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Euler's Theorem: It Was Developed by Swiss Mathematician Leonhard Euler

Euler's Theorem states that if a production function exhibits constant returns to scale and factors of production are paid their marginal products, then the total product of the firm will be exactly exhausted by distributing payments to the factors, with no surplus or deficit remaining. It applies to homogeneous functions of degree one, where multiplying all input quantities by a constant factor results in multiplying the total output by the same constant factor.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
835 views5 pages

Euler's Theorem: It Was Developed by Swiss Mathematician Leonhard Euler

Euler's Theorem states that if a production function exhibits constant returns to scale and factors of production are paid their marginal products, then the total product of the firm will be exactly exhausted by distributing payments to the factors, with no surplus or deficit remaining. It applies to homogeneous functions of degree one, where multiplying all input quantities by a constant factor results in multiplying the total output by the same constant factor.

Uploaded by

Bikram Maharjan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Euler's Theorem

It was developed by Swiss Mathematician Leonhard Euler.

It is mathematical relationship that applies to any homogeneous function.

If a production function is homogeneous of degree one (constant return to scale)


and factors are paid equal to marginal products, total product is exhausted with no
surlus or deficit.

Formula

If f(x) is said to be homogeneous of degree 't',

If α =1(Constant Return ¿ Scale)


α >1¿

α <1¿

Let f(x) be production function with two factors i.e. capital and labour.

Then,

Production function of degree 't' = ω t ×Y =f ( ωK , ωL )

Where,

Y = Output, K = Capital , L= Labour

t= parameter of return to scale

if t = 1 ( constant return to scale)

t > 1 Increasing return to scale

t < 1 Decreasing return to scale


∂Y ∂Y
∴Y = L . +K .
∂L ∂K
Where,
∂Y
=Marginal Product of Labour
∂L

∂Y
∂K
= Marginal Product of Capital

M.P. of Labour ×Amount of Labour + M.P. of Capital ×Amount of capital = Total


Product of firm

Homogeneous function ???

u = f(x,y) is said to be homogeneous function of degree 'n' if it can be expressible


in the form of :

ω n × f (x , y)=f ( ωx , ωy )

Example

f(x,y) = x2+y2+2xy

or, f ( ωx , ωy )=( ωx )2 +¿

= ω 2 x 2+ ω2 y 2+ 2 xy . ω2

= ω 2 ( x 2 + y 2+ 2 xy )

= ω2. f ( x , y )

A function is said to be homogeneous of degree n, if multiplication of each of its


independent variables by a constant ωwill alter the value of the function by
proportion ω n, that is, if ω n × f (x , y)=f ( ωx , ωy ) .

In Production Function

Note 1 : Homogeneous function of first degree often referred to as lenearly


homogeneous function.

Note 2 : Linear homogeneity means that raising all inputs (independent variables)
j-fold will always raise the output (vlaue of function) exactly j-fold also.
Proof

Q = f (K, L)

Capital - Labour Ratio (k) = K/L

j = 1/ L

Q j = Q × 1/L = Q/ L

f (K,L) .j = f (jK, jL) = f (K/L , L/L ) = f (k , 1)

Function of Capital Labour Ratio = ∅ (k)

APPL = Q/L = ∅ ( k )
1
APPK = Q/K = Q/L ×L/K = ∅ ( k ) × k =∅(k) /k

Therefore,

Total Product (Q) = L . ∅ ( k)

∂k
=
∂ ( KL ) = 1 × 1= 1
∂K ∂K L L

∂k
=
∂ ( KL ) = −K
2
∂L ∂L L

Now,

∂ Q ∂ ( L . ∅ (k )) ∂(∅ ( k ) ) ∂ k
= =L. ×
∂K ∂K ∂k ∂K
1
¿ L . ∅' ( k ) × =∅' ( k )
L

∂Q ∂ ( L . ∅ ( k ) )
= =L. ∂ ¿ ¿
∂L ∂L

∂Q
=L . ∂ ¿ ¿
∂L

−K
¿ L . ∅' ( k ) × 2
+ ∅ ( k )=−k . ∅ ' ( k )+ ∅ ( k )=∅ ( k )−k . ∅' ( k )
L

Euler's Theorem
∂Q ∂Q
K. + L. =Q
∂L ∂L

Proof:

=K. ∅ ' ( k ) + L. ( ∅ ( k ) −k . ∅ ' ( k ) )

= K. ∅ ' ( k ) + L. ¿

= K. ∅ ' ( k ) + L. ¿

= K. ∅ ' ( k ) + L. ¿

= L . ∅ ( k ) =Q

Important Notes:

 Economically, this property means that under condition of constant return to


scale, if each factor is paid amount of its marginal product, the total product ,
the total product will be exactly exhausted by the distributive shares for all
the input factors or equivalently, the pure economic profit will be zero.
 This situation is descriptive of the long run equilibrium under pure
competition.
 The zero economic profit in the long run equilibrium is brought about by the
forces of competition through the entry and exit of firms.
 This is not mandatory to have a production function that ensures product
exahustion for any and all (K,L) pairs.
 When imperfect competition exists in the factor markets, the remuneration to
the factors may not be equal to the marginal products and consequently
Euler's theorem becomes irrelevant to the distribution picture.

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