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Managerial Economics:: Production Theory

Lecture on Macro Economic

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
148 views44 pages

Managerial Economics:: Production Theory

Lecture on Macro Economic

Uploaded by

Phong Vũ
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS:

THEORY, APPLICATIONS, AND CASES


W. Bruce Allen | Keith Weigelt | Neil Doherty | Edwin Mansfield

CHAPTER 4

Production Theory
OBJECTIVES
• Explain how managers should
determine the optimal method of
production by applying an
understanding of production processes
• Understand the linkages between
production processes and costs
PRODUCTION PROCESSES
• Production processes include all
activities associated with providing
goods and services, including
• Employment practices
• Acquisition of capital resources
• Product distribution
• Managing intellectual resources
PRODUCTION PROCESSES
• Production processes define the
relationships between resources used
and goods and services produced per
time period.
• Managers exert control over production
costs by understanding and managing
production technology.
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
WITH ONE VARIABLE INPUT
• A production function shows the
maximum amount that can be
produced per time period with the best
available technology from any given
combination of inputs.
• Table
• Graph
• Equation
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
WITH ONE VARIABLE INPUT
• Production Function Example
• Q = f(X1, X2)
• Q = Output rate
• X1 = Input 1 usage rate
• X2 = Input 2 usage rate
• Q = 30L + 20L2 – L3
• Q = Hundreds of parts produced per year
• L = Number of machinists hired
• Fixed Capital = Five machine tools
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
WITH ONE VARIABLE INPUT
• Unit Functions
• Average Product of Labor = APL = Q/L
• Common measuring device for estimating the
units of output, on average, per worker
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
WITH ONE VARIABLE INPUT
• Unit Functions (Continued)
• Marginal Product of Labor = MPL = Q/L
• Metric for estimating the efficiency of each
input in which the input’s MP is equal to the
incremental change in output created by a
small increase in the input
• Using calculus (assumes that labor can be
varied continuously): MP = dQ/dL
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
WITH ONE VARIABLE INPUT
• Unit Functions (Continued)
• Unit function examples from Q = 30L +
20L2 – L3
• Table 4.2 and Figure 4.2
• APL = 30 + 20L – L2
• Using calculus: MPL = 30 + 40L – 3L2
• APL is at a maximum, and MPL = APL, at L =
10 and MPL = APL = 130
• MPL is at a maximum at L = 6.67 and MPL =
163.33
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
WITH ONE VARIABLE INPUT
• Unit Functions (Continued)
• Why does MPL = APL when APL is at a maximum?
• If MPL > APL, then APL must be increasing
• If MPL < APL, then APL must be decreasing
THE LAW OF DIMINISHING
MARGINAL RETURNS
• Law of diminishing returns
• When managers add equal increments of
an input while holding other input levels
constant, the incremental gains to output
eventually get smaller
THE PRODUCTION FUNCTION WITH
TWO VARIABLE INPUTS
• Q = f(X1, X2)
• Q = Output rate
• X1 = Input 1 usage rate
• X2 = Input 2 usage rate
• AP1 = Q/X1 and MP1 = Q/X1 or dQ/dX1
• AP2 = Q/X2 and MP2 = Q/X2 or dQ/dX2
• Example
• Table 4.3 and Figure 4.3
ISOQUANTS
• Isoquant: Curve showing all possible
(efficient) input bundles capable of
producing a given output level.
• Graphically constructed by cutting
horizontally through the production
surface at a given output level
• Isoquants representing different output
levels are shown in Figure 4.4.
ISOQUANTS
• Properties
• Isoquants farther from the origin
represent higher input and output levels.
• Given a continuous production function,
every possible input bundle is on an
isoquant and there is an infinite number
of possible input combinations.
• Isoquants slope downward to the right
and are convex to the origin.
MARGINAL RATE OF
TECHNICAL SUBSTITUTION
• Marginal rate of technical substitution
(MRTS): Shows the rate at which one input
is substituted for another (with output
remaining constant)
• Q = f(X1, X2)
• MRTS = –X2/X1 with Q held constant and X2 on
the vertical axis
• MRTS = MP1/MP2
• MRTS = Absolute value of the slope of an
isoquant
MARGINAL RATE OF
TECHNICAL SUBSTITUTION
• MRTS and isoquants (with X2 on the
vertical axis)
• If the MRTS is large, it takes a lot of X2 to
substitute for one unit of X1, and
isoquants will be steep.
• If the MRTS is small, it takes little X2 to
substitute for one unit of X1, and
isoquants will be flat.
MARGINAL RATE OF
TECHNICAL SUBSTITUTION
• MRTS and isoquants (with X2 on the vertical
axis) (Continued)
• If X1 and X2 are perfect substitutes, MRTS is
constant, and isoquants will be straight lines.
• If X1 and X2 are perfect complements, no
substitution is possible, MRTS is undefined, and
isoquants will be right angles.
MARGINAL RATE OF
TECHNICAL SUBSTITUTION
• Ridge Lines
• Ridge lines: The lines that profit-maximizing firms
operate within, because outside of them, marginal
products of inputs are negative
• Economic region of production is located within the
ridge lines.
THE OPTIMAL COMBINATION
OF INPUTS
• Isocost curve: Curve showing all the
input bundles that can be purchased
at a specified cost
• PLL + PKK = M
• L = Labor use rate
• PL = Price of labor
• K = Capital use rate
• PK = Price of capital
• M = Total outlay
THE OPTIMAL COMBINATION
OF INPUTS
• Isocost curve (Continued)
• K = M/PK – (PL/PK)L
• Vertical intercept = M/PK
• Horizontal intercept = M/PL
• Slope = – PL/PK
THE OPTIMAL COMBINATION
OF INPUTS
• Optimal Combination of Inputs
• Tangency between isocost and isoquant
• MRTS = MPL/MPK = PL/PK
• MPL/PL = MPK/PK
• Marginal product per dollar spent should be the same
for all inputs.
• MPa/Pa = MPb/Pb =  = MPn/Pn
• Maximize output for given cost: Figure 4.8
• Minimize cost for a given output: Figure 4.9
CORNER SOLUTIONS
• Optimal input combination does not
occur at a point of tangency between
isocost and isoquant curves.
• In a two-input case, one of the inputs will
not be used at all in production.
• Example: Figure 4.10
CORNER SOLUTIONS
• If two inputs are perfect complements
(isoquants are right angles), then both
inputs will be used, but the optimal
combination will not occur at a point of
tangency between isocost and isoquant
curves.
RETURNS TO SCALE
• Long-run effect of an equal proportional
increase in all inputs
• Increasing returns to scale: When output
increases by a larger proportion than inputs
• Decreasing returns to scale: When output
increases by a smaller proportion than inputs
• Constant returns to scale: When output
increases by the same proportion as inputs
RETURNS TO SCALE
• Sources of increasing returns to scale
• Indivisibilities: Some technologies can
only be implemented at a large scale of
production.
• Subdivision of tasks: Larger scale allows
increased division of tasks and increases
specialization.
RETURNS TO SCALE
• Sources of increasing returns to scale
(Continued)
• Probabilistic efficiencies: Law of large numbers
may reduce risk as scale increases.
• Geometric relationships: Doubling the size of a
box from 1 X 1 X 1 to 2 X 2 X 2 multiplies the
surface area by four times (from 3 to 12) but
increases the volume by eight times (from 1 to
8). This applies to storage devices,
transportation devices, etc.
RETURNS TO SCALE
• Sources of decreasing returns to scale
• Coordination inefficiencies: Larger
organizations are more difficult to
manage.
• Incentive problems: Designing efficient
compensation systems in large
organizations is difficult.
THE OUTPUT ELASTICITY
• Output elasticity: The percentage change in
output resulting from a 1 percent increase
in all inputs.
• Note: A more common definition of output
elasticity is the percentage change in output
resulting from a 1 percent increase in a single
input. Accordingly, the coefficients 0.3 and 0.8 in
the Cobb-Douglas function below would be
referred to as the output elasticities of labor and
capital, respectively.
THE OUTPUT ELASTICITY
• Cobb-Douglas production function example:
Q = 0.8L0.3K0.8
• Q = Parts produced by the Lone Star Company
per year
• L = Number of workers
• K = Amount of capital
• Output elasticity = 1.1 for infinitesimal changes
in inputs
• Example calculation for 1 percent increase in
both inputs
• Q' = 0.8(1.01L)0.3(1.01K)0.8 = 1.011005484Q
ESTIMATIONS OF
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
• Cobb-Douglas Mathematical form:
Q = aLbKc
• MPL = Q/L = b(Q/L) = b(APL)
• Linear estimation: log Q = log a + b log L
+ c log K
• Returns to scale
• b + c > 1 => increasing returns
• b + c = 1 => constant returns
• b + c < 1 => decreasing returns
This concludes the
Lecture PowerPoint
presentation for Chapter 4

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