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Factors of Production

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views14 pages

Factors of Production

Uploaded by

ksdivya089
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

Topics

 The Ownership and Management of Firms.

 Production.

 Short-Run Production: One Variable and One Fixed


Input.

 Long-Run Production: Two Variable Inputs.

 Returns to Scale.

 Productivity and Technical Change.

6-1
What is a firm?
 Firm - an organization that converts
inputs such as labor, materials, energy,
and capital into outputs, the goods and
services that it sells.
 Sole proprietorships are firms owned and
run by a single individual.
 Partnerships are businesses jointly owned
and controlled by two or more people.
 Corporations are owned by shareholders in
proportion to the numbers of shares of
stock they hold.
6-2
What Owners Want?

 Main assumption: firm’s owners try to


maximize profit!

 Profit () - the difference between


revenues, R, and costs, C:

=R–C

6-3
What are the categories of inputs?
 Capital (K) - long-lived inputs.
 land, buildings (factories, stores), and equipment
(machines, trucks)

 Labor (L) - human services


 managers, skilled workers (architects, economists,
engineers, plumbers), and less-skilled workers
(custodians, construction laborers, assembly-line
workers)

 Materials (M) - raw goods (oil, water, wheat)


and processed products (aluminum, plastic,
paper, steel)

6-4
How firms combine the inputs?

 Production function - the relationship


between the quantities of inputs used
and the maximum quantity of output that
can be produced, given current
knowledge about technology and
organization

6-5
Production Function

Production
Inputs Function Output
(L, K) q = f(L, K) q

 Formally,
q = f(L, K)

 where q units of output are produced using L units


of labor services and K units of capital (the
number of conveyor belts).

6-6
Time and the Variability of Inputs
 Short run - a period of time so brief that at
least one factor of production cannot be
varied practically

 Fixed input - a factor of production that cannot be


varied practically in the short run.

 Variable input - a factor of production whose


quantity can be changed readily by the firm during
the relevant time period

 Long run - a lengthy enough period of time


that all inputs can be varied

6-7
Short-Run Production

 In the short run, the firm’s production


function is
q = f(L, K)

 where q is output, L is workers, and K is the


fixed number of units of capital.

6-8
Table 6.1 Total Product, Marginal Product, and
Average Product of Labor with Fixed Capital

6-9
Marginal Product of Labor
 Marginal product of labor (MPL ) - the change
in total output, q, resulting from using an extra
unit of labor, L, holding other factors constant:

q
MPL 
L

6-10
Average Product of Labor
 Average product of labor (APL ) - the ratio of
output, q, to the number of workers, L, used to
produce that output:

q
APL 
L

6-11
Total Product of Labor

 Total product of labor- the amount of


output (or total product) that can be
produced by a given amount of labor

6-12
Figure 6.1 (a)
C

Output, q, Units per day


Production
110

Relationships
90 B

with Variable 56 A

Labor
Diminishing
0 4 6 11
Marginal Returns (b)
L, Workers per day

sets in!
a

APL, MPL
20

b
15
Average product, APL

Marginal product, MPL

c
0 4 6 11

L, Workers per day

6-13
Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns

If a firm keeps increasing an input, holding


all other inputs and technology constant,
the corresponding increases in output
will become smaller eventually.

 That is, if only one input is increased, the


marginal product of that input will diminish
eventually.

6-14

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