Aggregate Supply
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Transcript Aggregate Supply
Aggregate Supply
Chapter 11 — one week
Definition
AS
is a schedule showing level of
real domestic output available at
each possible price level.
Possible Shapes of Aggregate
Short Run Supply Curve
Horizontal
SRAS Curve
PL
SRAS
GDPr
Horizontal
Conditions:
Substantial
unemployment and excess
capacity
Might be in a recession or depression
Upward sloping or Intermediate
Range SRAS Curve
PL
SRAS
GDPr
Upward sloping or Intermediate
Range
Conditions:
Closer
to full-employment levels, which
create upward pressure on prices
Upward pressure on prices is caused by
rising costs of doing business
Vertical Range SRAS Curve
PL
SRAS
GDPr
Vertical Range SRAS Curve
Conditions:
Absolute
capacity is assumed—the
economy is unable to produce any more G
& S for a long period of time
Any attempt to increase output will bid up
resource and product prices
Full employment is assumed
Putting it together
SRAS
PL
C
B
A
GDPr
A = horizontal
B = upward sloping
C = vertical
Determinants of AS
1.
Change in input prices:
Availability of resources (4 factors)
Prices of imported resources
Market power of certain industries
This was also in the eeb book
This is the most common determinant
Determinants of AS cont.
2.
Change in productivity can cause
changes in per-unit production cost
Productivity rises, unit production costs will
• Shift to the right and lower prices
Productivity falls, unit production cost will
• Shift to the left and increase prices
Determinates of AS cont.
3.
Change in legal-institutional environment:
Business taxes and or subsidies
Cost of gov’t regulation (pollution clean up)
Change in SRAS? or NC
1. unions grow more aggressive; wage rates
increase
2. labor productivity increases dramatically
3. OPEC successfully increases oil prices
4. computer technology brings new efficiency to
industry
5. Gov’t spending increases
6. giant natural gas discovery decreases energy
prices
7. cuts in tax rates increase incentives to save
8. low birth rate will decrease the labor force in
the future.
Change in SRAS? or NC
1. unions grow more aggressive; wage rates increase
or shift to the left
2. labor productivity increases dramatically
or shift to the right
3. OPEC successfully increases oil prices
or shift to the left
Always think of oil as an input. Many things are made
with oil—don’t think just gas
4. computer technology brings new efficiency to industry
or shift to the right
5. Gov’t spending increases
NC—gov’t spending would shift the AD curve.
6. giant natural gas discovery decreases energy
prices
7. cuts in tax rates increase incentives to save
or shift to the right
NC— would shift the AD curve
8. low birth rate will decrease the labor force in
the future.
NC—will not affect aggregate supply for 16 years or
more
Any questions?
Long Run Aggregate Supply
LRAS
PL
Output or GDPr
Represents
the Q of g & s a nation can
produce over a sustained period of time
using its productive resources efficiently
LRAS is at full employment
4 factors of production will shift the curve