Case Study

Correcting a Misinterpretation of a Production Graph

A junior analyst is examining a company's production graph, which plots total output on the vertical axis against a single variable input on the horizontal axis. The production curve starts at the origin and is concave (it rises at a continuously decreasing rate). The analyst points to an operating point, P, on the curve and makes the following statement: 'Since the curve is still rising at point P, the efficiency of our input use, measured as the average output per unit of input, must also be increasing at this point.'

As a senior economist, explain why the analyst's conclusion is incorrect. Your explanation should be based on the geometric properties of the graph at point P, specifically by comparing the slope that represents the 'average output per unit of input' with the slope that represents the 'output from the last unit of input added'.

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Updated 2025-08-04

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