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Substituting One Input for Another in Production

Substituting One Input for Another in Production. Lecture III. Elasticity of Scale and Law of Variable Proportions. We continue to develop the economics of production through a ray from the origin.

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Substituting One Input for Another in Production

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  1. Substituting One Input for Another in Production Lecture III

  2. Elasticity of Scale and Law of Variable Proportions • We continue to develop the economics of production through a ray from the origin. • Last lecture, we developed the notion of returns to scale by looking at changes in production along a ray from the origin

  3. Following the definition of this ray, we defined the elasticity of scale:

  4. Building on these definitions, we next define the ray average product as where l is a strictly positive scalar. • In addition, we define the ray marginal product

  5. Differentiating the ray average product yields

  6. Which states that the ray average product is maximum when it is equal to the ray marginal product (RMP). Note that this relationship is the same as the univariate relationship

  7. Applying these relationships to the Zellner production function: Note that by definition:

  8. Thus, x2 does not affect the scale economies. The RMP is then

  9. Ray Average Product

  10. Ray Marginal Product

  11. The results also indicate that the ray average product reaches a maximum at

  12. RAP RMP A

  13. If l=1 at point A, the production function exhibits constant returns to scale at x, since • If l=1 is to the right of A, then the production function exhibits decreasing returns to scale at x since any ray from the origin to f(lx) for l>A will cut f(lx) from below. Thus, the ray average product is greater than the ray marginal product. • If l=1 to the left of A, f(x) exhibits increasing returns to scale at x.

  14. Measures of Inputs Substitution • In the first lecture, we developed the idea of the rate of technical substitution defined as the movement along an isoquant. • Now we want to expand our discussion to discuss an elasticity of substitution. In general we would like to define the elasticity of substitution as the percentage change in relative rate of input use. However, the exact nature of this elasticity is somewhat ambiguous.

  15. There are three general elasticities of substitution: • Hicks defined the first elasticity of substitution in 1963. The Hicksian or direct elasticity of substitution

  16. Using the Cobb-Douglas as an example:

  17. Writing the bordered Hessian of the production surface: • This Hessian represents the change in x1 and x2 such that y remains unchanged. Based on this transformation, the direct elasticity of substitution can be written as

  18. Allen Partial Elasticity of Substitution is a generalization of the matrix expression above:

  19. Morishima Elasticity of Substitution is the final generalization

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