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Aggregate Demand and Supply
Aggregate Supply
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics Aggregate Demand and Supply Aggregate Supply
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics Aggregate Demand and Supply
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics
Economics Textbooks
Economics
Concept Version 5
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Moving from Short-Run to Long-Run

In the short-run, the price level of the economy is sticky or fixed; in the long-run, the price level for the economy is completely flexible.

Learning Objective

  • Recognize the role of capital in the shape and movement of the short-run and long-run aggregate supply curve


Key Points

    • When capital increases, the aggregate supply curve will shift to the right, prices will drop, and the quantity of the good or service will increase.
    • The short-run aggregate supply curve is an upward slope. The short-run is when all production occurs in real time.
    • The long-run curve is perfectly vertical, which reflects economists' belief that changes in aggregate demand only temporarily change an economy's total output. The long-run is a planning and implementation stage.
    • Aggregate supply moves from short-run to long-run by considering some equilibrium that is the same for both short and long-run when analyzing supply and demand. That state of equilibrium is then compared to the new short-run and long-run equilibrium state from a change that disturbs equilibrium.

Term

  • capital

    Already-produced durable goods available for use as a factor of production, such as steam shovels (equipment) and office buildings (structures).


Full Text

In economics, the short-run is the period when general price level, contractual wages, and expectations do not fully adjust. In contrast, the long-run is the period when the previously mentioned variables adjust fully to the state of the economy.

Aggregate Supply

Aggregate supply is the total amount of goods and services that firms are willing to sell at a given price level.

When capital increases, the aggregate supply curve will shift to the right, prices will drop, and the quantity of the good or service will increase.

Short-run Aggregate Supply

During the short-run, firms possess one fixed factor of production (usually capital). It is possible for the curve to shift outward in the short-run, which results in increased output and real GDP at a given price. In the short-run, there is a positive relationship between the price level and the output . The short-run aggregate supply curve is an upward slope. The short-run is when all production occurs in real time.

Aggregate Supply

This graph shows the relationship between aggregate supply and aggregate demand in the short-run. The curve is upward sloping and shows a positive correlation between the price level and output.

Long-run Aggregate Supply

In the long-run only capital, labor, and technology impact the aggregate supply curve because at this point everything in the economy is assumed to be used optimally. The long-run supply curve is static and shifts the slowest of all three ranges of the supply curve. The long-run curve is perfectly vertical, which reflects economists' belief that changes in aggregate demand only temporarily change an economy's total output. The long-run is a planning and implementation stage.

Moving from Short-run to Long-run

In the short-run, the price level of the economy is sticky or fixed depending on changes in aggregate supply. Also, capital is not fully mobile between sectors.

In the long-run, the price level for the economy is completely flexible in regards to shifts in aggregate supply. There is also full mobility of labor and capital between sectors of the economy.

The aggregate supply moves from short-run to long-run when enough time passes such that no factors are fixed. That state of equilibrium is then compared to the new short-run and long-run equilibrium state if there is a change that disturbs equilibrium.

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