Production Function
Production Function
Production Function
Stages of production
To simplify the interpretation of a production function, it is common to divide its range into 3 stages. In Stage 1 (from the origin to point B) the variable input is being used with increasing output per unit, the latter reaching a maximum at point B (since the average physical product is at its maximum at that point). Because the output per unit of the variable input is improving throughout stage 1, a price-taking firm will always operate beyond this stage. In Stage 2, output increases at a decreasing rate, and the average and marginal physical product are declining. However the average product of fixed inputs (not shown) is still rising, because output is rising while fixed input usage is constant.
Contd
In this stage, the employment of additional variable inputs increases the output per unit of fixed input but decreases the output per unit of the variable input. The optimum input/output combination for the price-taking firm will be in stage 2, although a firm facing a downward-sloped demand curve might find it most profitable to operate in Stage 1. In Stage 3, too much variable input is being used relative to the available fixed inputs: variable inputs are over-utilized in the sense that their presence on the margin obstructs the production process rather than enhancing it. The output per unit of both the fixed and the variable input declines throughout this stage. At the boundary between stage 2 and stage 3, the highest possible output is being obtained from the fixed input.
Total Product, In this example, output increases as more inputs are employed up until point A. The maximum output possible with this production function.
Average Product , If there are 10 employees working on a production process that manufactures 50 units per day, then the average product of variable labor input is 5 units per day. It can be obtained by drawing a vector from the origin to various points on the total product curve. The continuous marginal product of a variable input can be calculated as the derivative of quantity produced with respect to the variable input employed. The MPP curve obtained from the slope of the TPP.
0 1
2 3 4 5
0 2000
3000 3500 3800 3900
100
Output
Inputs
Here is a picture of the relationship between the variable input and the output in the numerical example in the above table. The curve slope gets flatter: as the variable input Increases, output increases at a decreasing rate. This is a visualization of the Law of Diminishing Returns.
Contd
Thus, we distinguish between the short run and the long run as follows: In the perspective of the short run, the number and equipment of firms operating in each industry is fixed. In the perspective of the long run, all inputs are variable and firms can come into existence or cease to exist, so the number of firms is also variable. In the long run the firm have the various choices of production function, whereas it is limited under short run.
Returns to Scale
In microeconomics, diminishing returns as a short run. In the long run, all inputs can be increased or decreased in proportion. Reductions in the marginal productivity of labor, due to increasing the labor input, can be offset by increasing the tools and equipment the workers have to work with. The returns to scale concept is an inherently long run concept. In the long run we define three possible cases:
Optimum Production
It states the amount of product by every possible combination of factors, assuming the most efficient available methods of production. The production function can thus measure the marginal productivity of a particular factor of production and determine the cheapest combination of productive factors.