Aggregate supply is a crucial concept in understanding how economies function. It shows the total output firms can produce at different price levels, with short-run and long-run distinctions reflecting how quickly businesses can adjust their production.
The short-run aggregate supply curve is upward sloping, while the long-run curve is vertical. This difference stems from wage and price flexibility, affecting how output responds to changes in aggregate demand and other economic factors.
Short-run vs Long-run Aggregate Supply
Defining SRAS and LRAS
- Short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) represents total output firms produce at various price levels within one year
- Upward sloping curve indicates higher production as price level increases
- Long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) shows total output at full employment with flexible prices and wages
- Vertical curve represents potential output independent of price level
- SRAS and LRAS differ in input price flexibility, particularly wages
- Wages sticky in short run but fully adjustable in long run
- Changes in aggregate demand affect output and employment along SRAS curve
- Economy tends to return to natural rate of output in long run
Short-run vs Long-run Economic Adjustments
- SRAS allows for temporary deviations from full employment output
- Firms can adjust production quickly in response to price changes
- Examples: Increasing overtime hours, utilizing excess capacity
- LRAS represents economy's maximum sustainable output
- All prices and wages fully adjust in long run
- Examples: New factories built, workers retrained for different industries
- Short-run fluctuations occur around long-run trend
- Business cycles create temporary booms and recessions
- Economy gravitates towards full employment in long run (natural rate of unemployment)
Determinants of Aggregate Supply
Resource and Technology Factors
- Resource availability impacts both SRAS and LRAS
- Changes in quantity and quality of labor, capital, land, entrepreneurship
- Examples: Discovery of new oil reserves, improved education systems
- Technological advancements influence SRAS and LRAS positively
- Improvements in production processes and efficiency
- Examples: Automation in manufacturing, artificial intelligence in services
- Input prices primarily affect SRAS
- Fluctuations in costs of raw materials, wages, other production inputs
- Examples: Oil price shocks, minimum wage increases
Economic and Policy Factors
- Expectations about future economic conditions impact SRAS
- Anticipated changes affect current production decisions
- Examples: Expected inflation leading to increased current production
- Government policies influence both SRAS and LRAS
- Taxes, regulations, subsidies alter production costs and incentives
- Examples: Corporate tax cuts, environmental regulations
- Institutional factors affect LRAS by influencing long-term productivity
- Changes in property rights, legal systems, economic institutions
- Examples: Improved contract enforcement, streamlined business registration
External and Environmental Factors
- Natural disasters and weather conditions typically impact SRAS
- Temporary disruptions to production
- Examples: Hurricanes damaging factories, droughts affecting agriculture
- Long-term climate change can affect both SRAS and LRAS
- Gradual shifts in resource availability and production patterns
- Examples: Rising sea levels affecting coastal infrastructure, changing agricultural zones
Aggregate Supply and Production Possibilities
Relationship Between AS and PPF
- Production possibilities frontier (PPF) shows maximum output combinations
- Represents economy's productive capacity given resources and technology
- LRAS curve directly relates to PPF
- Represents potential output at full employment and capacity
- LRAS intersection with x-axis corresponds to maximum sustainable PPF output
- Reflects economy's overall productive capacity
- PPF shifts mirror LRAS curve shifts
- Changes in resources, technology, efficiency affect both
- SRAS represents short-run output, may deviate from PPF
- Temporary factors like price stickiness cause inefficiencies
Economic Efficiency and Resource Utilization
- Economy operates at points on PPF when at full employment
- Corresponds to points along vertical LRAS curve
- Short-run fluctuations may lead to points inside PPF
- Represents underutilization of resources or inefficiencies
- Movement along SRAS curve reflects changes in resource utilization
- Economy can operate below or above full employment in short run
- Long-run growth expands both PPF and LRAS
- Outward shifts represent increased productive capacity over time
Shifts in Aggregate Supply Curves
Positive Supply Shocks
- Increased resource availability shifts SRAS and LRAS right
- Expands economy's productive capacity
- Examples: Population growth, discovery of natural resources
- Technological improvements shift SRAS and LRAS right
- Enhance productivity and efficiency
- Examples: Development of new manufacturing processes, improved logistics systems
- Decreased input prices shift SRAS right
- Lower production costs in short run
- Examples: Falling oil prices, decreased raw material costs
Negative Supply Shocks
- Resource depletion or degradation shifts SRAS and LRAS left
- Reduces economy's productive capacity
- Examples: Overfishing, soil erosion
- Increased input prices shift SRAS left
- Higher production costs in short run
- Examples: Rising energy prices, increased labor costs
- Natural disasters typically shift SRAS left
- Temporary disruptions to production
- Examples: Earthquakes damaging infrastructure, floods destroying crops
Policy and Institutional Changes
- Positive government policies shift SRAS and LRAS right
- Reduce costs or increase efficiency
- Examples: Lower corporate tax rates, reduced regulatory burden
- Institutional improvements primarily shift LRAS right
- Enhance long-term productivity and efficiency
- Examples: Stronger property rights, improved education systems
- Negative policy changes shift SRAS and LRAS left
- Increase costs or reduce efficiency
- Examples: Higher taxes, stricter environmental regulations