Technology D: Input Coordinates (5, 5)
Technology D is a production method requiring 5 workers and 5 tons of coal to produce 100 meters of cloth. This technology is represented on the comparison graph by the coordinate point (5, 5).

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Related
Technology C: Input Coordinates (3, 7)
Technology D: Input Coordinates (5, 5)
Technology E: Input Coordinates (10, 1) and Coal-to-Labor Ratio
Technology A: An Energy-Intensive Method with Coordinates (1, 6)
Figure 2.6: The Five Available Technologies for Cloth Production
Drawing Conclusions from Figure 2.10
Technology B: A Labor-Intensive Method with Coordinates (4, 2)
A firm can produce 100 meters of cloth using one of the four technologies listed below. Each technology requires a specific combination of labor (number of workers) and energy (tons of coal).
- Technology A: 1 worker, 6 tons of coal
- Technology B: 4 workers, 2 tons of coal
- Technology C: 3 workers, 7 tons of coal
- Technology D: 10 workers, 1 ton of coal
Assuming the firm's goal is to minimize costs, which technology would it be irrational for the firm to ever choose, regardless of the wages for labor or the price of coal?
Cost-Minimizing Technology Choice
A firm produces 100 meters of cloth. Initially, the wage is £10 per worker and the price of coal is £20 per ton. Under these conditions, the firm uses 'Technology B' (4 workers, 2 tons of coal), as it is the most cost-effective option. Now, imagine the wage for workers rises to £30, while the price of coal remains at £20 per ton. Given the available technologies below, which one will the firm switch to in order to minimize its costs?
A firm can produce 100 meters of cloth using various technologies, each defined by a specific combination of labor (workers) and energy (tons of coal). Analyze the input requirements for each technology listed below and match it to the correct description of its input intensity.
A firm analyzes several technologies, represented as points on a graph with labor on the horizontal axis and energy on the vertical axis. An isocost line is drawn, showing all combinations of labor and energy that cost exactly £1000. What can be concluded about a technology if its corresponding point lies in the region of the graph above the £1000 isocost line?
Impact of Input Price Changes on Technology Choice
A firm uses a model to decide which production technology to use. The model is represented on a graph where the horizontal axis measures the number of workers (labor) and the vertical axis measures the tonnes of coal (energy). Isocost lines are drawn on this graph to show all combinations of labor and energy that result in the same total cost. What does the slope of an isocost line represent in this model?
Evaluating a Firm's Technology Investment Decision
A manufacturing firm uses a model to select the most cost-effective production technology. This model is visualized on a graph where the horizontal axis represents the number of workers (labor) and the vertical axis represents tons of coal (energy). An isocost line on this graph shows all combinations of labor and coal that have the same total cost. If the price of coal increases while the wage for labor stays the same, how will the isocost line change?
Minimizing Production Costs
Technology C: Input Coordinates (3, 7)
Technology D: Input Coordinates (5, 5)
Technology A: An Energy-Intensive Method with Coordinates (1, 6)
Technology E: Input Coordinates (10, 1) and Coal-to-Labor Ratio
Technology B: A Labor-Intensive Method with Coordinates (4, 2)
A graph is used to compare different methods for producing a fixed amount of a good. The horizontal axis measures the number of workers, and the vertical axis measures the tons of coal required. Consider two production methods shown on this graph: Method X is at the coordinate (2, 9) and Method Y is at the coordinate (8, 3). Based on this information, which of the following statements is an accurate comparison of the two methods?
A standard economic graph is used to visualize different production methods for a set amount of output. The horizontal axis represents the number of workers (labor), and the vertical axis represents the amount of energy (in tons of coal). Match each described production method to its correct coordinate pair on this graph.
A graph is used to compare different technologies for producing a fixed quantity of a good. The horizontal axis represents the number of workers, and the vertical axis represents tons of coal. A company is evaluating four new technologies represented by the following coordinate pairs: Technology P (2, 8), Technology Q (4, 4), Technology R (7, 2), and Technology S (9, 1). If the company's main priority is to minimize its energy consumption (coal), which technology is the most suitable choice?
Evaluating a Production Technology Shift
Analyzing a Shift in Production Technology
A firm is analyzing two different technologies to produce 100 units of a product. The production process is visualized on a graph where the horizontal axis represents the number of workers and the vertical axis represents tons of coal. Technology Alpha is located at the coordinate (2, 10), and Technology Beta is at (9, 3). Which of the following statements provides the most accurate evaluation of the choice between these two technologies?
On a graph used to compare production methods, the horizontal axis measures the number of workers and the vertical axis measures tons of coal. True or False: A production method represented by the coordinate point (8, 2) is more labor-intensive than a method represented by the point (2, 8).
A company's current technology for producing a fixed quantity of a good requires 6 workers and 6 tons of coal. The company is evaluating four alternative technologies, represented on a graph where the horizontal axis is 'number of workers' and the vertical axis is 'tons of coal'. Which of the following alternatives represents an unambiguous technological improvement, meaning it uses less of at least one input without using more of the other?
Determining New Technology Coordinates
On a graph where the horizontal axis represents the number of workers and the vertical axis represents tons of coal, a specific production technology is located at the coordinate point (6, 3). To produce the standard amount of output, this technology requires 6 workers and ____ tons of coal.
Learn After
Technology B Dominates Technology D
A textile firm currently produces 100 meters of cloth using a process that requires 5 workers and 5 tons of coal. The firm discovers a new production process that also yields 100 meters of cloth but requires only 4 workers and 2 tons of coal. Which of the following statements correctly analyzes the two production processes?
Representing Production Inputs
Production Cost Calculation
A textile firm can produce 100 meters of cloth using one of three available methods. Initially, the wage for a worker is $10 and the price of a ton of coal is $40.
- Method A: Requires 8 workers and 2 tons of coal.
- Method C: Requires 2 workers and 7 tons of coal.
- Method D: Requires 5 workers and 5 tons of coal.
A new labor agreement increases the wage to $50 per worker, while the price of coal remains unchanged. Based on this change, which statement accurately evaluates the firm's most cost-effective option?
A firm produces 100 meters of cloth using a method that requires 5 workers and 5 tons of coal. A $10 increase in the daily wage per worker will increase the total cost of producing 100 meters of cloth by the exact same amount as a $10 increase in the price per ton of coal.
A textile firm can use different production methods to produce 100 meters of cloth. Each method is described by its required inputs: a certain number of workers and a quantity of coal in tons. Match each method, described by its input coordinates (workers, tons of coal), to the correct description of its resource intensity.
A firm produces a standard batch of cloth using a method that requires 5 workers and 5 tons of coal. The daily wage per worker is fixed at $20. The firm is evaluating an alternative production method that requires 4 workers and 7 tons of coal. At what price per ton of coal would the total production cost of both methods be identical?
Evaluating Production Method Viability
Strategic Risk Analysis of a Production Method
Production Method Vulnerability Analysis