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A-Level Economics
Macro Economics
Aggregate Supply
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Created by
Stephen Adesina
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Aggregate Supply
is the total
outproduced
in an economy at any given price.
Factors that affect
Aggregate Supply
The
taste
(quality)
The size
Cost of resources
Costs of Production
Its availability (
scarcity
)
Tax/VAT
Oil price
Substitutes
Wages
Aggregate Supply
Short Run
: Assume FOP's are fixed (in terms of quality & quantity)
This is the movement along and is caused by a change in price
In the short run (SRAS), the AS curve is upward sloping because:
Prices of inputs (like wages) are sticky and do not adjust immediately to changes in the price level.
Higher prices can temporarily increase profit margins, leading firms to increase production.
Aggregate Supply
Long Run
:
In the long run (
LRAS
), the AS curve is vertical at the
full-employment level
of output (
potential GDP
) because:
In the long run, all prices, including wages, are flexible.
Output is determined by factors such as
technology
,
resources
, and
institutions
, not by the
price level
.