% | $$ \text{XED}_{\text{Tea, Coffee}} = \frac{30%}{20%} = 1.5 $$ | Substitutes |
→ Both positive (substitutes), but 0.5 ≠ 1.5.
Implication for your notes
Always specify the direction:
- “XED of B with respect to A” = $$ \frac{%\Delta Q_B}{%\Delta P_A} $$
- Use subscript: $$ \text{XED}_{B,A} $$
Do not assume $$ \text{XED}{B,A} = \text{XED} $$.