Any supply curve.You are referring to the supply curve as it relates to production, of course.
Are you serious?That doesn't change the definition of supply itself, which is much broader in scope, and happens to encompass production, or the fact that supply curves are also used for land, whether developed or undeveloped lands as factors of production, to wit:
http://www.wcrer.wsu.edu/resource materials/ResearchSummaries/clarkgma01_execsum.pdf
They aren't land supply curves. You obviously can't even be bothered reading the crap you provide as "sources," let alone understanding it.![]()
Figure 1 shows how the land supply curve becomes steeper as the quantity of developed
land in a market (QD) expands toward the UGB supply constraint (QT). This means that we
expect land supply to become more and more price inelastic over time as development
occurs within a constrained geography. Greater supply price inelasticity means that land
price can be expected to grow at an accelerating rate even though the need for developed
land may only grow at a constant rate. This effect is illustrated in figure 2.
![]()
Like dead artists' works, land area is finite and cannot be produced. If supply is fixed to mean the aggregate total in existence (the maximum quantity possible), why are these Land Supply curves NOT vertical?
Like the works of dead artists. Which are a canonical example of fixed supply.In theory it is often argued that the supply curve would TEND to go vertical, but only as available land is exhausted (or artificially constrained). However, it is erroneous to suggest that the aggregate quantity of land in existence is equal to the "supply", which is PRECISELY what you are claiming - and only by virtue of the fact that it cannot be produced, while completely ignoring the fact that PRODUCTION is only a means by which something NEWLY PRODUCED can be made available as supply, and can then CIRCULATE in the case of a non-perishable, non-consumable good which can then enter an re-enter a supply curve many times.
Yes, it does, as oranges and presumably widgets can be produced.It does not matter whether you are talking about oranges, widgets, works of dead artists, or land.
No, it is not.At all times supply is still defined as "the quantity an owner is willing to make available at a given supply price (or range of all possible prices)"
Evidence? Of course not.-- NOT THE AGGREGATE TOTAL IN EXISTENCE, given that some quantities CAN AND ARE excluded from being made available by owners at any price.
Garbage.If a thing is withheld from the market (by any mechanism and for any reason such that the owner is unwilling to make a quantity or area available at any price), it doesn't matter whether the total quantity in existence is fixed - it is still NOT SUPPLY, which will always be some quantity less the total quantity in existence.
Yes, it does, because whatever the price, that is what it sells for. You still haven't really understood that.Take the case of gold, and say, hypothetically, that we had finally mined/exhausted all gold available on or in the Earth. No more mining will produce even one more ounce of gold. The total quantity in existence is now fixed, but NOT the total supply that now circulates - which is ONLY defined as the quantity owners are willing to make available at a given price, or range of all possible prices in the case of a supply curve, at a given period of time. The fact that they cannot affect the MAXIMUM TOTAL EXTANT (or maximum possible available for sale) does NOT mean they cannot affect the maximum total that IS available for sale at a given price at a given time.