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of changes in the demand for it have to be given if it is to offer its maximum elasticity of
employment. Obviously consumption-goods, taken as a whole, have in this sense the longest period
of production, since of every productive process they constitute the last stage. Thus if the first
impulse towards the increase in effective demand comes from an increase in consumption, the
initial elasticity of employment will be further below its eventual equilibrium-level than if the
impulse comes from an increase in investment. Moreover, if the increased demand is directed to
products with a relatively low elasticity of employment, a larger proportion of it will go to swell the
incomes of entrepreneurs and a smaller proportion to swell the incomes of wage-earners and other
prime-cost factors; with the possible result that the repercussions may be somewhat less favourable
to expenditure, owing to the likelihood of entrepreneurs saving more of their increment of income
than wage-earners would. Nevertheless the distinction between the two cases must not be over-
stated, since a large part of the reactions will be much the same in both.
However long the notice given to entrepreneurs of a prospective change in demand, it is not
possible for the initial elasticity of employment, in response to a
given
increase of investment, to be
as great as its eventual equilibrium value, unless there are surplus stocks and surplus capacity at
every stage of production. On the other hand, the depletion of the surplus stocks will have an
offsetting effect on the amount by which investment increases. If we suppose that there are initially
some surpluses at every point, the initial elasticity of employment may approximate to unity; then
after the stocks have been absorbed, but before an increased supply is coming forward at an
adequate rate from the earlier stages of production, the elasticity will fall away; rising again towards
unity as the new position of equilibrium is approached. This is subject, however, to some
qualification in so far as there are rent factors which absorb more expenditure as employment
increases, or if the rate of interest increases. For these reasons perfect stability of prices is
impossible in an economy subject to change—unless, indeed, there is some peculiar mechanism
which ensures temporary fluctuations of just the right degree in the propensity to consume. But
price-instability arising in this way does not lead to the kind of profit stimulus which is liable to
bring into existence excess capacity. For the windfall gain will wholly accrue to those entrepreneurs
who happen to possess products at a relatively advanced stage of production, and there is nothing
which the entrepreneur, who does not possess specialised resources of the right kind, can do to
attract this gain to himself. Thus the inevitable price-instability due to change cannot affect the
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