ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY AS A DETERMINANT OF DISTRIBUTION 81 be that postulated by the bargain theorists is represented in Figure 1; namely, a straight line perpendicular to the base and parallel to the price axis. Here the supply will be the same, irrespective of whether the price is P, Py, P,, ete. Figure 2 represents a supply curve of infinite elasticity which was posu- lated by the Malthusians for labor and by the later members of the classical school for capital. This, with some modifications,’ represents Taussig’s con- cept of the supply curve for capital. A virtually unlimited number of the units of a given factor will be produced at the return P. It is thus identical with production under constant cost. If the rate of return rises above P, the supply will expand almost indefinitely until the in- crease of that factor may bring the return to this factor back to its original point P. Similarly, if the return should fall below P, then the supply would dwindle away to almost nothing, being checked only by the fact that so rapid a decrease would cause its unit return to rise and when it had reached P, the contraction would cease. We should also note the difference between positive and nega- tive supply curves which are shown in Figure 3. With a posi- D ! Taussig’s assumed curve permits of a fraction of the total supply being saved at less than the broad margin.