Lecture 5 Production
Lecture 5 Production
always easy!
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LECTURE 5
THE PRODUCER THEORY:
PRODUCTION
Semester 1
LECTURE OUTLINE
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Recall from lecture 3.
Consumer behaviour is best understood in three distinct steps:
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The Production Decisions of a Firm
The production decisions of firms can be understood in three steps:
1. Production Technology: How inputs (such as labor, capital, and raw
materials) can be transformed into outputs.
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Firms and Their Production Decisions
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Firms and Their Production Decisions
Production function Function showing the highest output that a firm
can produce for every specified combination of inputs.
q = F (K, L) (6.1)
𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐧𝐠𝐞 𝐢𝐧 𝐎𝐮𝐭𝐩𝐮𝐭 ∆𝐪
Marginal Product of Labor = =
𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐧𝐠𝐞 𝐢𝐧 𝐋𝐚𝐛𝐨𝐫 𝐈𝐧𝐩𝐮𝐭 ∆𝐋
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Table 6.1. Production with One Variable Input (Labor)
AVERAGE MARGINAL
AMOUNT OF AMOUNT OF TOTAL
PRODUCT PRODUCT
LABOR (L) CAPITAL (K) OUTPUT (q)
(q/L) (∆q/∆L)
0 10 0 — —
1 10 15 15 15
2 10 40 20 25
3 10 69 23 29
4 10 96 24 27
5 10 120 24 24
6 10 138 23 18
7 10 147 21 9
8 10 152 19 5
9 10 153 17 1
10 10 150 15 -3
11 10 143 13 -7
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Table 6.1. Production with One Variable Input (Labor)
FIGURE 6.1
PRODUCTION WITH ONE VARIABLE
INPUT
The total output curve in (a) shows the
output produced for different amounts of
labor input.
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13
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14
1. Lower Wages
3. More flexibility
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The effect of technological improvement
FIGURE 6.2
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Isoquants
Isoquants: Curve showing all possible
combinations of inputs that yield the same output.
ISOQUANT MAPS
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Production with Two Variable Inputs
FIGURE 6.5
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Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution (MRTS)
∆𝐾
MRTS = - ;
∆L
(6.2)
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Diminishing MRTS
(6.2)
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MRTS
FIGURE 6.6
Like indifference curves, isoquants
are downward sloping and convex.
The slope of the isoquant at any point
measures the marginal rate of
technical substitution—the ability of
the firm to replace capital with labor
while maintaining the same level of
output.
On isoquant q2, the MRTS falls from
2 to 1 to 2/3 to 1/3.
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Isoquants when inputs are perfect substitutes
FIGURE 6.7
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Fixed-proportions production function
FIGURE 6.8
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Returns to Scale
returns to scale Rate at which output increases as inputs are increased proportionately.
increasing returns to scale Situation in which output more than doubles when all inputs
are doubled.
constant returns to scale Situation in which output doubles when all inputs are doubled.
decreasing returns to scale Situation in which output less than doubles when all inputs
are doubled.
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Returns to Scale
FIGURE 6.10 RETURNS TO SCALE
When a firm’s production process exhibits However, when there are increasing returns
constant returns to scale as shown by a to scale as shown in (b), the isoquants move
movement along line 0A in part (a), the closer together as inputs are increased along
isoquants are equally spaced as output the line.
increases proportionally.
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Suggested Reading
• For this lecture
• Pindyck & Rubinfeld (2015). “Microeconomics”, 8th edition. Chapter 6.
Alternatively
• Perloff, J.M. "Microeconomics", 5th edition, Chapters 6-7
• Rittenberg & Tregarthen (2009). "Principles of Microeconomics".
Chapter 8
• Or, any Microeconomics textbook, sections on preferences, production
function
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