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CHAPTER 31 PRODUCTION. The Robinson Crusoe Economy One consumer and one firm; The consumer owns the firm; Preference: over leisure and coconuts; Technology:

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 31 PRODUCTION. The Robinson Crusoe Economy One consumer and one firm; The consumer owns the firm; Preference: over leisure and coconuts; Technology:"— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 31 PRODUCTION

2 The Robinson Crusoe Economy One consumer and one firm; The consumer owns the firm; Preference: over leisure and coconuts; Technology: use leisure to produce coconuts; The planner’s problem:  F.O.C.

3 The Robinson Crusoe economy

4 The Competitive equilibrium Labor market and goods market; The consumer supplies labor and buys consumption goods from markets; The firm hires labor and sells output in markets; Utility maximization and profit maximization; General equilibrium on both markets; The consumer is the shareholder of the firm.

5 The Competitive equilibrium The firm’s behavior:  F.O.C. The firm’s profits:

6 The Competitive equilibrium The firm’s behavior

7 The Competitive equilibrium The consumer’s budget constraint: The consumer’s problem:  F.O.C.

8 The Competitive equilibrium The consumer’s behavior

9 The Competitive equilibrium The competitive outcome is Pareto efficient.

10 The Competitive equilibrium

11 Different Technologies Constant returns to scale  Zero profits for the firm;  The isoprofit coincides with the production function;  The budget line coincides with the isoprofit;  The competitive equilibrium is Pareto efficient.

12 Different Technologies The competitive equilibrium exists.

13 Different Technologies Increasing returns to scale  The Pareto efficient allocation cannot be achieved by the competitive market. The firm would be making negative profits at the Pareto efficient allocation; Given any market price, the profit-maximization problem has no solution.

14 Different Technologies The Pareto efficient allocation is not attainable.

15 The 1 st and 2 nd theorem of welfare economics Assuming convexity and closedness, the competitive equilibrium exists; The competitive equilibrium is Pareto efficient; Assuming convexity, any Pareto efficient allocation can be achieved by a competitive equilibrium.

16 Production possibilities One input, multiple output; Production possibility set: set of feasible outputs; Production possibility frontier: set of efficient outputs; Marginal rate of transformation: the rate at which the economy substitutes one output for another.

17 Production possibilities

18 Comparative Advantage Robinson Crusoe: F C /10+C C /20  10; Friday: F F /20+C F /10  10; Robinson has a comparative advantage in coconuts and Friday has a comparative advantage in fish.

19 Comparative Advantage

20 Joint production possibility set:

21 Comparative Advantage

22 Pareto efficiency Given total output (x 1, x 2 ), the competitive equilibrium is given by MRS A =MRS B. We must have MRS A =MRS B =MRT; The slope of indifference curves at the competitive equilibrium must equal the slope of the PPF at (x 1, x 2 ).

23 Pareto efficiency

24 Competitive Equilibrium Assuming inelastic supply of labor: L C +L F =L; The firm’s problem:  F.O.C.

25 Competitive Equilibrium The firm chooses a point on the PPF that maximizes its profits given prices.

26 Competitive Equilibrium The consumer’s problem:  F.O.C.


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