Production function/Tutorials: Difference between revisions

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===Production===
===Production===
Joan Robinson's objection to the production function equation was that she could not envisage a unit of measurement that could be applied both to output on the one, side and to labour and capital on the other side of the equation.
Joan Robinson's objection to the production function equation was that she could not envisage a unit of measurement that could be applied both to output on the one, side and to labour and capital on the other side of the equation. Anwar Shaikh
 
<ref>[http://homepage.newschool.edu/~AShaikh/humbug2.pdf Anwar Shaikh: "The Humbug Production Function II: The Laws of Production and the Laws of Algebra", '' Review of Economics and Statistics'' February 1974]</ref>


==References==
==References==


<references/>
<references/>

Revision as of 10:27, 4 September 2008

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Tutorials relating to the topic of Production function.

The learning curve[1]

On a P per cent learning curve, every time the length of the production run is doubled, the unit cost is reduced by a factor p.

(p being the percentage P expressed as a fraction)


The cost, Cn of the nth unit is given by:

Cn= C1.n-b

where

b = (-logp)(log2)

The Cobb-Douglas production function

The Cobb-Douglas function has the form:

Y = A. Lα . Cβ,

where

Y = output,  C = capital input, L = labour input,
and A, α and β are constants determined by the technology employed.

If α = β = 1, the function represents constant returns to scale,

If α + β < 1, it represents diminishing returns to scale, and,

If α + β > 1, it represents increasing returns to scale.


It can be shown that, in a perfectly competitive economy, α is labour's share of the value of output, and β is capital's share.


Dissenting voices

Supply

Piero Saffra objected to the law of supply and demand on the grounds that, by bidding up the prices of inputs to suppliers of substitutes, the increased output of a product expansion could increase the demand for that product, thus violatimg the necessary condition that demand must be independent of supply [1]. Jacob Viner had justified the long-run diminishing returns thesis by arguing that competitors for the required inputs would bid up their prices [2], but Lionel Robbins argued that Viner's justification was incomplete in cases where the market did not contain other users of an input and raised a number of other more complex objections [3].

Production

Joan Robinson's objection to the production function equation was that she could not envisage a unit of measurement that could be applied both to output on the one, side and to labour and capital on the other side of the equation. Anwar Shaikh

[4]

References