CHAPTER 27 AGGREGATE SUPPLY Flashcards
Aggregate supply curve
The relationship between the average level of prices in the economy and the level of total output
Full capacity
The level of output where no extra production can take in the long run with existing resources. The full capacity level of output for an economy is shown by the classical long run aggregate supply curve or the vertical part of a Keynesian aggregate supply curve.
Long-run aggregate supply curve
The aggregate supply curve which assumes that wage rates are variable, both upward or downwards. Classical or supply side economists assume that wage rates are flexible. Keynesian economists assume that wage rates may be ‘sticky downwards’ and hence the economy may operate less than full employment even in the long run.
Short-run aggregate supply curve
The upward sloping aggregate supply curve which assumes that money wage rates are fixed
Supply side shocks
factors such as change in wage rates or commodity prices which causes the short run aggregate supply curve to shift