Unit 2 1 Production Function Law of Variable Proportions
Unit 2 1 Production Function Law of Variable Proportions
Unit 2 1 Production Function Law of Variable Proportions
(i) Land:
It refers to all natural resources which are free gifts of nature. Land, therefore, includes all gifts
of nature available to mankind—both on the surface and under the surface, e.g., soil, rivers,
waters, forests, mountains, mines, deserts, seas, climate, rains, air, sun, etc.
(ii) Labour:
Human efforts done mentally or physically with the aim of earning income is known as labour.
Thus, labour is a physical or mental effort of human being in the process of production. The
compensation given to labourers in return for their productive work is called wages (or
compensation of employees).
Land is a passive factor whereas labour is an active factor of production. Actually, it is labour
which in cooperation with land makes production possible. Land and labour are also known as
primary factors of production as their supplies are determined more or less outside the economic
system itself.
(iii) Capital:
All man-made goods which are used for further production of wealth are included in capital.
Thus, it is man-made material source of production. Alternatively, all man-made aids to
production, which are not consumed/or their own sake, are termed as capital.
(iv) Entrepreneur:
An entrepreneur is a person who organises the other factors and undertakes the risks and
uncertainties involved in the production. He hires the other three factors, brings them together,
organises and coordinates them so as to earn maximum profit. For example, Mr. X who takes the
risk of manufacturing television sets will be called an entrepreneur.
An entrepreneur acts as a boss and decides how the business shall run. He decides in what
proportion factors should be combined. What and where he will produce and by what method.
He is loosely identified with the owner, speculator, innovator or inventor and organiser of the
business. Thus, entrepreneur ship is a trait or quality owned by the entrepreneur.
The functional relationship between physical inputs (or factors of production) and output is
called production function. It assumed inputs as the explanatory or independent variable and
output as the dependent variable. Mathematically, we may write this as follows: Q = f (L,K) Here,
‘Q’ represents the output, whereas ‘L’ and ‘K’ are the inputs, representing labour and capital (such
as machinery) respectively.
The production function is differently defined in the short run and in the long run. This distinction
is extremely relevant in microeconomics. The distinction is based on the nature of factor inputs.
Those inputs that vary directly with the output are called variable factors. These are the factors
that can be changed. Variable factors exist in both, the short run and the long run. Examples of
variable factors include daily-wage labour, raw materials, etc.
On the other hand, those factors that cannot be varied or changed as the output changes are
called fixed factors. These factors are normally characteristic of the short run or short period of
time only. Fixed factors do not exist in the long run.
Consequently, we can define two production functions: short-run and long-run. The short-run
production function defines the relationship between one variable factor (keeping all other
factors fixed) and the output. The law of returns to a factor explains such a production
function.
The long-run production function is different in concept from the short run production
function. Here, all factors are varied in the same proportion. The law that is used to explain
this is called the law of returns to scale. It measures by how much proportion the output changes
when inputs are changed proportionately.