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Production

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Production
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11/16/2011
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Production

Production



an activity that creates value

Inputs for Production



raw materials, labor, land, capital, &

entrepreneurial or managerial talent.



Capital includes tools, machinery,

equipment, & physical facilities.

Production Function



Q = f(X1,X2,X3,X4,…,Xn)

where Q is the quantity of output that can

be produced with amounts of inputs,

X1,X2,X3,X4,…,Xn.

Short run



time period so short that the amounts of

some inputs can not be changed

For example, the quantity of plant & heavy

equipment can not be changed in a short

time period.

Long run



time period long enough for all inputs to be

changed

Fixed input



an input whose quantity can not be changed

in the short run

Variable input



an input whose quantity can be changed in a

short period of time

Examples: labor, raw materials

The scale of a firm’s operation is

determined by its fixed inputs.

We can look at the productivity of a variable

input given a fixed level of fixed input.

Marginal Product (MP)

of the variable input X



Discrete MP = ΔQ/ ΔX = ΔTP/ ΔX

Change in output resulting from a one-unit

change in the quantity of input



Continuous MP = dQ/dX = dTP/dX

Rate of change in total output as the usage

of the variable input increases by very

small amounts.

Graphical Interpretation of MP

The continuous MP is the slope of

Q = TP

the total product curve at a

particular point.





The discrete MP is the slope of the

line segment connecting 2 points on

the total product curve.









X

Example: Q = 21X + 9X2 – X3



X Q = TP

0 0

1 29

2 70

Example: Q = 21X + 9X2 – X3



Discrete MP

X Q = TP

ΔQ/ΔX

0 0 –

1 29 29

2 70 41

Example: Q = 21X + 9X2 – X3



Discrete MP Continuous MP

X Q = TP

ΔQ/ΔX dQ/dX =21+ 18 X – 3X2

0 0 – –

1 29 29 36

2 70 41 45

Average Product (AP)



AP = Q / X = TP / X

Amount of product per unit of input

Can be calculated for variable or fixed inputs

Example: Q = 21X + 9X2 – X3



AP = Q / X = (21X + 9X2 – X3) / X

= 21 + 9X – X2



X = 1: AP = 29

X = 2: AP = 35

Graphical Interpretation of

AP = Q / X



Q = TP The AP of a particular value

of X1 can be interpreted as

the slope of the line from the

origin to the corresponding

point on the curve.











Q1



0

 X1 → X

In this graph, we see that initially,

AP is increasing



Q = TP









0

X

and then decreasing



Q = TP









0

X

Principle of Diminishing Marginal Returns



As the amount of a variable input is

increased and combined with a specified

amount of fixed inputs, a point is

eventually reached where the resulting

increases in the quantity of output get

smaller & smaller.

In other words, as the amount of variable

input increases, eventually the MP of the

variable input falls.

Q = TP

Total Product,

Marginal Product, &

Average Product

Curves



Diminishing marginal

returns set in when

incr marg

MP returns X MP starts to fall (but

AP is still positive).

MP

The TP curve gets

AP flatter as the slope of

TP falls.





pt of dim

marg returns X

Q = TP









Diminishing average

returns set in when

AP starts to fall.

(Remember that AP

X is the slope of the

MP

AP

line from the origin to

MP the point on the TP

curve.)

AP









pt of dim X

avg returns

Q = TP









Diminishing total

returns set in when

the TP curve turns

dim total X

MP returns downward and MP

AP becomes negative.

MP



AP









marginal returns

become negative

X

Isoquant



a curve showing all possible efficient

combinations of input that are capable of

producing a certain quantity of output



(Note: iso means same, so isoquant means

same quantity)

Isoquant for 100 units of output

Quantity of capital 100 units of output can be produced in

used per unit of time many different ways including

L1 units of labor & K1 units of capital,

K1 L2 units of labor & K2 units of capital,

L3 units of labor & K3 units of capital, &

K2

L4 units of labor & K4 units of capital.





K3





K4 100







L1 L2 L3 L4 Quantity of labor

used per unit of time

Isoquants for different output levels

Quantity of capital

used per unit of time As you move in a northeasterly

direction, the amount of output

produced increases, along with

the amount of inputs used.









125



100

50



Quantity of labor

used per unit of time

If you move out from the origin along a ray with

constant slope, the input combinations have a

constant capital-labor ratio.

Quantity of capital

Each of the indicated points

used per unit of time

uses one-third as much

capital as labor.









15

140

12

8 125

5 100

50



15 24 36 45

Quantity of labor used per unit of time

It is possible for an isoquant to have

positively sloped sections.

Quantity of capital

In these sections, you’re

used per unit of time

increasing the amounts of

both inputs, but output is

not increasing, because

the marginal product of

one the inputs is negative.









Quantity of labor used per unit of time

The lines connecting the points where the isoquants

begin to slope upward are called ridge lines.



Quantity of capital

used per unit of time





ridge lines









Quantity of labor used per unit of time

No profit-maximizing firm will operate at a point

outside the ridge lines, since it can produce the

same output with less of both outputs.

Notice, for example, that

Quantity of since points A & B are on

capital used per the same isoquant, they

unit of time

produce the same

K2 B amount of output.

A

K1 However, point B is a

more expensive way to

produce since it uses

more capital & more

labor.

L1 L2 Quantity of labor used

per unit of time

Marginal rate of technical substitution

(MRTS)

The slope of the isoquant

The rate at which you can trade off inputs

and still produce the same amount of output.

For example, if you can decrease the

amount of capital by 1 unit while increasing

the amount of labor by 3 units, & still

produce the same amount of output, the

marginal rate of technical substitution is 1/3.

What is the MRTS or slope of the isoquant?

Quantity of capital Consider 2 points A & B on the same isoquant.

used per unit of Let’s divide the movement between A & B into 2 parts, from

time A to C, & from C to B.

Moving from A to C, ΔQ = (ΔQ/ΔK) ΔK .

Moving from C to B, ΔQ = (ΔQ/ΔL) ΔL .

Moving from A to B, ΔQ = (ΔQ/ΔK) ΔK + (ΔQ/ΔL) ΔL

= MPK ΔK + MPL ΔL .

KA A

Since A & B are on the same isoquant, ΔQ = 0.

So, MPK ΔK + MPL ΔL = 0 .

KB B MPK ΔK = - MPL ΔL .

C

ΔK/ΔL = - MPL/MPK



Q2 slope of

Q1 isoquant



LA LB Quantity of labor

used per unit of time

Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution

(MRTS)

or slope of an isoquant

ΔK/ΔL = - MPL/MPK

the negative of the ratio of the marginal

products of the inputs, with the input on the

horizontal axis in the numerator.

How does output respond to changes in

scale in the long run?



Three possibilities:

1. Constant returns to scale

2. Increasing returns to scale

3. Decreasing returns to scale

Constant returns to scale



Doubling inputs results in double the output.

Increasing returns to scale



Doubling inputs results in more than double

the output.

One reason this may occur is that a firm

may be able to use production techniques

that it could not use in a smaller operation.

Decreasing returns to scale



Doubling inputs results in less than double

the output.

One reason this may occur is the difficulty

in coordinating large organizations (more

paper work, red tape, etc.)

Graphs of Constant, Increasing, &

Decreasing Returns to Scale

Capital Capital Capital









150





150

150 100

100 100

50 50 50

Labor Labor Labor



Constant Returns to Increasing Returns to Decreasing Returns

Scale: isoquants for Scale: isoquants for to Scale: isoquants

output levels 50, 100, output levels 50, 100, for output levels 50,

150, etc. are evenly 150, etc. get closer & 100, 150, etc. become

spaced. closer together. more widely spaced.

Methods of estimating production functions



1. using statistical analysis of time series or

cross-sectional data.

2. based on experimentation or experience

with day-to-day operations.

A commonly used production function is the

Cobb-Douglas function



Q = AL1 K2 M3

where K is the quantity of capital, L is the quantity of

labor, & M is the quantity of raw materials. A, 1, 2, &

3 are parameters that depend on the specific case.

Also, 1, 2, & 3 are between 0 & 1.

If 1+ 2 + 3 = 1, we have constant returns to scale.

If 1+ 2 + 3 > 1, we have increasing returns to scale.

If 1+ 2 + 3 1, this production

function does have increasing returns to scale, by showing that

doubling inputs results in more than double the output.





Let Q’ be the output resulting from doubling the inputs.

Then Q’ = (A)(2L).5 (2K).2 (2M).5

= (A) (2.5 L.5) (2.2 K.2) (2.5 M.5)

= (A) (2.5) (2.2) (2.5)(L.5 K.2 M.5)

= (A) (2 .5 + .2 + .5)(L.5 K.2 M.5)

= 21.2 (A L.5 K.2 M.5)

> 2 (A L.5 K.2 M.5)  2Q

So doubling the inputs more than doubles the output.


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