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Production

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Sole proprietorships are firms owned and run by a single individual. ... Capital (K) - long-lived inputs. ... MRTSLK decreases as we increase L and decrease K ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Production


1
Production
  • ECO61 Microeconomic Analysis
  • Udayan Roy
  • Fall 2008

2
What is a firm?
  • A firm is an organization that converts inputs
    such as labor, materials, energy, and capital
    into outputs, the goods and services that it
    sells.
  • Sole proprietorships are firms owned and run by a
    single individual.
  • Partnerships are businesses jointly owned and
    controlled by two or more people.
  • Corporations are owned by shareholders in
    proportion to the numbers of shares of stock they
    hold.

3
What Owners Want?
  • Main assumption firms owners try to maximize
    profit
  • Profit (p) is the difference between revenues, R,
    and costs, C
  • p R C

4
What are the categories of inputs?
  • Capital (K) - long-lived inputs.
  • land, buildings (factories, stores), and
    equipment (machines, trucks)
  • Labor (L) - human services
  • managers, skilled workers (architects,
    economists, engineers, plumbers), and
    less-skilled workers (custodians, construction
    laborers, assembly-line workers)
  • Materials (M) - raw goods (oil, water, wheat)
    and processed products (aluminum, plastic, paper,
    steel)

5
How firms combine the inputs?
  • Production function is the relationship between
    the quantities of inputs used and the maximum
    quantity of output that can be produced, given
    current knowledge about technology and
    organization

6
Production Function
  • Production
  • Function
  • q f(L, K)

Output q
Inputs (L, K)
  • Formally,
  • q f(L, K)
  • where q units of output are produced using L
    units of labor services and K units of capital
    (the number of conveyor belts).

7
The production function may simply be a table of
numbers
8
The production function may be an algebraic
formula
Just plug in numbers for L and K to get Q.
9
Marginal Product of Labor
  • Marginal product of labor (MPL ) - the change in
    total output, DQ, resulting from using an extra
    unit of labor, DL, holding other factors constant

10
Average Product of Labor
  • Average product of labor (APL ) - the ratio of
    output, Q, to the number of workers, L, used to
    produce that output

11
Production with Two Variable Inputs
  • When a firm has more than one variable input it
    can produce a given amount of output with many
    different combinations of inputs
  • E.g., by substituting K for L

7-11
12
Isoquants
  • An isoquant identifies all input combinations
    (bundles) that efficiently produce a given level
    of output
  • Note the close similarity to indifference curves
  • Can think of isoquants as contour lines for the
    hill created by the production function

7-12
13
Family of Isoquants
y
a
a
6
, Units of capital per d
The production function above yields the
isoquants on the left.
K
b
3
f
c
e
2
d
1
6
3
2
1
0
L
,
W
o
r
k
ers per d
a
y
14
Figure 7.8 Isoquant Example
Productive Inputs Principle Increasing the
amounts of all inputs increases the amount of
output. So, an isoquant must be negatively sloped
7-14
15
Properties of Isoquants
  • Isoquants are thin
  • Do not slope upward
  • Two isoquants do not cross
  • Higher-output isoquants lie farther from the
    origin

7-15
16
Figure 7.10 Properties of Isoquants
7-16
17
Figure 7.10 Properties of Isoquants
7-17
18
Substitution Between Inputs
  • Rate that one input can be substituted for
    another is an important factor for managers in
    choosing best mix of inputs
  • Shape of isoquant captures information about
    input substitution
  • Points on an isoquant have same output but
    different input mix
  • Rate of substitution for labor with capital is
    equal to negative the slope

7-18
19
Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution
  • Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution for labor
    with capital (MRTSLK) the amount of capital
    needed to replace labor while keeping output
    unchanged, per unit of replaced labor
  • Let ?K be the amount of capital that can replace
    ?L units of labor in a way such that total output
    ? Q F(L,K) ? is unchanged.
  • Then, MRTSLK - ?K / ?L, and
  • ?K / ?L is the slope of the isoquant at the
    pre-change inputs bundle.
  • Therefore, MRTSLK - slope of the isoquant

20
Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution
  • marginal rate of technical substitution (MRTS) -
    the number of extra units of one input needed to
    replace one unit of another input that enables a
    firm to keep the amount of output it produces
    constant

Slope of Isoquant!
21
How the Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution
Varies Along an Isoquant
M
R
TS
in a P
r
inting and Pu
b
lishing
U
.
S
.
Fi
r
m
y
a
a
16
, Units of capital per d
b
10
K
3
c
1
7
d
2
1
5
e
1
4
1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
L
,
W
o
r
k
ers per d
a
y
22
Substitutability of Inputs and Marginal Products.
  • Along an isoquant output doesnt change (Dq 0),
    or
  • (MPL x ?L) (MPK x ?K) 0.
  • or

Extra units of labor
Extra units of capital
Increase in q per extra unit of labor
Increase in q per extra unit of capital
23
Figure 7.12 MRTS
7-23
24
MRTS and Marginal Product
  • Recall the relationship between MRS and marginal
    utility
  • Parallel relationship exists between MRTS and
    marginal product
  • The more productive labor is relative to capital,
    the more capital we must add to make up for any
    reduction in labor the larger the MRTS

7-24
25
Figure 7.13 Declining MRTS
  • We often assume that MRTSLK decreases as we
    increase L and decrease K
  • Why is this a reasonable assumption?

7-25
26
Extreme Production Technologies
  • Two inputs are perfect substitutes if their
    functions are identical
  • Firm is able to exchange one for another at a
    fixed rate
  • Each isoquant is a straight line, constant MRTS
  • Two inputs are perfect complements when
  • They must be used in fixed proportions
  • Isoquants are L-shaped

7-26
27
Substitutability of Inputs
28
Substitutability of Inputs
29
Returns to Scale
7-29
30
Figure 7.17 Returns to Scale
7-30
31
Returns to Scale
  • Constant returns to scale (CRS) - property of a
    production function whereby when all inputs are
    increased by a certain percentage, output
    increases by that same percentage.
  • f(2L, 2K) 2f(L, K).

32
Returns to Scale (cont).
  • Increasing returns to scale (IRS) - property of a
    production function whereby output rises more
    than in proportion to an equal increase in all
    inputs
  • f(2L, 2K) gt 2f(L, K).

33
Returns to Scale (cont).
  • Decreasing returns to scale (DRS) - property of a
    production function whereby output increases less
    than in proportion to an equal percentage
    increase in all inputs
  • f(2L, 2K) lt 2f(L, K).

34
Productivity Differences and Technological Change
  • A firm is more productive or has higher
    productivity when it can produce more output use
    the same amount of inputs
  • Its production function shifts upward at each
    combination of inputs
  • May be either general change in productivity of
    specifically linked to use of one input
  • Productivity improvement that leaves MRTS
    unchanged is factor-neutral

7-34
35
The Cobb-Douglas Production Function
  • It one is the most popular estimated functions.
  • q ALaKb

36
Cobb-Douglas Production Function
  • A shows firms general productivity level
  • a and b affect relative productivities of labor
    and capital
  • Substitution between inputs

7-36
37
Figure 7.16 Cobb-Douglas Production Function
7-37
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