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of a given grade of labourers is uniform irrespective of the efficiency of the individuals, we shall
have rising labour-costs, irrespective of the efficiency of the equipment. Moreover, if equipment is
non-homogeneous and some part of it involves a greater prime cost per unit of output, we shall have
increasing marginal prime costs over and above any increase due to increasing labour-costs.
Hence, in general, supply price will increase as output from a given equipment is increased. Thus
increasing output will be associated with rising prices, apart from any change in the wage-unit.
(3) Under (2) we have been contemplating the possibility of supply being imperfectly elastic. If
there is a perfect balance in the respective quantities of specialised unemployed resources, the point
of full employment will be reached for all of them simultaneously. But, in general, the demand for
some services and commodities will reach a level beyond which their supply is, for the time being,
perfectly inelastic, whilst in other directions there is still a substantial surplus of resources without
employment. Thus as output increases, a series of 'bottle-necks' will be successively reached, where
the supply of particular commodities ceases to be elastic and their prices have to rise to whatever
level is necessary to divert demand into other directions.
It is probable that the general level of prices will not rise very much as output increases, so long as
there are available efficient unemployed resources of every type. But as soon as output has
increased sufficiently to begin to reach the 'bottle-necks', there is likely to be a sharp rise in the
prices of certain commodities.
Under this heading, however, as also under heading (2), the elasticity of supply partly depends on
the elapse of time. If we assume a sufficient interval for the quantity of equipment itself to change,
the elasticities of supply will be decidedly greater eventually. Thus a moderate change in effective
demand, coming on a situation where there is widespread unemployment, may spend itself very
little in raising prices and mainly in increasing employment; whilst a larger change, which, being
unforeseen, causes some temporary 'bottle-necks' to be reached, will spend itself in raising prices, as
distinct from employment, to a greater extent at first than subsequently.
(4) That the wage-unit may tend to rise before full employment has been reached, requires little
comment or explanation. Since each group of workers will gain,
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