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Production Theory & Functions Overview

The document discusses key concepts in production theory, including: 1) It defines inputs, outputs, and production functions, noting that production involves transforming inputs like labor, capital, land, and raw materials into outputs. 2) It explains the short-run production function where capital is fixed and only variable inputs like labor can be changed, subject to diminishing returns. 3) It describes total, average, and marginal production concepts, noting marginal product initially rises then falls as average product peaks and diminishing returns set in.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
195 views43 pages

Production Theory & Functions Overview

The document discusses key concepts in production theory, including: 1) It defines inputs, outputs, and production functions, noting that production involves transforming inputs like labor, capital, land, and raw materials into outputs. 2) It explains the short-run production function where capital is fixed and only variable inputs like labor can be changed, subject to diminishing returns. 3) It describes total, average, and marginal production concepts, noting marginal product initially rises then falls as average product peaks and diminishing returns set in.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
  • Introduction to Managerial Economics: Briefly introduces the topic of managerial economics and the session's context within a series of lectures.
  • Session Outline: Presents an overview of the session topics including production definitions, functions, and economic laws.
  • What is Production?: Explains the concept of production and how inputs are transformed into outputs including basic types of change.
  • Basic Concepts of Production Theory: Discusses classifications of inputs such as labor, capital, and raw materials, introducing entrepreneurship.
  • Production Function: Explores the relationship between inputs and outputs in production, including technical and economic efficiency.
  • Short Run Production: Details changes in outputs when one input is fixed, introducing short run production functions.
  • Law of Diminishing Returns: Explains the law of diminishing returns, illustrating with curves and productivity examples.
  • The Three Stages of Production: Breaks down the stages of production: increasing, decreasing, and negative returns.
  • Law of Diminishing Return - Example: Provides a real-world example of diminishing returns in production scenarios to highlight efficiency.
  • Session References: Lists references for further reading and study material related to the session content.

17 : Theory of Production

Session Outline

Defining Input, Output, Production


Production function
Short Run Production Function
Law of Diminishing Return
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

What is Production?

Production is basically an activity of transformation , which


connects factor inputs and outputs
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

What is Production?

The process of transforming inputs into outputs can be any of


the following kinds:
Change in the Form(Raw material transformed to finished
goods )
Change in Place( Supply chain, Factory to Retailer)

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

What is Production?

With these three kinds of transformations, usability of the


good or materials increases.

Production is an activity that increases consumer usability of


goods and services.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Basic Concepts of Production Theory: Classifications of Inputs


(i) labour (ii) capital
(iii) land (iv) raw materials
(v) time.
These variables are measured per unit of time and hence
referred to as flow variables.
Entrepreneurship has been added as part of the production
inputs, though this can be measured by the managerial
expertise and the ability to make things happen.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Basic Concepts of Production Theory

An input is a good or service that goes into the production


process. As economists refer to it, an input is simply anything
which a firm buys for use in its production process.
An output, on the other hand, is any good or service that
comes out of a production process.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Basic Concepts of Production Theory


Inputs are considered variable or fixed depending on how
readily their usage can be changed
Fixed input
An input for which the level of usage cannot readily be
changed
- In economic sense, a fixed input is one whose supply is
inelastic in the short run.
- In technical sense, a fixed input is one that remains fixed (or
constant) for certain level of output.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Basic concepts of Production Theory


Variable input
A variable input is one whose supply in the short run is elastic,
example, labour, raw materials, and the like. Users of such
inputs can employ a larger quantity in the short run.
Technically, a variable input is one that changes with changes
in output. In the long run, all inputs are variable.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Basic Concepts of Production Theory


Short run
At least one input is fixed
All changes in output achieved by changing usage of
variable inputs
Long run
All inputs are variable
Output changed by varying usage of all inputs
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Production Function
A tool of analysis used in explaining the input-output
relationship.
It describes the technical relationship between inputs and
output in physical terms.
In its general form, it holds that production of a given
commodity depends on certain specific inputs.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Production Function
In its specific form, it presents the quantitative relationships
between inputs and outputs.
A production function may take the form of a schedule, a
graph line or a curve, an algebraic equation or a
mathematical model.
The production function represents the technology of a firm.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Basic Concepts of Production Theory

Production function
Maximum amount of output that can be produced from any
specified set of inputs, given existing technology
Technical efficiency
Achieved when maximum amount of output is produced with a given
combination of inputs
Economic efficiency
Achieved when firm is producing a given output at the lowest
possible total cost

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Production Function
Process 1
10
15

Process 2
15
15

Process 3
05
20

A process of production is technically efficient if it uses less


of one factor and no more from the other factor, compare to
any other process of production.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Production Function
An empirical production function is generally so complex to
include a wide range of inputs: land, labour, capital, raw
materials, time, and technology.
These variables form the independent variables in a firms
actual production function.
A firms long-run production function is of the form:
Q = f(Ld, L, K, M, T, t)
where Ld = land and building; L = labour; K = capital; M =
materials; T = technology; and, t = time.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Production Function
For sake of convenience, economists have reduced the
number of variables used in a
production function to only two: capital (K) and labour (L).
Therefore, in the analysis of
input-output relations, the production function is expressed
as:
Q = f(K, L)

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Production Function

Q = f(K, L)
Increasing production, Q, will require K and L, and whether
the firm can increase both K and L or only L will depend on
the time period it takes into account for increasing
production, that is, whether the firm is thinking in terms of
the short run or in terms of the long run.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Production Function

Economists believe that the supply of capital (K) is inelastic


in the short run and elastic in the long run.
Thus, in the short run firms can increase production only by
increasing labour, since the supply of capital is fixed in the
short run. In the long run, the firm can employ more of both
capital and labour, as the supply of capital becomes elastic
over time.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Short Run Production


In the short run, capital is fixed
Only changes in the variable labor input can change the
level of output
Short run production function Q f ( L,K ) f ( L )

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Short Run Production


Total Product: It gives maximum of output that can be
produced at different levels of one input, assuming that the
other input is fixed at a particular level.
Marginal Product: Change in the output resulting from a very
small change in one factor input , keeping the other factor
inputs constant.

Average Product: Total production for per unit of output.


Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Average & Marginal Products


Average product of labor
AP = Q/L

Marginal product of labor


MP = Q/ L
Average product of Capital
AP = Q/K
Marginal product of Capital
MP = Q/ K
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Total, Average, & Marginal Products of Labor, K = 2


Number of
workers (L)

Total product (Q)

52

112

170

220

258

286

304

314

318

10

314

Average product
(AP=Q/L)

Marginal product
(MP= Q/ L)

--

--

52

52

56

60

56.7

58

55

50

51.6

38

47.7

28

43.4

18

39.3

10

35.3

31.4

-4

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Law of Diminishing Returns or the Law of Variable Proportion

The Shape of total product curve is determined by law of


diminishing return.

The law of diminishing returns, states that with a given


state of technology if the quantity of one factor input is
increased , by equal increment , the quantities of other factor
inputs remaining fixed , the resulting increment of total
product will first increase but decreases after a particular
point.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Law of Diminishing Returns or the Law of Variable Proportion

It states that as we go on employing more of one factor


of production, other factor remaining same, the marginal
productivity will diminish after some point.

The shape of marginal product curve is therefore


Inverted U Shaped.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Assumptions
State of technology is given.
One factor of production must always be kept constant at a
given level.
The law is not applicable when two inputs are used in a
fixed proportion.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Total, Average & Marginal Product Curves


C

Q2

B
Q1

Panel A

Total
product

A
Q0

I
L0

II
L1

III
L2

Panel B
Average product

L0

L1

L2

Marginal product

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Total, Average & Marginal Products

At the point O, the factor input labor is equal to zero, the


value of total product will also be zero. Obviously the value of
MP and AP will be zero. So all the three curves , TP, AP and MP
starts from the origin.
TP curve is first convex from below and then concave.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Total, Average & Marginal Products

As long as TP curve is convex, MP is increasing. When TP curve


is Concave , MP is decreasing.
The point A on TP curve is called as point of inflexion. MP will
be maximum corresponding to this point of the TP curve.
AP is maximum at the point B, and also AP = MP.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Total, Average & Marginal Products

Corresponding to the maximum point of the TP curve, point


C, MP is equal to Zero.
To the left of Point C, total product is increasing and
marginal product is positive. To the right of point C, TP curve
is decreasing and marginal product is negative.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Total, Average & Marginal Products

Since the MP curve is must be decreasing when the average


product is maximum, the MP curve reaches maximum
before the AP curve.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Marginal and Average Product

When AP is rising, MP is greater than AP


When AP is falling, MP is less than AP
When AP reaches it maximum, AP = MP

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production


Stage I: Stage of Increasing Returns:
AP is increasing and the MP is greater than the AP. Up to
point B on the TP curve Stage I exist.
AP is increasing, but MP is increasing first up to point A then
decreasing.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production

Stage II: Stage of Decreasing Returns


Both AP and MP is decreasing. But MP is positive.
The portion of TP curve between B and C represents this
stage.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production


Stage III: Stage of Negative Returns
TP is diminishing and the MP is negative.
The portion of TP curve which lies to the right of point C
represents this stage.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production

In which stage would the rational producer like to operate?

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production

In Stage I, MP and AP both are rising, and the MP is more than


AP.
A given increase in variable factor leads to a more than
proportionate increase in the output.
The producer is not making the best possible use of the fixed
factor. A particular portion of fixed factor remains unutilized.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production


In Stage III, MP of variable factor is negative and the TP is also
decreasing.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production


In Stage II, MP and AP both are falling and MP through positive,
is less than AP.
There is less than proportionate change in output due to
change in labor force .
Hence at this stage the producer will employ the variable
factor in such a manner that the utilization of fixed factor is
most efficient.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

The Three Stages of Production


A good example of Diminishing Returns includes the use of
chemical fertilizers- a small quantity leads to a big increase in
output. However, increasing its use further may lead to
declining Marginal Product (MP) as the efficacy of the
chemical declines.

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Law of Diminishing Return -Example

Number of
Workers
1
2
3
4
5
6

Unit of
product
produced
10
25
45
60
70
60

Marginal
Product
10
15
20
15
10
-10

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Law of Diminishing Return -Example


It is with three workers that the farm production is most
efficient because the marginal product is at its highest.
Beyond this point, the farm begins to experience diminishing
returns and, at the level of 6 workers, the farm actually begins
to see decreasing returns as production levels decline, even
though costs continue to increase.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Law of Diminishing Return -Example


In this example, the number of workers changed, while the
land used, seeds planted, water consumed, and all other
inputs remained the same.
If more than one input were to change, the production
results would vary and the law of diminishing returns may
not apply if all inputs could be increased.
Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

Session References
Managerial Economics; D N Dwivedi, 7th Edition
Managerial Economics Christopher R Thomas, S Charles
Maurice and Sumit Sarkar
Micro Economics : ICFAI University Press

Prof. Trupti Mishra, School of Management, IIT Bombay

43

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