Multiple Choice

A firm can produce a specific quantity of cloth using five different production methods. Each method uses a combination of two inputs: labor (number of workers) and energy (tonnes of coal). The input combinations for the methods are: Method A (2 workers, 8 tonnes), Method B (3 workers, 5 tonnes), Method C (5 workers, 6 tonnes), Method D (6 workers, 3 tonnes), and Method E (8 workers, 2 tonnes). A method is considered inefficient if another available method can produce the same output using less of at least one input without using more of the other. Based on this principle, which method would a cost-minimizing firm never select, regardless of the price of labor and energy?

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Updated 2025-10-03

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