Production and Laws of Production
(Curated by lunotes.in)
Meaning of Production
In economics, production refers to the creation of goods and services (material or non-material) with the purpose of selling them in the market. It includes converting raw materials into finished goods.
Laws of Production
These laws deal with cost analysis and producer’s equilibrium, helping businesses determine the most profitable level of output.
There are two major laws:
1. Law of Variable Proportions (Short Run)
This law explains the relationship between input and output when only one input is variable and others remain fixed.
Definition (Marshall):
"An increase in the amount of labour and capital applied in cultivation leads to a less than proportionate increase in output, unless accompanied by improvements in technology."
Key Concepts:
-
Total Product (TP): Total output produced.
-
Average Product (AP):
-
Marginal Product (MP):
or
Three Stages of the Law:
Stage | TP Trend | AP Trend | MP Trend | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
I | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ then ↓ | MP = AP at end |
II | ↑ (at ↓ rate) | ↓ | ↓ | TP max, MP = 0 |
III | ↓ | ↓ | Negative | MP < 0 |
MP intersects AP at AP’s maximum.
Law is also called Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns.
Reasons for Diminishing Returns:
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Variable factors not homogeneous
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Poor combination of inputs
-
Limited substitution possibilities
Assumptions:
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Technology constant
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Short-run framework
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At least one fixed factor
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Units of variable factor are homogeneous
2. Law of Returns to Scale (Long Run)
This law examines output changes when all inputs are changed proportionately.
Types:
Type | Output Change | Cause/Feature |
---|---|---|
Increasing Returns | Output ↑ > Input ↑ | Specialization, Economies of Scale |
Constant Returns | Output ↑ = Input ↑ | Transitional phase |
Diminishing Returns | Output ↑ < Input ↑ | Diseconomies of Scale, Coordination loss |
Example Table:
Inputs (Land+Labour) | Total Product | Marginal Product |
---|---|---|
1+2 | 4 | - |
2+4 | 10 | 6 |
3+6 | 18 | 8 |
... | ... | ... |
MP increases → constant → then decreases.
Difference: Variable Proportion vs Returns to Scale
Basis | Law of Variable Proportions | Law of Returns to Scale |
---|---|---|
Time Frame | Short-run | Long-run |
Input Change | Only one variable | All inputs in same proportion |
Factor Ratio | Changes | Constant |
Scale of Production | Constant | Changing |
Production Function
It shows the technical relationship between inputs and output for a given technology.
Formula:
Where:
-
: Output
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: Inputs (Labour, Land, Capital etc.)
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: Technology factor
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