Technology Production And Costs Flashcards

1
Q

Isoquant

A

Identifies all combinations of inputs (FOP) that produce a given output.

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2
Q

Fixed proportion isoquant

A

Technology is inflexible, so we want an equal number of workers and machines.

E.g each machine needs one worker to operate it, and additional workers cannot impact.

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3
Q

So what determines level of production for fixed proportion isoquants, and how can we express it in the production function.

A

Level of production is determined by the minimum number of machines and the number of workers needed to produce output y.

f(x₁,x₂)=min{x₁,x₂}

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4
Q

What does fixed proportion isoquants look like?

A

L shape (just like perfect complements diagram in consumer choice)

Because the 2 inputs are essentially perfect complements, need one for the other otherwise valueless.

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5
Q

Perfect substitutes isoquant, and how is this expressed in the production function.

A

Easily switch between inputs

Example: any machine or any worker can produce one unit of output per hour.
F(x₁,x₂)=x₁+x₂

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6
Q

What does the perfect substitutes isoquant look like?

A

Downward sloping straight.

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7
Q

Express CD function including technology

What happens if A increases

A

f(x₁,x₂) =Ax₁to the v x₂ to the 1-v

A represents tech. I.e if A increases, we can produce more output with same inputs.

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8
Q

Properties/assumptions about technology

A

Monotonicity
Free disposal
Convexity

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9
Q

Monotonicity assumption in technology

A

If we increasing quantity of at least one input without reducing the other, you produce at least as much as before.

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10
Q

Free disposal assumption in technology

A

Unwanted inputs can be disposed costlessly, so having more of any input can never be harmfuL.

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11
Q

Convexity assumption in technology

A

If there are 2 different ways of producing a given output, a weighted average of the 2 will produce at least the same amout.

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12
Q

Technical rate of substitution

A

How much more of one factor we need to add following a reduction in the other factor, to keep output constant.

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13
Q

How is TRS represented graphically

A

Slope of the isoquant.

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14
Q

TRS formula

A

dx₂/dx₁ = -MP₁/MP₂

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15
Q

How do we get this equation?

A

We get marginal product by differentiating prod function.
MP₁dx1 + MP₂dx₂

Then, since for TRS we want to hold output constant, marginal product=0.

MP₁dx1 + MP₂dx₂ = 0

Rearrange to make TRS
dx₂/dx₁ = -MP₁/MP₂

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16
Q

Is TRS usually diminshing, constant, or increasing

A

Diminishing technical rate of substitution i.e

As we keep reducing one factor, we need to increase amounts of the other factor to hold output constant

17
Q

Returns to scale example slide 23.

A
18
Q

Once we get t to the a+b, what do we do from there?

A

We now have 3 cases.

a+b> 1 , increasing returns
Etc.

19
Q

Short run vs long run production assumption (same as last year)

A

Long run FOP variable
SR at least one is fixed (usually capital)

20
Q

How to express the fixed factor in the short run

(Let factor 2 x₂ be fixed)

A

y = f(x₁,xbar₂)

21
Q

Summary to cover
Production function
Isoquants
Returns to scale
SR LR

A