Introduction
to Economics ECO401
VU
UNIT
- 5
Lesson
5.1
BACKGROUND
TO SUPPLY/COSTS
PRODUCTIVE
THEORY
A
firm is any organized form
of production, in which someone or a
collection of individuals
are
involved
in the production of goods
and services. A firm can be
sole proprietorship
(one
person
ownership), partnership (a limited
number of owners) or a limited
company (a large
number
of changing shareholders).
A
firm is faced with three
basic questions:
a.
What should it
produce?
b.
How should it produce it
and
c.
How much profit/net benefit
will the firm
make?
The
traditional theory of the
firm says that the
firm's basic goal is to
maximize profits.
Production
Function:
A
production function is simply
the relationship between
inputs & outputs.
Mathematically
it can be written as:
Q
= f (K, L, N, E, T, P..........)
Where,
Q
= Output = Total product
produced
K
= Capital
L
= Labor
N
= Natural resources
E
= Entrepreneurship
T
= Technology
P
= Power
Cobb
Douglas production
function:
In
economics, the Cobb-Douglas
functional form of production
functions is widely used
to
represent
the relationship of an output to
inputs. It was proposed by
Knut Wicksell, and
tested
against
statistical evidence by Paul
Douglas and Charles Cobb in
1928.
Cobb
Douglas production function
can be represented by the
following equation,
Q
= A Kα
L1 α
Where:
Q
= output
L
= labor input
K
= capital input
A,
α and 1
α are
constants determined by
technology.
Short
run and Long
run:
Short
run is a period of time in
which at least one of the
factors of production is fixed
or
unchangeable;
long run is a period of time
in which all the factors of
production used in
the
production
are flexible. The actual
length of the short run
and long-run can vary
considerably
from
industry to industry.
The
Law of Diminishing Marginal
Returns:
The
law of diminishing marginal
returns states that as you
increase the quantity of a
variable
factor
together with a fixed
factor, the returns (in
terms of output) become less
and less. Thus
if
we are using labor in the
production of wheat given a
fixed amount of land, after
a certain
39
Introduction
to Economics ECO401
VU
point
the increase in the output
of wheat will become less
and less until it starts
reducing the
total
output of wheat.
The
total physical product (TPP)
of
a factor (F) is the latter's
total contribution to
output
measured
in units of output
produced.
Average
physical product (APP) is
TPP per unit of the
variable factor:
APP
can be represented by the
following formula,
APP
= TPPF/QF
Marginal
physical product (MPP) is
the addition to TPP brought
by employing an extra
unit
of
the variable factor More
generally,
MPPF
= ĆTPPF/ĆQF
Relationship
between APP and
MPP:
·
If
the marginal physical
product equals the average
physical product, the
average
physical
product will not
change.
If
the marginal physical
product is above the average
physical product, the
average
·
physical
product will rise.
If
the marginal physical
product is below the average
physical product the
average
·
physical
product will fall.
40