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Production Function

The document discusses production functions which represent the transformation of inputs into outputs. It defines key concepts like technical efficiency, provides examples of mathematical representations, and describes characteristics of production functions including isoquants and returns to scale.

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Shyam Budhwar
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views

Production Function

The document discusses production functions which represent the transformation of inputs into outputs. It defines key concepts like technical efficiency, provides examples of mathematical representations, and describes characteristics of production functions including isoquants and returns to scale.

Uploaded by

Shyam Budhwar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 34

Production Functions (PF)

Outline

1. Definition

2. Technical Efficiency

3. Mathematical Representation

4. Characteristics

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 1 of 34
Production Function - Basic Model
for Modeling Engineering Systems
 Definition:
— Represents technically efficient transform of
physical resources X = (X1…Xn) into product
or outputs Y (may be good or bad)

 Example:
— Use of aircraft, pilots, fuel (the X factors)
to carry cargo, passengers and create
pollution (the Y)

 Typical focus on 1-dimensional output

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 2 of 34
Technical Efficiency
 A Process is Technically Efficient if it
provides Maximum product from a given
set of resources X = X1 , ... Xn
 Graph: Max

Feasible Note
Output Region

Resource

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 3 of 34
Mathematical Representation -- General
 Two Possibilities
 Deductive -- Economic
— Standard economic analysis
— Fit data to convenient equation
c
— Advantage - ease of use o
n
— Disadvantage - poor accuracy t
r
 Inductive -- Engineering a
s
— Create system model from knowledge of details t
— Advantage - accuracy
— Disadvantage - careful technical analysis needed

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 4 of 34
Mathematical Representation -- Deductive

 Standard Cobb-Douglas Production Function Y


= a0 Xiai = a0X1a1 ... Xnan [  means multiplication]
— Interpretation: ‘ai’ are physically significant
— Easy estimation by linear least squares

log Y = a0 + ai log Xi


 Translog PF -- more recent, less common
— log Y = a0 + ai log Xi + aij log Xi log Xj

— Allows for interactive effects


— More subtle, more realistic

 Economist models (no technical knowledge)


Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 5 of 34
PF Example
 One of the advantage of the “economist”
models is that they make calculations easy.
This is good for examples, even if not as
realistic as Technical Cost Models (next)

 Thus: Output = 2 M 0.4 N 0.8

 Let’s see what this looks like...

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 6 of 34
PF Example -- Calculation

M N Output
N VARIABLE
10 10 31.70 0 5 10 15 20
0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
M 10 0.00 18.21 31.70 43.84 55.19
20 0.00 24.02 41.83 57.85 72.82
VARIABLE 30 0.00 28.25 49.19 68.04 85.65
40 0.00 31.70 55.19 76.34 96.09
50 0.00 34.66 60.34 83.46 105.06

The formula in Excel to calculate the output is: = 2((power(b7,0.4))*(power(c7,0.8))

We calculate ouput for many values of the variables using a 2-way Data Table

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 7 of 34
PF Example -- Graphs

150.00

100.00
OUTPUT
50.00
S4
0.00 N
1 S1 VARIABLE
2 3 4 5 6
M VARIABLE

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 8 of 34
PF Example -- Graphs

150.00

100.00
OUTPUT
50.00
S4 M
0.00 VARIABLE
S1
1 2 3 4 5
N VARIABLE

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 9 of 34
Mathematical Representation -- Inductive
 “Engineering models” of PF
 Analytic expressions
— Rarely applicable: manufacturing is inherently
discontinuous
— Exceptions: process exists in force field,

for example transport in fluid, river


 Detailed simulation, Technical Cost Model
— Generally applicable
— Requires research, data, effort

— Wave of future -- not yet standard practice

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 10 of 34
Cooling Time, Part Weight, Cycle Time
Correlation (MIT MSL, Dr.Field)

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 11 of 34
PF: Characteristics
 Isoquants

 Marginal Products

 Marginal Rates of Substitution

 Returns to Scale

 Possible Convexity of Feasible Region

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 12 of 34
Characteristic: Isoquants
 Isoquant is the Locus (contour) of equal
product on production function

 Graph: Y
Production
Function
Surface
Xj
Isoquant

Projection

Xi

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 13 of 34
Important Implication of Isoquants
 Many designs are technically efficient
— All points on isoquant are technically efficient
— no technical basis for choice among them

— Example:

* little land, much steel => tall building


* more land, less steel => low building

 Best System Design depends on Economics


 Values are decisive

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 14 of 34
Isoquant Example -- Calculation

For any given output, we can M for OUTPUT= 20


calculate the M value as a
function of the N value. Thus: c7=10 3.16
for output = 20, the formula is: 3 35.14
5 12.65
= power(10,2.50 / (power(c7,2) 7 6.45
9 3.90
A 1-way data table calculates 11 2.61
the (M,N) combinations that 13 1.87
constitute the isoquant 15 1.41

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 15 of 34
Isoquant Example -- Graph

40.00
35.00 35.14
N VARIABLE

30.00
25.00
20.00
15.00
12.65
10.00
5.00 6.45
3.90 2.61 1.87 1.41
0.00
3 5 7 9 11 13 15
M VARIABLE

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 16 of 34
Characteristic: Marginal Products
 Marginal Product is the change in output
as only one resource changes

MPi = Y/ Xi

 Graph:
MPi

Xi

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 17 of 34
Diminishing Marginal Products
 Math:
Y = a0X1a1 ... Xiai ...Xnan
Y/ Xi = (ai/Xi)Y = f (Xiai-1)
Diminishing Marginal Product if ai < 1.0

 “Law” of Diminishing Marginal Products


— Commonly observed -- but not necessary
— “Critical Mass” phenomenon => increasing

marginal products

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 18 of 34
MP Example -- Calculations

MARGINAL PRODUCT FOR M


The formula for the marginal product is
(FOR N = 12.65)
= (0.4/b7)*(2)*(power(b7,0.4))*power(12.65,0,8)
C7=10 1.53
3 3.15
Note that the Marginal Product is conditional on the
5 2.32
change in only one variable (in this case M). All
7 1.90
other variables are fixed (in this case N=12.65).
9 1.63
11 1.45
Obviously, the Marginal Product depends on the
13 1.31
"cut" of the production function you take.
15 1.20

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 19 of 34
MP Example -- Graph
MARGINAL PRODUCT FOR

3.50
3.00
2.50
2.00
M

1.50
1.00
0.50
0.00
3 5 7 9 11 13 15
M VARIABLE

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 20 of 34
Characteristic:
Marginal Rate of Substitution
 Marginal Rate of Substitution is the Rate
at which one resource must substitute for
another so that product is constant
 Graph:
Xj
Xi

Xj
Isoquant

Xi

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 21 of 34
Marginal Rate of Substitution (cont’d)
 Math:
since XIMPI + XJMPJ = 0
(no change in product)
then MRSIJ = XJ/XI
= - MPI / MPJ = - [(aI/ XI) Y] / [(aJ/ XJ ) Y]
= - (aI/aJ) (XJ/XI )

 MRS is “slope” of isoquant


— It is negative
— Loss in 1 dimension made up by gain in other
Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 22 of 34
MRS Example

 For our example PF: Output = 2 M 0.4 N 0.8

 aM = 0.4 ; aN = 0.8

 At a specific point, say M = 5, N = 12.65

 MRS = - (0.4 / 0.8) (12.65 / 5) = - 1.265

 At that point, it takes ~ 5/4 times as much M


as N to get the same change in output
Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 23 of 34
Characteristic: Returns to Scale
 Returns to Scale is the Ratio of rate of
change in Y to rate of change in ALL X
(each Xi changes by same factor)
 Graph:
— Directions in which the rate of change in
output is measured for MP and RTS
Xj
RTS – along a ray from origin
MPj

MPi

Xi
Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 24 of 34
Returns to Scale (cont’d)
 Math:
Y’ = a0 X i
ai

Y’’ = a  (sX )
 i
ai = Y’(s)a all inputs increase by s

RTS = (Y”/Y’)/s = s(ai - 1)

Y”/Y’ = % increase in Y

if Y”/Y’ > s => Increasing RTS

Increasing returns to scale (IRTS) if ai > 1.0


Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 25 of 34
Increasing RTS Example
 The PF is: Output = 2 M 0.4 N 0.8
— Thus ai = 0.4 + 0.8 = 1.2 > 1.0
— So the PF has Increasing Returns to Scale

— Compare outputs for (5,10), (10,20), (20,40)

N VARIABLE
10 31.70 0 5 10 15 20
0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
M 10 0.00 18.21 31.70 43.84 55.19
20 0.00 24.02 41.83 57.85 72.82
VARIABLE 30 0.00 28.25 49.19 68.04 85.65
40 0.00 31.70 55.19 76.34 96.09
50 0.00 34.66 60.34 83.46 105.06

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 26 of 34
Importance of Increasing RTS
 Increasing RTS means that bigger units
are more productive than small ones

 IRTS => concentration of production


into larger units

 Examples:
— Generation of Electric power
— Chemical, pharmaceutical processes

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 27 of 34
Practical Occurrence of IRTS
 Frequent!
 Generally where
* Product = f (volume) and
* Resources = f (surface)
 Example:
* ships, aircraft, rockets
* pipelines, cables
* chemical plants
* etc.

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 28 of 34
Characteristic: Convexity of
Feasible Region
 A region is convex if it has no “reentrant”
corners

 Graph:

CONVEX NOT CONVEX

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 29 of 34
Informal Test for Convexity of
Feasible Region (cont’d)
 Math: If A, B are two vectors to any 2
points in region

Convex if all
T = KA + (1-K)B 0 K 1
entirely in region

Origin 

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 30 of 34
Convexity of Feasible Region for
Production Function
 Feasible region of Production function is
convex if no reentrant corners
Y Y

Non-
Convex Convex

X X

 Convexity => Easier Optimization


— by linear programming (discussed later)

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 31 of 34
Test for Convexity of Feasible
Region of Production Function
 Test for Convexity: Given A,B on PF
If T = KA + (1-K)B 0  K  1
Convex if all T in region
B
Y Y
B

A T
T
A
X X
 For Cobb-Douglas, the test is if:
all ai  1.0 and ai  1.0
Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 32 of 34
Convexity Test Example

 Example PF has Diminishing MP, so in the


MP direction it looks like left side
 But: it has IRTS, like bottom of right side
 Feasible Region is not convex

B
Y Y
B

A T
T
A
X X

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 33 of 34
Summary
 Production models are the way to
describe technically efficient systems

 Important characteristics
— Isoquants, Marginal products, Marginal rates
of Substitution, Returns to scale, possible
convexity

 Two ways to represent


— Economist formulas
— Technical models (generally more accurate)

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville ©


Massachusetts Institute of Technology Production Function Slide 34 of 34

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