LONG-RUN AGGREGATE SUPPLY CURVE: A graphical representation of the long-run relation between real production and the price level, holding all ceteris paribus aggregate supply determinants constant. The long-run aggregate supply curve, abbreviated LRAS, is one of two curves that graphically capture the supply-side of the aggregate market. The other is the short-run aggregate supply curve. The demand-side of the aggregate market is occupied by the aggregate demand curve. The vertical long-run aggregate supply curve captures the independent relation between real production and the price level that exists in the long run.The long-run aggregate supply curve reflects the lack of a cause-and-effect relation between real production and the price level. As the price level rises, real production remains constant at the full-employment level. As the price level falls, real production remains constant at the full-employment level. Due to flexible prices, the same level of real production is generated at every price level. Interaction between the long-run aggregate supply curve and the aggregate demand curve, as well as the short-run aggregate supply curve is the core mechanism of the aggregate market (or AS-AD) analysis. This analysis is then used to explain and understand macroeconomic phenomenon, including business cycles, inflation, unemployment, and stabilization policies. The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve
Moving Along the LRAS Curve
In the analysis of the aggregate market, the price level generally changes in response to a disequilibrium in the economy. While the change in the price level leads to changes in aggregate expenditures on the demand side of the aggregate market and short-run aggregate real production, it does NOT cause changes in long-run aggregate real production. The price level change does cause a movement along the vertical long-run aggregate supply curve, but this is not associated with any quantity change. Shifting the LRAS Curve
Shifts of the long-run aggregate supply curve can be brought about by such things as technology or changes in resource quantities. While changes in aggregate supply determinants and resulting shifts of the long-run aggregate supply curve are less dramatic than changes affecting aggregate demand, they DO change. In most cases the changes are slow and steady, for example, the natural growth of the population. From time to time, however, shifts in the long-run aggregate supply curve are more abrupt, such as energy shortages during the 1970s. The long-run aggregate supply curve is shifted due to changes by any (ceteris paribus) factor other than the price level. Two broad determinant categories include:
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