Sufficiency of a Single Point Representation
A graph shows a single point 'A' representing the inputs (10 workers, 5 tons of coal) needed to produce 100 meters of cloth using a specific technology. Explain why this single point is sufficient to determine the inputs required to produce 500 meters of cloth, assuming the technology exhibits constant returns to scale.
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A firm can produce one unit of a product using one of two available technologies, both of which operate with fixed input proportions and constant returns to scale. The input requirements for one unit of output are as follows:
- Technology X: Requires 8 hours of labor and 3 units of capital.
- Technology Y: Requires 5 hours of labor and 5 units of capital.
Based on this information, which statement accurately analyzes the two technologies?
Scaling Production at a Textile Mill
Match each characteristic below to the appropriate measure of price responsiveness.
For a production technology with fixed input proportions and constant returns to scale, a single point on a graph representing the inputs needed for one unit of output is insufficient to determine the inputs required for any other level of output.
Sufficiency of a Single Point Representation
A graph shows that a specific production technology, which operates with fixed input proportions and constant returns to scale, requires 6 workers and 3 tons of coal to produce 100 units of a good. What combination of inputs would be required to produce 150 units of the same good using this technology?
Justification for Simplified Technology Representation
A manufacturing firm develops a new production process where doubling all inputs results in 2.5 times the original output. An economist plots a single point on a graph to represent the labor and capital required to produce the first 1,000 units. Evaluate the adequacy of using only this single point to predict the inputs needed for producing 2,000 units.
Validity of Simplified Technology Models
A company observes that to produce 1,000 units of its product, it requires 10 workers and 5 machines. To increase production to 2,000 units, it finds that it needs 18 workers and 9 machines. An analyst attempts to represent this production technology on a graph by plotting a single point corresponding to the inputs for 1,000 units. Why would this single-point representation be inadequate for predicting the resources needed for other output levels?
For a production technology with fixed input proportions and constant returns to scale, a single point on a graph representing the inputs needed for one unit of output is insufficient to determine the inputs required for any other level of output.