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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”: We model production as a function that turns inputs into output: q = f(k, l) 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. 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. 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. 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
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