From the Short Run to the Long Run
Section 3.2 built SRAS on a single critical assumption: that wages and other input costs are sticky — slow to adjust in the short run. That stickiness is what makes SRAS slope upward, and it's what gives firms a temporary profit-margin boost when prices rise unexpectedly.
But "sticky" isn't the same as "permanent." Eventually, labor contracts expire. Workers see that prices have risen and demand wage increases. Suppliers renegotiate raw material contracts. Rents reset. Every input cost gets a chance to catch up. When all that adjustment is finished, we've entered what economists call the long run — a period not defined by a specific number of years, but by the fact that every price and wage in the economy has had time to fully adjust.
This shift changes everything about supply behavior. The profit-margin advantage that made SRAS upward-sloping disappears. If prices doubled, wages also doubled, and the relationship between cost and revenue is back where it started. Firms have no reason to produce more or less than they did before the price level changed. Output settles at a level determined not by prices, but by the economy's real productive capacity — its workers, machines, technology, and resources.
The result is the Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS) curve — vertical instead of upward-sloping, and pinned to a specific level of output called potential GDP. This section explains why LRAS looks the way it does, what determines its position, and why it turns out to be the same concept as the PPC from Unit 1.
⚠️ The "long run" isn't a time period: Don't think of the long run as "10 years from now" or "after the next recession." It's defined functionally: the long run begins whenever wages and prices have fully adjusted to any shock. For some industries that might take six months; for others, several years. What matters is the flexibility, not the calendar.
What Long-Run Aggregate Supply Is
Long-Run Aggregate Supply tells us how much total output the economy can produce when every input price has had time to fully adjust. The answer turns out to be straightforward: the economy produces exactly the amount determined by its real productive capacity, no more and no less, regardless of the price level.
Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS): A vertical line at the level of real GDP the economy can produce when all resources are fully employed and all prices and wages are fully flexible. This level of output is called potential GDP, often written as Yf (the "f" stands for "full employment").
The Three Names for the Same Idea
The AP exam uses several phrases that all describe the exact same level of output. Don't let the vocabulary trip you up — they're interchangeable:
- Potential GDP (Yf) — The level of real output produced at full employment.
- Full-employment output — The output level when only frictional and structural unemployment exist (recall the natural rate of unemployment from Section 2.2).
- Long-run equilibrium output — The level the economy gravitates toward over time, regardless of short-run fluctuations.
All three refer to the position of the LRAS curve. When economists say "the economy is at potential," "operating at full employment," or "in long-run equilibrium," they're describing the same thing: real GDP equals the level marked by the LRAS curve.
🔗 Connection to Unit 2: Recall from Section 2.2 that "full employment" doesn't mean zero unemployment. It means the natural rate of unemployment (frictional + structural, typically 4–5% in the U.S.) — with no cyclical unemployment. The level of GDP produced when the economy operates at that natural rate is exactly the level marked by the LRAS curve. This connection appears constantly on the AP exam and across Units 3, 4, and 5.
Why the LRAS Curve Is Vertical
The defining feature of LRAS is its shape: a vertical line. To see why, follow what happens to the economy when the price level changes and we let enough time pass for all costs to adjust.
The Step-by-Step Argument
Imagine the economy is initially producing at potential GDP, with all prices in equilibrium. Now suppose the price level rises by 10% (perhaps because of an AD increase). Walk through what happens over time:
- Step 1 (short run). Prices rise by 10%, but wages and other input costs are sticky. Firms see higher revenue with the same costs, so profit margins expand. Production rises temporarily above potential — this is the upward-sloping SRAS at work.
- Step 2 (medium run). Workers notice prices have risen. They renegotiate contracts and demand higher wages. Suppliers raise their prices too. Input costs begin catching up to the higher price level.
- Step 3 (long run). Wages and all other input costs have risen by the same 10% as the price level. Profit margins return to their original size. Firms have no incentive to produce more or less than they did before the price-level change.
- Result. Output returns to exactly the level determined by the economy's real resources (workers, capital, technology). The 10% price change had zero permanent effect on real output. That level of output is potential GDP — the same regardless of whether the price level is high or low.
The same logic works in reverse for a falling price level: temporary profit-margin squeeze in the short run, but wages and costs eventually adjust downward too, and output returns to potential.
The Key Insight
In the long run, the price level is a nominal variable — it just affects how many dollars are exchanged. Real output depends on real things: how many workers the economy has, how much capital it possesses, what technology it can use, what natural resources are available. Doubling all prices doesn't double the number of workers or invent new factories. The economy's productive capacity is unaffected.
That's why LRAS is vertical. Any change in the price level moves us up or down along the same vertical line, but output stays pinned at Yf. To change long-run output, you have to change the underlying real resources — and that's exactly what shifts the LRAS curve, which we cover next.
⚠️ Don't confuse LRAS with SRAS: SRAS slopes upward only because wages are temporarily sticky. Take that stickiness away — which is what the long run does — and the upward slope disappears entirely. LRAS being vertical isn't an arbitrary choice; it's a direct consequence of full price flexibility.
Movement Along vs. Shifts of LRAS
With AD and SRAS, the distinction between movement along and shifts of the curve was central. With LRAS, the distinction is much simpler — but still tested on the AP exam.
Movement along LRAS: Caused by a change in the price level. Because LRAS is vertical, we move up or down along the same line — but real GDP stays at Yf. Movement along LRAS only changes the price level, never output.
Shift of LRAS: Caused by a change in the economy's real productive capacity — labor, capital, technology, or natural resources. The entire vertical line moves to a new position (right for growth, left for decline).
Why This Matters
The vertical shape has a powerful implication: no demand-side policy can permanently change long-run output. The Federal Reserve printing money, Congress passing a stimulus bill, foreign trade fluctuations — all of these shift AD, which moves the economy along the LRAS line (changing the price level) but doesn't shift LRAS itself. To increase long-run output, you have to change something on the supply side: invest in workers, build more capital, advance technology, find new resources.
This is the foundation of every long-run policy debate you'll encounter in Units 4 and 5. It's also why economists distinguish so carefully between short-run stabilization (managing AD around a fixed potential) and long-run growth (shifting potential itself).
📝 AP test point: If a question asks what shifts LRAS, the answer never involves money supply, government spending, taxes, consumer confidence, or anything else that affects AD. Those move AD, not LRAS. LRAS only shifts when something real changes in the economy's productive capacity.
What Shifts LRAS: The Four Factors
Since LRAS is the economy's productive capacity, anything that changes that capacity shifts the curve. The shifters fall into four categories — and they should look familiar, because they're the four factors of production from Unit 1: labor, capital, land (natural resources), and entrepreneurship (which manifests largely through technology and innovation).
Quantity increases: Population growth, immigration, higher labor force participation, lower retirement rates.
Quality increases: Better education, more job training, improved health and life expectancy, accumulated work experience.
Direction: More or better workers → LRAS shifts right. Population decline, mass emigration, or a health crisis → LRAS shifts left.
Capital grows when: Firms invest more in machines and factories, governments build infrastructure, households save (funding investment via loanable funds — Section 4.5).
Capital shrinks when: Depreciation outpaces new investment, war or disaster destroys factories.
Direction: More capital → LRAS shifts right.
Examples: Mechanization, electrification, computers, the internet, AI, improved manufacturing processes, better management practices.
Direction: Technological progress → LRAS shifts right. (Technology rarely shifts left, but losing access to key technologies — through sanctions, war, or institutional collapse — can do so.)
Increases: Discovery of new reserves, improved extraction technology, favorable climate, opening up of new arable land.
Decreases: Depletion of finite resources, climate damage to farmland, environmental degradation.
Direction: More accessible resources → LRAS shifts right. Resource depletion → LRAS shifts left.
The LRAS Shift Visualized
Summary Table
↗️ LRAS Shifts Right (Growth)
- ↑ Population, immigration, labor force participation
- ↑ Education or worker training
- ↑ Capital stock (net investment positive)
- ↑ Technology, innovation, R&D
- Discovery of natural resources
- Improved healthcare → workers live and work longer
- Improved institutions (rule of law, property rights)
- Lower natural rate of unemployment
↙️ LRAS Shifts Left (Decline)
- ↓ Population (emigration, falling birth rates)
- Mass loss of workers (war, pandemic, brain drain)
- Net investment negative (depreciation > gross investment)
- Destruction of capital (war, disaster)
- Resource depletion
- Higher natural rate of unemployment (e.g., from chronic structural problems)
- Institutional collapse (political instability, lawlessness)
⚠️ The trap: nominal vs. real shifters. Anything that changes the price level — monetary policy, fiscal stimulus, exchange rates — affects AD, not LRAS. Anything that changes the economy's real productive capacity affects LRAS. If the question's variable could happen even with prices held fixed (more workers, new technology, destroyed factories), it shifts LRAS. If it only matters because prices respond, it affects AD instead.
LRAS, PPC, and Potential GDP: The Same Concept
Here's a payoff that ties together two units of material. The LRAS curve, the Production Possibilities Curve (PPC) from Unit 1, and "potential GDP" all describe the same economic concept — the maximum sustainable level of output the economy can produce when all resources are fully employed. They're just shown on different graphs and emphasized for different purposes.
🔗 The Three-Way Equivalence
LRAS shows potential output as a vertical line on a price level vs. real GDP graph. Useful for analyzing how output relates to prices.
PPC shows potential output as a frontier between two goods. Useful for analyzing tradeoffs and opportunity cost.
Potential GDP (Yf) is just the number itself — the dollar value of output at full employment.
The key insight: When any of these change, all three change in the same direction. A rightward LRAS shift = an outward PPC shift = a higher potential GDP. They're three views of the same underlying economic reality.
Side-by-Side Visualization
The Same Causes Move Both
Every shifter we listed for LRAS also shifts the PPC. The mapping is exact:
| If This Happens... | Then... |
|---|---|
| Population grows / immigration rises | PPC shifts outward + LRAS shifts right + potential GDP rises |
| New technology is invented | PPC shifts outward + LRAS shifts right + potential GDP rises |
| New oil reserves are discovered | PPC shifts outward + LRAS shifts right + potential GDP rises |
| A war destroys factories and infrastructure | PPC shifts inward + LRAS shifts left + potential GDP falls |
| The central bank prints more money | None of the above. This is an AD shifter — neither PPC nor LRAS responds to monetary changes alone. |
🎯 The AP-favorite test point: A question might say "the economy's PPC shifts outward — what happens to LRAS?" The answer is "LRAS shifts right by the same amount." They're describing the same thing on different graphs. Don't let the variation in framing throw you off.
Common Misconceptions
LRAS is one of the most tested topics in Unit 3, and several of its features are deeply counterintuitive. Get these straight before test day.
- "LRAS slopes upward like SRAS, just less steeply." No — LRAS is strictly vertical. The upward slope of SRAS depends entirely on sticky wages; once wages adjust fully (the long run), the slope disappears completely. Drawing LRAS as anything other than vertical will lose you points on FRQs.
- "Monetary or fiscal policy can shift LRAS." No. Monetary policy (Fed actions) and fiscal policy (government spending and taxes) shift AD, not LRAS. They affect prices and short-run output, but they don't add workers, capital, technology, or resources to the economy. Only changes to real productive capacity shift LRAS.
- "LRAS is the unemployment-equals-zero level of output." No. LRAS is the output level when the economy operates at the natural rate of unemployment (frictional + structural, typically 4–5%). Zero unemployment isn't possible — people are always between jobs and skills are always evolving. This trap was already tested heavily in Unit 2 and reappears in Unit 3.
- "Higher prices increase long-run output." No — that's the SRAS story, and it only works because wages are sticky in the short run. In the long run, every cost catches up, profit margins normalize, and output returns to potential. The price level has zero effect on long-run output. That's literally what "vertical LRAS" means.
- "LRAS and PPC are different concepts." Wrong. They're two graphical representations of the same economic reality — the maximum sustainable output of the economy. Whatever shifts one shifts the other.
- "Population growth always shifts LRAS right." Usually, but watch the context. If population growth outpaces capital accumulation, output per worker can actually fall. For the AP exam, treat population growth as a rightward LRAS shifter unless the question explicitly contrasts it with capital growth.
- "A change in AD eventually shifts LRAS." No. AD changes the price level and short-run output, but the economy self-corrects back to the same LRAS. AD shifts move along LRAS; they don't shift it. The only way to permanently raise output is to shift LRAS itself by adding to productive capacity.
- "Low real interest rates shift LRAS right." Be careful. Low rates encourage investment, which builds capital, which does shift LRAS right — but the channel is the increase in capital stock, not the rates themselves. The interest rates affect AD directly and LRAS only indirectly (and only over years).
⚡ 3.3 Quiz: 5 Questions
Click an answer to lock it in. Every option gets a full breakdown — what's right, what's wrong, and the AP-favorite trap each distractor is designed to catch.
1. The Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS) curve is vertical because:
✓ Correct answer: (C)
This is the precise long-run logic. In the long run, wages and all other input costs catch up to any price-level change. If prices rise 10%, wages eventually rise 10% too. Profit margins return to where they started, and firms have no incentive to produce above or below potential GDP. Output settles at the level determined by real productive capacity (workers, capital, technology, resources) — independent of the price level. That's why LRAS is vertical.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) Wrong premise — prices definitely change in the long run. What's special is that those price changes don't affect real output.
- (B) Too vague and circular. The real reason is the mechanism of full price/wage flexibility eliminating profit-margin advantages.
- (D) AD is downward-sloping, not vertical, in both the short run and long run. The question is about LRAS specifically.
- (E) Misreads "long run." The long run is defined as the period when all prices have had time to fully adjust — that's not "too short" for production changes, it's "long enough" for full adjustment.
🔗 Review: Re-read the "Step-by-Step Argument" in the "Why the LRAS Curve Is Vertical" section. The mechanism is what the AP wants you to name — full price/wage adjustment eliminating the SRAS profit-margin effect.
2. Which of the following would most likely shift the LRAS curve to the right?
✓ Correct answer: (D)
Worker training raises the quality of labor — a key real productive capacity. Better-skilled workers produce more output from the same hours, raising the economy's potential GDP. This is one of the four LRAS shifter categories (labor quantity/quality, capital, technology, natural resources). The other options all affect AD, not LRAS.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) Money supply increases shift AD, not LRAS. The Fed can change the price level and short-run output through monetary policy, but printing money doesn't create new workers, factories, or technology. LRAS stays put.
- (B) Fiscal stimulus shifts AD via the government purchases channel. It can raise short-run output along the SRAS curve, but it doesn't shift LRAS — there's no addition to productive capacity.
- (C) Rising consumer confidence is a classic AD shifter, working through the consumption channel (C). It doesn't change the economy's productive capacity.
- (E) A change in the price level causes movement along LRAS (which doesn't change output anyway because LRAS is vertical). It doesn't shift the curve.
🔗 Review: Look at the four factor cards (Labor, Capital, Technology, Natural Resources). Worker training falls squarely under Labor quality. Compare with the AD shifters from Section 3.1 to keep the two sets of triggers separate.
3. When the economy is operating at potential GDP (Yf), which of the following must be true?
✓ Correct answer: (A)
The LRAS curve marks the level of output where the economy operates at full employment. Recall from Section 2.2 that "full employment" means cyclical unemployment is zero, leaving only frictional and structural unemployment — which together make up the natural rate. So at potential GDP, the actual unemployment rate equals the natural rate. This is one of the most foundational connections across Units 2 and 3, and it gets tested constantly.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (B) Zero unemployment is impossible. People are always transitioning between jobs (frictional) and skills are always shifting (structural). Even at potential, unemployment is around 4–5%.
- (C) The price level can be any value at potential GDP — LRAS is vertical, so output stays at Yf regardless of where the price level sits. The price level being "zero" doesn't have economic meaning.
- (D) Frictional unemployment is always positive — workers are constantly moving between jobs in a dynamic economy. It doesn't disappear at full employment; it's part of the natural rate.
- (E) Real GDP and nominal GDP are only equal in the base year (when the deflator equals 100). Operating at potential doesn't force the deflator to equal 100. The two are independent concepts.
🔗 Review: The connection between LRAS, potential GDP, full employment, and the natural rate of unemployment links Section 2.2 to Section 3.3. Master this chain — it returns in Unit 4 (monetary policy) and Unit 5 (Phillips Curve).
4. Country X's Production Possibilities Curve (PPC) shifts outward this year due to technological advances. Which of the following also occurs?
✓ Correct answer: (C)
The PPC and LRAS represent the exact same economic concept — the maximum sustainable output the economy can produce — shown on different graphs. When the PPC shifts outward, LRAS shifts right by the corresponding amount, and potential GDP rises. This three-way equivalence (PPC, LRAS, potential GDP) is one of the most powerful connections in AP Macroeconomics, and it appears on nearly every exam.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) The PPC and LRAS are supply-side concepts. They don't directly shift AD. Technological progress might indirectly boost confidence or investment over time, but the direct effect of a PPC outward shift is on the supply side, not demand.
- (B) Technology generally raises productivity, which would shift SRAS right (lower costs per unit), not left. SRAS leftward shifts come from rising input costs or negative supply shocks.
- (D) Without knowing what's happening to AD, we can't predict the price level. A rightward LRAS shift with constant AD would lower the price level, but the question doesn't specify AD's path.
- (E) Wrong — they're literally the same concept. This is one of the unifying ideas of the course; the AP exam tests it directly.
🔗 Review: Look at the side-by-side PPC and LRAS diagrams in the "LRAS, PPC, and Potential GDP" section. The two are always synchronized — same direction, same cause, same conclusion.
5. A country experiences a severe natural disaster that destroys a large portion of its capital stock (factories, equipment, infrastructure). Holding everything else constant, what is the most likely effect on the country's LRAS in the long run?
✓ Correct answer: (B)
The capital stock is one of the four key determinants of LRAS. When a disaster destroys factories, equipment, and infrastructure, the economy's real productive capacity falls — there are physically fewer machines and buildings to produce with. LRAS shifts left, and potential GDP declines. This is one of the few situations where LRAS shifts left in real-world cases (along with wars, pandemics, and persistent net-negative investment).
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) Reconstruction effort shifts AD via increased investment spending, but it doesn't add new productive capacity beyond what existed before. At best it returns LRAS to where it was; the immediate effect of the disaster itself is leftward.
- (C) Disasters absolutely affect productive capacity. The destroyed capital is gone until rebuilt, and that takes time. "Temporary" doesn't mean LRAS is unaffected — it means the leftward shift may eventually reverse, but it happens.
- (D) LRAS is always vertical, regardless of price changes. Higher reconstruction prices don't change the shape of LRAS, only its position.
- (E) The "broken window fallacy" — destruction doesn't create real wealth. Yes, reconstruction creates jobs, but those workers are now repairing what they had instead of producing new things. Net productive capacity has fallen.
🔗 Review: Capital is one of the four LRAS shifters (along with labor, technology, and natural resources). Anything that destroys capital — disasters, wars, or sustained negative net investment — shifts LRAS left. Cross-check with the Unit 2 problem that asked about depreciation exceeding gross investment (same logic, slightly different framing).
Ready for more? Take the full Unit 3 Practice Test →
End of Section 3.3. Up next: 3.4 The AD-AS Model & Equilibrium — putting AD, SRAS, and LRAS together to find short-run and long-run equilibrium, and analyzing output gaps.