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THE ECONOMICS OF MONEY,BANKING, AND FINANCIAL MARKETS 657

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CHAPTER 24 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis 625 Profit on a unit of output equals the price for the unit minus the costs of producing it In the short run, costs of many factors that go into producing goods and services are fixed; wages, for example, are often fixed for periods of time by labour contracts, and raw materials are often bought by firms under long-term contracts that fix the price Because these costs of production are fixed in the short run, when the overall price level rises, the price for a unit of output will rise relative to the costs of producing it, and the profit per unit will rise Because the higher price level results in higher profits in the short run, firms increase production, and the quantity of aggregate output supplied rises, resulting in an upward-sloping shortrun aggregate supply curve Frequent mention of the short run in the preceding paragraph hints that the relationship between the price level and aggregate output embodied in the upward-sloping, short-run aggregate supply curve (AS1 in Figure 24-3) may not remain fixed as time passes To see what happens over time, we need to understand what makes the aggregate supply curve shift Shifts in the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve We have seen that the profit on a unit of output determines the quantity of output supplied If the cost of producing a unit of output rises, profit on a unit of output falls, and the quantity of output supplied at each price level falls To learn what this implies for the position of the aggregate supply curve, let s consider what happens at a price level of P1 when the costs of production increase Now that firms are earning a lower profit per unit of output, they reduce production at that price level, and the quantity of aggregate output supplied falls from point A to point A* Applying the same reasoning at point B indicates that the quantity of aggregate output supplied falls to point B* What we see is that the short-run aggregate supply curve shifts to the left when costs of production increase and to the right when costs decrease Factors That Shift the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve The factors that cause the short-run aggregate supply curve to shift are the ones that affect the costs of production: (1) tightness of the labour market, (2) expectations of inflation, (3) workers attempts to push up their real wages, and (4) changes in production costs that are unrelated to wages (such as energy costs) The first three factors shift the short-run aggregate supply curve by affecting wage costs: the fourth affects other costs of production If the economy is booming and the labour market is tight (Y Yn ), employers may have difficulty hiring qualified workers and may even have a hard time keeping their present employees Because the demand for labour now exceeds supply in this tight labour market, employers will raise wages to attract needed workers, and the costs of production will rise The higher costs of production lower the profit per unit of output at each price level, and the short-run aggregate supply curve shifts to the left (see Figure 24-3) By contrast, if the economy enters a recession and the labour market is slack (Y Yn ), because the demand for labour is less than the supply, workers who cannot find jobs will be willing to work for lower wages In addition, employed workers may be willing to make wage concessions to keep their jobs Therefore, in a slack labour market in which the quantity of labour demanded is less than the quantity supplied, wages and hence costs of production will fall, the profit per unit of output will rise, and the short-run aggregate supply curve will shift to the right The effects of tightness of the labour market on the short-run aggregate supply curve can be summarized as follows: When aggregate output is above the TIGHTNESS OF THE LABOUR MARKET

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