4 Production Functions - PPT Isoquants
4 Production Functions - PPT Isoquants
Production
An entrepreneur must put together resources -- land, labour, capital -- and produce a product people will be willing and able to purchase
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE AMOUNT OF INPUT REQUIRED AND THE AMOUNT OF OUTPUT THAT CAN BE OBTAINED IS CALLED THE PRODUCTION FUNCTION
COMBINING RESOURCES
THERE ARE MANY COMBINATIONS OF RESOURCES THAT COULD BE USED CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING TABLE SHOWING DIFFERENT NUMBER OF MECHANICS AND AMOUNT OF CAPITAL THAT THE HYPOTHETICAL FIRM, INDIA INC., MIGHT USE
LONG RUN
THE LONG RUN IS A PERIOD SUFFIECIENTLY LONG THAT ALL FACTORS INCLUDING CAPITAL CAN BE ADJUSTED OR ARE VARIABLE.
THIS MEANS THAT THE FIRM CAN CHOOSE ANY COMBINATION ON THE MANUFACTURING TABLE -- NOT JUST THOSE ALONG COLUMN LABELLED 10
The Long Run or Planning Period: As we double both resources, what happens to output?
Number of Mechanics 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 CAPITAL 5 0 30 60 100 130 130 110 100 10 0 100 250 360 440 500 540 550 15 0 250 360 480 580 650 700 720
INCREASES, REACHES ITS MAXIMUM & THEN DECLINES TILL MR = AP IS DIMINISHING AND BECOMES EQUAL TO ZERO
BECOMES NEGATIVE
CONTINUES TO DECLINE
FROM THE ABOVE TABLE ONLY STAGE II IS RATIONAL WHICH MEANS RELEVANT RANGE FOR A RATIONAL FIRM TO OPERATE.
IN STAGE I IT IS PROFITABLE FOR THE FIRM TO KEEP ON INCREASING THE USE OF LABOUR. IN STAGE III, MP IS NEGATIVE AND HENCE IT IS INADVISABLE TO USE ADDITIONAL LABOUR. i.e ONLY STAGE I AND III ARE IRRATIONAL
ISOQUANT
AN ISOQUANT OR ISO PRODUCT CURVE OR EQUAL PRODUCT CURVE OR A PRODUCTION INDIFFERENCE CURVE SHOW THE VARIOUS COMBINATIONS OF TWO VARIABLE INPUTS RESULTING IN THE SAME LEVEL OF OUTPUT.
IT IS DEFINED AS A CURVE PASSING THROUGH THE PLOTTED POINTS REPRESENTING ALL THE COMBINATIONS OF THE TWO FACTORS OF PRODUCTION WHICH WILL PRODUCE A GIVEN OUTPUT.
For example from the following table we can see that different pairs of labour and capital result in the same output. Labour (Units) 1
2 3 4 5
Capital (Units) 5
3 2 1 0
Output (Units) 10
10 10 10 10
FOR EACH LEVEL OF OUTPUT THERE WILL BE A DIFFERENT ISOQUANT. WHEN THE WHOLE ARRAY OF ISOQUANTS ARE REPRESENTED ON A GRAPH, IT IS CALLED AN ISOQUANT MAP. IMPORTANT ASSUMPTIONS
THE TWO INPUTS CAN BE SUBSTITUTED FOR EACH OTHER. FOR EXAMPLE IF LABOUR IS REDUCED IN A COMPANY IT WOULD HAVE TO BE COMPENSATED BY ADDITIONAL MACHINERY TO GET THE SAME OUTPUT.
SLOPE OF ISOQUANT
THE SLOPE OF AN ISOQUANT HAS A TECHNICAL NAME CALLED THE MARGINAL RATE OF TECHNICAL SUBSTITUTION (MRTS) OR THE MARGINAL RATE OF SUBSTITUTION IN PRODUCTION. THUS IN TERMS OF CAPITAL SERVICES K AND LABOUR L MRTS = Dk/DL
TYPES OF ISOQUANTS
1. LINEAR ISOQUANT 2. RIGHT-ANGLE ISOQUANT 3. CONVEX ISOQUANT
LINEAR ISOQUANT
IN LINEAR ISOQUANTS THERE IS PERFECT SUBSTIUTABILTY OF INPUTS. FOR EXAMPLE IN A POWER PLANT EQUIPED TO BURN OIL OR GAS. VARIOUS AMOUNTS OF ELECTRICITY COULD BE PRODUCED BY BURNING GAS, OIL OR A COMBINATION. i.e OIL AND GAS ARE PERFECT SUBSITUTES. HENCE THE ISOQUANT WOULD BE A STRAIGHT LINE.
RIGHT-ANGLE ISOQUANT
IN RIGHT-ANGLE ISOQUANTS THERE IS COMPLETE NON-SUBSTIUTABILTY BETWEEN INPUTS.
FOR EXAMPLE TWO WHEELS AND A FRAME ARE REQUIRED TO PRODUCE A BYCYCLE THESE CANNOT BE INTERCHANGED.
CONVEX ISOQUANT
IN CONVEX ISOQUANTS THERE IS SUBSTIUTABILTY BETWEEN INPUTS BUT IT IS NOT PERFECT.
FOR EXAMPLE (1) A SHIRT CAN BE MADE WITH LARGE AMOUNT OF LABOUR AND A SMALL AMOUNT MACHINERY. (2) THE SAME SHIRT CAN BE WITH LESS LABOURERS, BY INCREASING MACHINERY. (3) THE SAME SHIRT CAN BE MADE WITH STILL LESS LABOURERS MACHINERY. BUT WITH A LARGER INCREASE IN
WHILE A RELATIVELY SMALL ADDITION OF MACHINERY FROM M1(MANUAL EMBROIDERY) TO M2(TAILORING MACHINE EMBROIDERY) ALLOWS THE INPUT OF LABOURERS TO BE REDUCED FROM L1 TO L2. A VERY LARGE INCREASE IN MACHINERY TO M3 (COMPUTERISED EMBROIDERY) IS REQUIRED TO FURTHER DECREASE LABOUR FROM L2 TO L3.
PROPERTIES OF ISOQUANTS
1. AN ISOQUANT IS DOWNWARD SLOPING TO THE RIGHT. i.e NEGATIVELY INCLINED. THIS IMPLIES THAT FOR THE SAME LEVEL OF OUTPUT, THE QUANTITY OF ONE VARIABLE WILL HAVE TO BE REDUCED IN ORDER TO INCREASE THE QUANTITY OF OTHER VARIABLE.
PROPERTIES OF ISOQUANTS
2. A HIGHER ISOQUANT REPRESENTS LARGER OUTPUT. THAT IS WITH THE SAME QUANTITY OF 0NE INPUT AND LARGER QUANTITY OF THE OTHER INPUT, LARGER OUTPUT WILL BE PRODUCED.
PROPERTIES OF ISOQUANTS
3. NO TWO ISOQUANTS INTERSECT OR TOUCH EACH OTHER. IF THE TWO ISOQUANTS DO TOUCH OR INTERSECT THAT MEANS THAT A SAME AMOUNT OF TWO INPUTS CAN PRODUCE TWO DIFFERENT LEVELS OF OUTPUT WHICH IS ABSURD.
PROPERTIES OF ISOQUANTS
4. ISOQUANT IS CONVEX TO THE ORIGIN. THIS MEANS THAT THE SLOPE DECLINES FROM LEFT TO RIGHT ALONG THE CURVE. THAT IS WHEN WE GO ON INCREASING THE QUANTITY OF ONE INPUT SAY LABOUR BY REDUCING THE QUANTITY OF OTHER INPUT SAY CAPITAL, WE SEE LESS UNITS OF CAPITAL ARE SACRIFICED FOR THE ADDITIONAL UNITS OF LABOUR.
Number Total Mechanics Output 0 0 1 100 2 250 3 360 4 440 5 500 6 540 7 550 8 540
500
400 300
TPP
200
100 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Number of Mechanics
Average Product
125
100 75 50 25 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Number of Mechanics 8 APP
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
0 0 100 100 250 125 360 120 440 110 500 100 540 90 550 78.6 540 67.5
MechanicsOutput Product Product 0 0 0 0 1 100 100 100 2 250 125 150 3 360 120 110 4 440 110 80 5 500 100 60 6 540 90 40 7 550 78.6 10 8 540 67.5 -10
Lets Plot the MPP Schedule Well place it on top of the APP schedule so we can compare the two
and Average
125
100 75 50 25
|-----------------------------|
MPP<APP
APP
MPP=APP
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Number of Mechanics
MPP
RETURNS TO SCALE
DIMINISHING RETURNS REFER TO RESPONSE OF
OUTPUT TO AN INCREASE OF A SINGLE INPUT WHILE OTHER INPUTS ARE HELD CONSTANT.
WE HAVE TO SEE THE EFFECT BY INCREASING ALL
INPUTS.
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF THE PRODUCTION OF WHEAT IF LAND, LABOUR, FERTILISERS, WATER
ETC,. ARE ALL DOUBLED. THIS REFERS TO THE RETURNS TO SCALE OR EFFECT OF SCALE INCREASES OF INPURTS ON THE QUANTITY PRODUCED.
THAT BY INCREASING INPUTS OF LABOUR, CAPITAL AND MATERIALS BY 10% WILL INCREASE THE TOTAL OUTPUT BY MORE THAN 10%.
P ro d u ct io n a n d C os ts
T o ta l # o f m e c h a n ic s 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 O u tp u t
0
T o ta l Cost 100 250 360 440 500 540 550 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000
Total Costs
2
1 0 100 2 00 300 400 500 600
Total Output
P ro d u ctio n a n d C o sts
Total # of mechanics Output 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 100 250 360 440 500 540 550
Total Cost
1,000
Average Cost
10 8 8.33 9 10 11.1 12.7