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MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS 11th Edition

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Title: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS 11th Edition


1
MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS 11th Edition
  • By
  • Mark Hirschey

2
Production Analysis and Compensation Policy
  • Chapter 8

3
Chapter 8OVERVIEW
  • Production Functions
  • Total, Marginal, and Average Product
  • Law of Diminishing Returns to a Factor
  • Input Combination Choice
  • Marginal Revenue Product and Optimal Employment
  • Optimal Combination of Multiple Inputs
  • Optimal Levels of Multiple Inputs
  • Returns to Scale
  • Production Function Estimation
  • Productivity Measurement

4
Chapter 8 KEY CONCEPTS
  • ridge lines
  • marginal revenue product
  • economic efficiency
  • net marginal revenue
  • isocost curve (or budget line)
  • constant returns to scale
  • expansion path
  • increasing returns to scale
  • decreasing returns to scale
  • output elasticity
  • power production function
  • productivity growth
  • labor productivity
  • multifactor productivity
  • production function
  • discrete production function
  • continuous production function
  • returns to scale
  • returns to a factor
  • total product
  • marginal product
  • average product
  • law of diminishing returns
  • isoquant
  • technical efficiency
  • input substitution
  • marginal rate of technical

5
Production Functions
  • Properties of Production Functions
  • Production functions are determined by
    technology, equipment and input prices.
  • Discrete production functions are lumpy.
  • Continuous production functions employ inputs in
    small increments.

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7
Returns to Scale and Returns to a Factor
  • Returns to scale measure output effect of
    increasing all inputs.
  • Returns to a factor measure output effect of
    increasing one input.

8
Total, Marginal, and Average Product
  • Total Product
  • Total product is total output.

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10
Marginal Product
  • Marginal product is the change in output caused
    by increasing input use.
  • If MPX?Q/?Xgt 0, total product is rising.
  • If MPX?Q/?Xlt 0, total product is falling (rare).
  • Average product
  • APXQ/X.

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12
Law of Diminishing Returns to a Factor
  • Diminishing Returns to a Factor Concept
  • MPX tends to diminish as X use grows.
  • If MPX grew with use of X, there would be no
    limit to input usage.
  • MPXlt 0 implies irrational input use (rare).
  • Illustration of Diminishing Returns to a Factor

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15
Input Combination Choice
  • Production Isoquants
  • Technical efficiency is least-cost production.
  • Input Factor Substitution
  • Isoquant shape shows input substitutability.
  • C-shaped isoquants are common and imply imperfect
    substitutability.

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17
Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution
  • MRTSXY-MPX/MPY
  • Rational Limits of Input Substitution
  • MPXlt0 or MPYlt0 are never observed.

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19
Marginal Revenue Product and Optimal Employment
  • Marginal Revenue Product
  • MRPL is the revenue gain after all variable costs
    except labor costs.
  • MRPL MPL x MRQ ?TR/?L.
  • Optimal Level of a Single Input
  • Set MRPLPL to get optimal employment.
  • Illustration of Optimal Employment

20
Optimal Combination of Multiple Inputs
  • Budget Lines
  • Least-cost production occurs when MPX/PX MPY/PY
    and PX/PY MPX/MPY
  • Expansion Path
  • Shows efficient input combinations as output
    grows.
  • Illustration of Optimal Input Proportions
  • Input proportions are optimal when no additional
    output could be produce for the same cost.
  • Optimal input proportions is a necessary but not
    sufficient condition for profit maximization.

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22
Optimal Levels of Multiple Inputs
  • Optimal Employment and Profit Maximization
  • Profits are maximized when MRPX PX for all
    inputs.
  • Profit maximization requires optimal input
    proportions plus an optimal level of output.
  • Illustration of Optimal Levels of Multiple Inputs

23
Returns to Scale
  • Evaluating Returns to Scale
  • Returns to scale show the output effect of
    increasing all inputs.
  • Output Elasticity and Returns to Scale
  • Output elasticity is eQ ?Q/Q ?Xi/Xi where Xi
    is all inputs (labor, capital, etc.)
  • eQ gt 1 implies increasing returns.
  • eQ 1 implies constant returns.
  • eQ lt 1 implies decreasing returns.
  • Returns to Scale Estimation

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25
Production Function Estimation
  • Cubic Production Functions
  • Display variable returns to scale.
  • First increasing, then decreasing returns are
    common.
  • Power Production Functions
  • Allow marginal productivity of each input to vary
    with employment of all inputs.

26
Productivity Measurement
  • How Is Productivity Measured?
  • Productivity measurement is the responsibility of
    the Bureau of Labor Statistics (since 1800s).
  • Productivity growth is the rate of change in
    output per unit of input.
  • Labor productivity is the change in output per
    worker hour.
  • Uses and Limitations of Productivity Data
  • Quality changes make productivity measurement
    difficult.

27
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