I tried to ask this question on Math Stackexchange, but got no answer. I'll try here.
I am a bit confused as to how to see elasticity of a function with respect to a variable from logarithm. Lets say we have the following function:
$$y^* =\beta^{\frac{1}{1-a}}(\frac{s}{n+\delta})^{\frac{a}{1-a}} \leftrightarrow$$ $$ln y^* = \frac{1}{1-a} * ln (\beta) + \frac{a}{1-a}*ln(\frac{s}{n+\delta})$$
How does one see from here what the elasticity of y with respect to $ n + \delta $ is?
Kind regards
Edit:
Elasticity is defined as "In economics, elasticity measures the percentage change of one economic variable in response to a change in another" via Wikipedia. To find the elasticity of y with respect to $n+\delta$, you can use the following formula:
$$ \frac{\partial y}{\partial (n+\delta)} * \frac{n+\delta}{y} = -\frac{a}{1-a} $$
But my books suggests I should be able to spot this from the $lny*$ equation. Anyone got any idea how?