Chap 7
Chap 7
Chap 7
Chapter 7
Managers must decide not only what to produce for the market, but also how to produce it in the most efficient or least cost manner. Economics offers widely accepted tools for judging whether the production choices are least cost. A production function relates the most that can be produced from a given set of inputs.
Production functions allow measures of the marginal product of each input.
2008 Thomson * South-Western Slide 1
Q = a K b1 L b2
is a Cobb-Douglas Production Function The number of inputs is often larger than just K & L. But economists simplify by suggesting some, like materials or labor, is variable, whereas plant and equipment is fairly fixed in the short run.
Slide 2
VARIABLE IN SR
_
A Production Function is has only one variable input, labor, is easily analyzed. The one variable input is labor, L.
Slide 3
Average Product = Q / L
output per labor
Marginal Product =Q / L = dQ / dL
output attributable to last unit of labor applied
Similar to profit functions, the Peak of MP occurs before the Peak of average product When MP = AP, were at the peak of the AP curve
Slide 4
Q
0 20 46 70 92 110
MP
--20 26 24 22 18
AP --20 23 23.33 23 22
1 2 3
Average Product
Labor Elasticity is greater then one, for labor use up through L = 3 units
5
Slide 5
Slide 6
Stage 3
SL
W DL D L
L L
Slide 10
MP of labor declines as more labor is applied. Also the MP of capital declines as more capital is applied.
Slide 11
ISOQUANT MAP
B A
Q3
Q2
Q1
L
Slide 12
MPL/CL = MPK/CK
where marginal products per dollar are equal Figure 7.15 on page 276 at D, slope of isocost = slope of isoquant
C(1)
Q(1)
Slide 13
people
5 4 M
3
2 1
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
computers
Slide 15
D T Q(1) Q(0)
Slide 16
If multiplying all inputs by (lambda) increases the dependent variable by,the firm has constant returns to scale (CRS).
Q = f ( K, L) So, f(K, L) = Q is Constant Returns to Scale Also, if 10% more all inputs leads to 10% more output the firm is constant returns to scale.
Returns to Scale
Problem
Again Suppose:
1. What is the production elasticity of capital? 2. What is the production elasticity of labor? 3. What happens to Q, if L increases 5% and capital is cut 10%?
Answers: 1. .35; 2. .70; 3. %Q = EL %L+ EK %K = .7(+5%) + .35(-10%) = 3.5% -3.5% = 0%. Note that this may reduce
costs without reducing output.
Slide 20