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Non-Rationalised Economics NCERT Notes, Solutions and Extra Q & A (Class 9th to 12th)
9th 10th 11th 12th

Class 12th Chapters
Introductory Microeconomics
1. Introduction 2. Theory Of Consumer Behaviour 3. Production And Costs
4. The Theory Of The Firm Under Perfect Competition 5. Market Equilibrium 6. Non-Competitive Markets
Introductory Macroeconomics
1. Introduction 2. National Income Accounting 3. Money And Banking
4. Determination Of Income And Employment 5. Government Budget And The Economy 6. Open Economy Macroeconomics



Chapter 3 Production And Costs



Production Function

This chapter examines the behaviour of a producer, also known as a firm. A firm is an entity that transforms inputs into output through a process called production.

Inputs are resources acquired by the firm, such as labour, machines, land, raw materials, etc. Output is the goods or services produced by using these inputs. Output can be consumed by individuals or used by other firms in further production processes.

Examples of production include a tailor making shirts from cloth and thread, a farmer producing wheat using land, labor, and equipment, or a manufacturer producing cars from steel, rubber, and labor.

For simplicity, we often make assumptions such as production being instantaneous (inputs are immediately converted to output) and using the terms production and supply interchangeably.

Firms incur costs of production to acquire inputs. They earn revenue by selling the output. The difference between revenue and cost is the firm's profit. The primary objective of a firm is assumed to be profit maximisation.

The production function of a firm describes the technical relationship between the inputs used and the maximum output that can be produced from those inputs. For any given combination of inputs, it specifies the highest possible quantity of output obtainable.

If a firm uses two inputs, say Labour (L) and Capital (K), to produce output (q), the production function can be written as $q = f(L, K)$. This function represents the maximum output q for any given amounts of L and K.

A production function represents efficient production, meaning it's not possible to produce more output with the same inputs, given the current technology.

The production function is defined for a specific level of technology. Improvements in technology allow higher maximum output levels to be produced from the same input combinations, resulting in a new production function.

Table 3.1 provides a numerical example of a production function showing the maximum output for different combinations of Labour and Capital. It illustrates that increasing inputs generally leads to increased output, and in this example, both inputs are necessary for production.

Factor Capital
Labour 0123456
00000000
10137101213
2031018242933
3071830404650
40102440505657
50122946565859
60133350575960

The Short Run And The Long Run

In the analysis of production, economists distinguish between two time periods: the short run and the long run. This distinction is based on the variability of factors of production.

In the short run, at least one factor of production is fixed and cannot be changed. This fixed factor (e.g., factory size, amount of land) restricts the firm's ability to adjust output freely. To change the output level in the short run, the firm can only vary the amount of other factors, called variable factors (e.g., labour, raw materials).

In the long run, all factors of production are variable. The firm has enough time to adjust the quantity of any input, including those that were fixed in the short run (e.g., building a new factory, acquiring more land). In the long run, there are no fixed factors.

The terms short run and long run are relative to the specific production process and do not correspond to fixed calendar periods like days, months, or years. The key is the variability of inputs.


Isoquant

An isoquant is a concept similar to an indifference curve, used to represent the production function graphically when there are two inputs (Labour and Capital).

An isoquant is a curve that shows all the different combinations of two inputs (e.g., L and K) that can produce the same specific maximum level of output.

Each isoquant corresponds to a particular output level and is labeled with that quantity.

Referring to Table 3.1, the output level of 10 units can be produced with combinations like (4 units of L, 1 unit of K), (2 units of L, 2 units of K), or (1 unit of L, 4 units of K). All these combinations lie on the same isoquant for output q=10.

Graph showing multiple downward sloping isoquants for different output levels (q1, q2, q3) with Labour on the X-axis and Capital on the Y-axis.

Isoquants are typically negatively sloped. This is because if marginal products are positive, producing the same output with more of one input requires using less of the other input.


Total Product, Average Product And Marginal Product

These concepts are used to describe the output achieved when varying only one input while keeping others constant (which happens in the short run).


Total Product

The Total Product (TP) of a variable input is the relationship between the quantity of that input used and the total output produced, assuming all other inputs are held constant.

For example, if Capital is fixed at 4 units in Table 3.1, the column for K=4 shows the total output (TP) for different amounts of Labour (L). This is the TP schedule of Labour when K=4.

Table 3.2 provides a numerical example of TP for Labour.


Average Product

The Average Product (AP) of a variable input is the output produced per unit of that input. It is calculated by dividing the Total Product (TP) by the quantity of the variable input (L).

$AP_L = \frac{TP_L}{L}$

The values in the last column of Table 3.2 are the AP of Labour, calculated by dividing TP by L.


Marginal Product

The Marginal Product (MP) of a variable input is the change in total output resulting from using one additional unit of that input, holding all other inputs constant.

$MP_L = \frac{\Delta TP_L}{\Delta L}$ (where $\Delta$ means change)

For discrete units of input, MP can be calculated as the difference in TP when one more unit of the variable input is used: $MP_L = TP_L - TP_{L-1}$.

Table 3.2 shows the MP of Labour. MP is typically undefined at zero input level.

Total product ($TP_n$) at a certain level of input employment (n) is the sum of the marginal products of each unit of that input up to level n: $TP_n = \sum_{i=1}^n MP_i$.

Average product at any level is the average of the marginal products of all preceding units up to that level.

Labour (L) TP MPL APL
00--
1101010
2241412
3401613.33
4501012.5
556611.2
65719.5

The Law Of Diminishing Marginal Product And The Law Of Variable Proportions

The Law of Variable Proportions (also known as the Law of Diminishing Marginal Product or Marginal Returns) describes the pattern of change in the marginal product of a variable input when other inputs are fixed.

This law states that as employment of one factor (variable input) is increased while holding other factors (fixed inputs) constant, the marginal product of the variable input will eventually decline.

Typically, the process involves three phases:

  1. Initially, MP rises: As the variable input is increased from a low level, the factor proportions (ratio of variable to fixed input) become more favourable, allowing for better specialisation and utilisation of fixed inputs. Each additional unit of the variable input adds more to total output than the previous unit.
  2. MP reaches a maximum.
  3. Eventually, MP falls: After a certain point, as more variable input is added to the fixed factor, the fixed factor becomes relatively scarce. Adding more variable input leads to 'crowding' or less efficient use of the fixed input, causing the marginal product of additional units to decrease.
  4. MP may become zero or negative: If the variable input continues to increase, MP can eventually fall to zero (total output maximum) or become negative (total output decreases).

This law operates because the factor proportions change when one input is varied and others are fixed. When both inputs can change, this law does not necessarily apply (see Returns to Scale).


Shapes Of Total Product, Marginal Product And Average Product Curves

Based on the Law of Variable Proportions, the Total Product (TP), Marginal Product (MP), and Average Product (AP) curves have characteristic shapes when one input is varied while others are fixed.

Relationship between AP and MP Curves:

Figure 3.2 illustrates the typical shapes and relationship between the AP and MP curves.


Returns To Scale

The Law of Variable Proportions applies in the short run when at least one factor is fixed. In the long run, all factors are variable. Returns to Scale describes the relationship between a proportional change in *all* inputs and the resulting proportional change in output, which is a long-run concept.


Returns To Scale

Consider increasing the employment level of all inputs by the same proportion, say by a factor 't' (where $t > 1$). Returns to Scale are classified based on how output changes:


Cobb-Douglas Production Function

A common example of a production function is the Cobb-Douglas form: $q = L^a K^b$, where L and K are inputs, and 'a' and 'b' are positive constants.

For a Cobb-Douglas production function, the type of returns to scale is determined by the sum of the exponents (a+b):


Costs

Firms incur costs to acquire inputs for production. For any given level of output, a firm aims to produce it using the least costly combination of inputs.

The cost function describes the minimum cost of producing each level of output, given input prices and the production technology.


Short Run Costs

In the short run, some inputs are fixed. The costs associated with these fixed inputs are called Total Fixed Cost (TFC). TFC does not change with the level of output produced.

Costs associated with variable inputs are called Total Variable Cost (TVC). TVC changes as the output level changes (since variable inputs must be adjusted).

Total Cost (TC) in the short run is the sum of Total Fixed Cost and Total Variable Cost: $TC = TFC + TVC$.

As output increases, variable input usage increases, leading to increases in both TVC and TC. TFC remains constant.

Table 3.3 provides a numerical example of short run costs.

Output (q) TFC (Rs) TVC (Rs) TC (Rs) AFC (Rs) AVC (Rs) SAC (Rs) SMC (Rs)
020020
120103020103010
2201838109198
32024446.67814.676
420294957.2512.255
520335346.610.64
62039593.336.59.836
72047672.866.79.578
82060802.57.51013
92075952.228.3310.5515
10209511529.511.520

Other short run cost concepts derived from Total Costs:

Shapes of Short Run Cost Curves:



Exercises

Exercises are excluded as per user instructions.