jagomart
digital resources
picture1_Neoclassical Economics Pdf 127754 | F02 Topic4


 288x       Filetype PDF       File size 0.86 MB       Source: www.dartmouth.edu


File: Neoclassical Economics Pdf 127754 | F02 Topic4
dartmouth college department of economics economics 1 dartmouth college department of economics economics 1 fall 02 dartmouth college department of economics economics 1 fall 02 dartmouth college department of economics ...

icon picture PDF Filetype PDF | Posted on 13 Oct 2022 | 3 years ago
Partial capture of text on file.
             DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS                              ECONOMICS 1
                             Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                             Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                             Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                                   Topic 4: Theory of the Firm
                                   Topic 4: Theory of the Firm
                                            Economics 1, Fall 2002
                                                 Andreas Bentz
                                 Based Primarily on Frank Chapters 9 - 12
                            Firms
                            Firms
                                demand:                              supply:
                                inputs:
                                labor,           production          output
                                capital
                               buy in factor                      sell in product
                                  market                             market
                                   cost                              revenue
                              Objective: firms are interested in profit = revenue - cost.
                                                                                    2
             © Andreas Bentz                                                                  page 1
                    DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS                                                                 ECONOMICS 1
                                           Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                                           Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                                           Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                                                                       Production
                                                                        Production
                                                                        The Black Box
                                          Production
                                          Production
                                           X Production for a neoclassical economist is a
                                               “black box”:
                                                ƒ   We model production as a function that turns inputs
                                                    into output:
                                                               q = f(k, l)
                                                ƒ   where:
                                                     » q:      output
                                                     » k:      capital input
                                                     » l:      labor input
                                                     » f(·, ·): production function
                                                                                                                             4
                    © Andreas Bentz                                                                                                         page 2
               DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS                                     ECONOMICS 1
                               Short Run and Long Run
                               Short Run and Long Run
                                X Firms may not immediately be able to change the
                                   quantity of all inputs they use.
                                    ƒ Example: buildings, etc.
                                X The long run is defined as the shortest period of time
                                   in which a firm can change the quantity of all inputs it
                                   uses.
                                    ƒ An input whose quantity can be freely adjusted is a variable
                                      input.
                                X The short run is the period of time during which one or
                                   more inputs cannot be varied.
                                    ƒ An input whose quantity cannot be freely adjusted is a fixed
                                      input.
                                                                                            5
                                Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                                Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                                Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall ‘02
                                      Production in the Short Run
                                      Production in the Short Run
                                         When not all inputs can be varied.
               © Andreas Bentz                                                                         page 3
                DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS                                          ECONOMICS 1
                                 Short-Run Production
                                 Short-Run Production
                                  X Suppose a firm produces output according to
                                     the production function q = f(k, l).
                                  X Suppose that, in the short run, the amount of
                                     capital cannot be varied (fixed input) - assume
                                     it is fixed at k0.
                                  X We can then plot the amount of output
                                     produced as we vary the amount of labor
                                     (variable input).
                                  X This gives us the short-run production
                                     function.
                                                                                                  7
                                 Short-Run Production Function
                                 Short-Run Production Function
                                 q
                                                                     X The short-run production
                                                             f(k ,l)   function f(k0,l) plots the
                                                               0       quantity of output (total
                                                                       product), as one input
                                                                       (labor) is varied (holding
                                                                       capital fixed at k0).
                                                                 l
                                                                                                  8
                © Andreas Bentz                                                                               page 4
The words contained in this file might help you see if this file matches what you are looking for:

...Dartmouth college department of economics fall topic theory the firm andreas bentz based primarily on frank chapters firms demand supply inputs labor production output capital buy in factor sell product market cost revenue objective are interested profit page black box x for a neoclassical economist is we model as function that turns into q f k l where input short run and long may not immediately be able to change quantity all they use example buildings etc defined shortest period time which can it uses an whose freely adjusted variable during one or more cannot varied fixed when suppose produces according amount assume at then plot produced vary this gives us plots total holding...

no reviews yet
Please Login to review.