88 ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK
tend to increase in any such ratio and if its supply remained
constant, then the produce jointly attributable to labor and
capital would decrease. Within this joint product, the relative
productivity of these two factors would be the same but their
absolute shares would shrink and this would bring the unit return
for each down toward the P; and P points which originally
prevailed.
Secondly, it is of course virtually inconceivable that the supply
curves of two factors or even of one would be thus infinitely
elastic. The natural forces of resistance to labor and to saving
would tend to cause them to turn upward after a time. And
when this happened the approach to an equilibrium would be
hastened. Irrespective of changes in marginal productivity, the
upward movement of the supply curves would at some time inter-
cept the new returns. This would be hastened, of course, by the
failure of a third factor to expand commensurately and would
be complicated, as we
shall see, if the upward
tilt of the supply curve of
either X or Y began
earlier or sloped more
sharply than that of the
other factor.
A third illustration
which may be chosen is
that where both elastic-
ities are equal. In Figure
8, both X and Y are given
unit positive elasticity
and are given a common
point of origin. They are
both therefore represented
by the curve of S in which the quantity A is offered for the
return P.
A word should be added here concerning the scale on which
quantities of two differing factors are drawn, since it may well be
asked how it is possible to represent hours of labor and physical
units of capital upon the same scale. The author makes no effort
to prove, as Cairnes sought to do, that both factors can be
reduced to common and commensurate units of disutility, for each
F1ag. 8