1 / 26

Production Theory 1

Production Theory 1. Short-Run v. Long-Run. Fixed input/factor of production: quantity of input is fixed regardless of required output level, e.g. capital or specialized labour Variable input/factor of production: quantity of input used depends on the level of output

ludwig
Download Presentation

Production Theory 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Production Theory 1

  2. Short-Run v. Long-Run • Fixed input/factor of production: quantity of input is fixed regardless of required output level, e.g. capital or specialized labour • Variable input/factor of production: quantity of input used depends on the level of output • Short run: at least one input/factor is fixed • Long run: all inputs/factors are variable

  3. Production Function • A technology is a process by which inputs (e.g. labour and capital) are converted into output. • The output level is denoted by y. • The technology’s production function states the maximum amount of output possible from an input bundle.

  4. Production Function One input Output Level y = f(x) is the production function y’ y’ = f(x’) is the maximum output level obtainable from x’ input units. x’ x Input Level

  5. Technology Set • The collection of all feasible production plans is the technology set.

  6. Technology Set One input Output Level y = f(x) is the production function. y’ y” y” = f(x’) is an output level that is feasible from x’ input units. x’ x Input Level

  7. Technology Set One input Output Level y’ The technologyset y” x’ x Input Level

  8. Technology Set One input Output Level Technicallyefficient plans y’ The technologyset Technicallyinefficientplans y” x’ x Input Level

  9. Technology: Multiple Inputs • What does a technology look like when there is more than one input? • The two input case: Input levels are x1 and x2. Output level is y. • Example of production function is

  10. PREVIEW: ISOQUANT • An isoquant is the set of all combinations of inputs 1 and 2 that are just sufficient to produce a given amount of output. • The slope of the isoquant = the marginal rate of technical substitution (MRTS) = the technical rate of substitution (TRS) • MRTS (TRS): The number of units of K that we can dispose of if one more unit of L becomes available while remaining on the original isoquant.

  11. Technologies with Multiple Inputs • The complete collection of isoquants is the isoquant map. • The isoquant map is equivalent to the production function. • Example

  12. Isoquants with Two Inputs K Y=40 Y=20 L

  13. Isoquants with Two Inputs • Properties Y/K>0, Y/L>0 2Y/K2<0, 2Y/L2<0 Diminishing marginal product (Diminishing marginal utility)

  14. Cobb-Douglas Technology x2 All isoquants are hyperbolic,asymptoting to, but nevertouching any axis. x1

  15. Marginal (Physical) Product • The marginal product of input i is the rate-of-change of the output level as the level of input i changes, holding all other input levels fixed.

  16. Marginal (Physical) Product then the marginal product of input 1 is

  17. Marginal (Physical) Product then the marginal product of input 1 is

  18. Marginal (Physical) Product then the marginal product of input 1 is and the marginal product of input 2 is

  19. Marginal (Physical) Product then the marginal product of input 1 is and the marginal product of input 2 is

  20. Marginal (Physical) Product • The marginal product of input i is diminishing if it becomes smaller as the level of input i increases. That is, if

  21. Technical Rate-of-Substitution The slope is the rate at which input 2 must be given up as input 1’s level is increased so as not to change the output level. The slope of an isoquant is its technical rate-of-substitution. x2 yº100 x1

  22. Technical Rate-of-Substitution • How is a technical rate-of-substitution computed?

  23. Technical Rate-of-Substitution • How is a technical rate-of-substitution computed? • The production function is • A small change (dx1, dx2) in the input bundle causes a change to the output level of

  24. Technical Rate-of-Substitution Along an individual isoquant, dy = 0, therefore the changes dx1 and dx2 must satisfy the following,

  25. Technical Rate-of-Substitution which rearranges to or

  26. Technical Rate-of-Substitution is the rate at which input 2 must be givenup as input 1 increases so as to keepthe output level constant. It is the slopeof the isoquant = MRTS = TRS.

More Related