The document discusses the law of variable proportions, which states that as the quantity of one input is increased while holding other inputs fixed, a production process will experience three stages: initially increasing returns followed by diminishing returns and eventually negative returns. It provides an example using land, labor and wheat production, and includes a table showing total, marginal and average product at different labor levels and a graph illustrating the three stages of the law.
Price Elasticity of Demand, Degrees of Elasticity, Factors determining Elasticity of Demand, Measurement of Price Elasticity, Importance of Elasticity of Demand
Price Elasticity of Demand, Degrees of Elasticity, Factors determining Elasticity of Demand, Measurement of Price Elasticity, Importance of Elasticity of Demand
A market can be defined as a group of firms willing and able to sell a similar product or service to the same potential buyers.
Imperfect competition covers all situations where there is neither pure competition nor pure monopoly.
Perfect competition and pure monopoly are very unlikely to be found in the real world.
In the real world, it is the imperfect competition lying between perfect competition and pure monopoly.
The fundamental distinguishing characteristic of imperfect competition is that average revenue curve slopes downwards throughout its length, but it slopes downwards at different rates in different categories of imperfect competition.
Monopoly refers to the market situation where there is a
Single seller selling a product which has no close substitutes.
Monopolies are characterized by a lack of economic competition to produce the good or service, a lack of viable substitute goods, and the existence of a high monopoly price well above the firm's marginal cost that leads to a high monopoly profit
The word “oligopoly” comes from the Greek “oligos” meaning "little or small” and “polein” meaning “to sell.” When “oligos” is used in the plural, it means “few” ,few firms or few sellers.
DEFINATION:
Oligopoly is that form of market where there are few firms and there is natural interdependence among the firms regarding price and output policy.
The cross-price elasticity of demand is the degree of responsiveness of quantity demanded of a commodity due to the change in price of another commodity.
Eliott Dear Lawyer is telling the Laws of return as the law of cost. Eliott Dear is a regarded attorney in New York. He has over ten years of involvement with his lawful work.
A market can be defined as a group of firms willing and able to sell a similar product or service to the same potential buyers.
Imperfect competition covers all situations where there is neither pure competition nor pure monopoly.
Perfect competition and pure monopoly are very unlikely to be found in the real world.
In the real world, it is the imperfect competition lying between perfect competition and pure monopoly.
The fundamental distinguishing characteristic of imperfect competition is that average revenue curve slopes downwards throughout its length, but it slopes downwards at different rates in different categories of imperfect competition.
Monopoly refers to the market situation where there is a
Single seller selling a product which has no close substitutes.
Monopolies are characterized by a lack of economic competition to produce the good or service, a lack of viable substitute goods, and the existence of a high monopoly price well above the firm's marginal cost that leads to a high monopoly profit
The word “oligopoly” comes from the Greek “oligos” meaning "little or small” and “polein” meaning “to sell.” When “oligos” is used in the plural, it means “few” ,few firms or few sellers.
DEFINATION:
Oligopoly is that form of market where there are few firms and there is natural interdependence among the firms regarding price and output policy.
The cross-price elasticity of demand is the degree of responsiveness of quantity demanded of a commodity due to the change in price of another commodity.
Eliott Dear Lawyer is telling the Laws of return as the law of cost. Eliott Dear is a regarded attorney in New York. He has over ten years of involvement with his lawful work.
Isoquants, MRTS, Concept of Total Product, Average & Marginal Product, Short Run and Long Run analysis of production, The Law of Variable proportion, Returns to scale,
Production Cost – Concept of Cost, Classification of Short run cost – Long run cost,
Law of Variable Proportions and Law of Returns to ScaleAyush Parekh
This presentation puts emphasis on
Law of Variable proportion and Law of Returns to Scale
It also puts light on production function, cost function, etc.
For undergraduate agricultural students of the course ‘Ag. Econ. 6.4 Farm Management, Production, and Resource Economics (2+1)’ of Junagadh Agricultural University, Gujarat and other State Agricultural Universities in India.
2. CONTENTS
• Introduction
• Key concept of law
• Production function with time period analysis
• Definition of the law
• Assumptions and example
• Table and calculations of AP and MP
• Graph
• 3 stages of law of variable proportion
• Important results and relationships
• Application and importance of law
• Laws of return as law of cost
• Table, calculation and graph
• Conclusion
3. Introduction
When producing an economic product, the supplier
must decide how much of each input to use:
◦ Land
◦ Labor
◦ Capital
In particular, the supplier must examine the relation
between input and output
4. The Law of Variable Proportions
Is the answer to the question: How will total output
change when all inputs except one are fixed?
(Answer to be provided later)
Two ways to illustrate the answer:
◦ Production schedule (chart)
◦ Production function (graph)
Usually, as in this example, labor is the variable
input; all other variables are held constant
5. Key Concept: Marginal Product
Marginal product is the amount that total output increases by adding
one more unit of an input
We can calculate Marginal Product as
MP = Change in output / change in input
Marginal product is calculated by subtracting the most recent total
product (# of units produced) from the new total product
6. Production Function
• The law of variable proportion analyses the input output
relationship in the short run through the marginal
implication. It studies the production function with one
variable input and other inputs remains constant
• Production function relates inputs to outputs. It describes
the technological relation between the inputs that a firm
uses and the output that it produces. A production
function can be written as q=f (land, labour, technology,
………..)
• It describes the flow of inputs to flow of output
7. Production function with time period analysis
• Economists describe production function as
being affected by time. When firms plan to
increase their production , they have two options
• Increase all the factors in same proportion,
known as scale of production. This is a long run
analysis
• Increase the amount of some factors keeping
others as constant. This is a short run analysis
• When the firm decide to increase output by
changing only a variable factor, they have to
face the law of variable proportions
8. Definition of Law of Variable Proportion
• Law of variable Proportion refers to the behavior
of output as the quantity of one factor is
increased, keeping the quantity of other factor
fixed and further it states that the marginal
product and average product will eventually
decline
• As more and more units of a factor of production
are added to fixed factor, the total product rises,
at first more in proportion to increase in variable
factor, then less in proportion and finally
decreases
9. Hypothetical Example and its Assumptions
• In our example we illustrate the assumption as:-
– Land is fixed factor
– Labour is variable factor
– Technology is fixed
– Wheat is grown on a Farm
– Labour is equally efficient
10. The Stages of Law of variable Proportions
• The behavior of output when the varying quantity of one
factor is combining with a fixed quantity of the other can
be divided into 3 distinct stages. In order to understand
these three stages it is better to graphically illustrate the
production function with one factor variable.
• There are three stages of this law.
– Increasing Returns
– Diminishing Returns
– Negative Returns
11. Table 1
Land and Workers Total Marginal Average Stages of Variable
Capital (Units of Product (TP) Product (MP) Product (AV) Proportions
(Units of variable (tons of
fixed factor) factor) wheat)
10 0 0 - -
10 1 6 6 6 Increasing
10 2 14 8 7 returns
10 3 24 10 8
10 4 32 8 8
10 5 38 6 7.6 Decreasing
10 6 42 4 7 returns
10 7 44 2 6.2
10 8 44 0 5.5
10 9 42 -2 4.8 (negative returns)
12. Calculations of Total Product, Average Product
and Marginal Product
Total Product
Total Product is defined as the sum total volume of Production or
total number of Units produced with the given fixed and variable
inputs.
Average Product
Average product is defined as the ratio between total product and
number of units of variable factor.
AP = TP / Units of Variable Factor
Marginal Product
Marginal Product is defined as the Increment in total output due to
the use of an extra unit of labour.
MP = Change in Total Product / Change in Variable Factor
OR
13. Graphical Representation of Three Stages of
Law of Variable Proportions
3RD STAGE
1st STAGE 2 STAGE
ND
Negative
Increasing Returns Decreasing Returns Returns
TOTAL PRODUCT
PRODUCT
AVERAGE PRODUCT
MARGINAL PRODUCT
WORKER
14. Three Stages of Law of Variable Proportions
Law of variable proportions consists of three phases.
Increasing returns In many cases, the increase in variable
factor is initially followed by increasing marginal returns i.e. total
output increases more than proportionally to the variable factor. This
phase does no last longer. Soon the Law of diminishing starts
Decreasing returns If increase in variable factor is continued,
the marginal product starts falling i.e. the law of decreasing sets in.
This law is more universal and lasts longer. No business can escape
this law. Sooner or later every economic activity comes under this
law
Negative returns When a business experiences decreasing
returns and the quantity of variable factor is further increased, the
marginal returns becomes negative
15. Important Results and Relationships
Relation between Marginal and Total Quantity
Marginal quantity shows the rate of change of total quantity
When marginal quantity increases it means the total quantity
increases at increasing rate, while if marginal quantity is decreasing,
(but positive) total quantity increases at decreasing rate
When total quantity increases, marginal quantity is positive
When total quantity is maximum, marginal quantity is zero
When total quantity falls, marginal quantity is negative
16. Important Results and Relationships
Relation between Average and Marginal Quantity
When average quantity is increasing, marginal quantity is greater
than average quantity.
When average quantity is decreasing, marginal quantity is less than
average quantity.
When average quantity is neither increasing nor decreasing,
marginal quantity is equal to average quantity
17. Important Results and Relationships
Relation between Total and Average Quantity
Average quantity is equal to the total quantity divided by the number
of units of a factor employed
Average = Total / Units
When average is zero, total quantity is zero
18. Rationale
• The law of variable proportions explains the engineering aspect of
production. This is expressed in physical units of output and not in
rupees. The reason for non proportional change in output is that
different factors of production are not perfect substitutes for each
other. They can be substituted only up to a certain extent in limited
quantities. The law of variable proportions consists of two parts
viz. increasing returns and decreasing returns. But the most
important part of variable proportions is the law of diminishing
marginal returns.
19. Summary
• The Law of Variable Proportions states that
while varying only one input, output will go
through three stages:
– Increasing returns
– Diminishing returns (ideal)
– Negative returns
20. Conclusions
• While adding units of an input (labor), the marginal
product goes through three stages:
• Stage I (Increasing returns): Marginal product
increases throughout
– This means that every additional unit increases productivity as
well as total output
– This is shown on the graph by an increasing slope of total
Product curve
21. Conclusions
Stage II (diminishing returns): Marginal product decreases
throughout.
◦ This means that every additional unit decreases productivity, though
total output still increases.
◦ This is shown on the graph by a decreasing positive slope of total
product curve
Stage III (negative returns): Marginal product is
negative throughout.
◦ This means that each additional unit actually decreases total output.
◦ A waste of money and resources.
This is shown on the graph by a negative slope
22. Conclusions
• The greatest productivity is at the end of Stage I
• The greatest output is at the end of Stage II
• Therefore, Stage II is ideal, because there is a balance
between productivity and total output
23. APPLICATION / IMPORTANCE OF LAW OF
DIMINISHING RETURNS
• The law cannot be applied only to agriculture but to
extractive industries like mining, fisheries and also to
building industries
• It is applied to those areas where nature is supreme
• The law is universal and can applied everywhere
24. LAWS OF RETURNS AS LAWS OF COST
• If we introduce the prices of the factors and the price of
output produced, the laws of returns give rise to laws of
cost.
• There are two main Stages of Laws of Cost
– Increasing Cost
– Decreasing Cost
26. Calculation of Marginal Cost of Output
Marginal cost for the given table can be calculated
Cost of Variable factor = W = 100 units
Marginal Product of 2nd worker=15 units
Marginal cost of the product =
W / MP = 100/15 = 6.6 units
Mathematically, TC = wL+rK.
If capital is fixed, TC= wL, where rK is fixed cost so
MC = ∆TC/ ∆Q. If labor is variable and keeping w
constant so ∆TC = w∆L.
MC= ∆TC/∆Q = w∆L/∆Q = w/(∆Q/ ∆L) and
MPL = ∆Q/ ∆L , hence MC = w/MPL and
w= wage rate, so MC = cost/ MP
28. ALTERNATE NAMES OF LAWS OF VARIABLE
PROPORTIONS AND LAWS OF COST
• Law of increasing returns is also known as
Law of Decreasing Marginal Cost
• Law of decreasing returns is also known
as law of Increasing Marginal Cost