Concept

Choosing a Technology Based on Relative Input Prices

Once technically inefficient technologies are discarded, a firm's choice among the remaining options (like A, B, and E) depends on economic factors, specifically the relative prices of inputs such as labor and coal. Intuition suggests that a labor-intensive technology like E is favored when labor is cheap relative to coal, whereas an energy-intensive technology like A becomes the preferred option when coal is relatively inexpensive. To move beyond intuition and make a precise decision, a formal economic model is required to calculate and compare the costs associated with each technology, thereby identifying the most profitable choice.

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Updated 2026-05-02

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