Samuelson - Managerial Economics 7e

Page 234

Other Production Decisions

employing different degrees of automation), what is the effect on output of expanding the labor force (for instance, adding extra shifts)? Does the industry exhibit economies of scale and, if so, over what range of outputs? (That is, will a 40 percent increase in plant scale deliver more than a 40 percent increase in output?) Production data—though subject to measurement errors—are very useful to managers. Based on these data, the manager (often with the help of an operations research specialist) can estimate the mathematical relationship between levels of inputs and quantity of output. The principal statistical method for carrying out this task is regression analysis (the most important elements of which were discussed in Chapter 4). The end product of this analysis is a tangible representation of the firm’s production function.

OTHER PRODUCTION DECISIONS Within the limits of its production technology, the firm’s managers face a number of important decisions. We have already discussed finding the optimal use of single input in the short run and choosing the best mix of inputs in the long run. We now consider two other decisions: (1) the allocation of a single input among multiple production facilities and (2) the use of an input across multiple products.

Multiple Plants Consider an oil company that buys crude oil and transforms it into gasoline at two of its refineries. Currently it has 10 thousand barrels of oil under long-term contract and must decide how to allocate it between its two refineries. The company’s goal is to allocate supplies to maximize total output from the refineries. Let MA and MB represent the crude input at each refinery and QA and QB the gasoline outputs. The firm’s problem is: Maximize Q Q A Q B, subject to MA MB 10 thousand. The key to maximizing total output is to compare marginal products at the two refineries. Barrels of crude first should be allocated to the refinery at which the marginal product is greater. Let’s say this is refinery A. As additional barrels are allocated to this refinery, its marginal product diminishes, and it becomes worthwhile to allocate oil to refinery B as well. In the final allocation of all 10 thousand barrels, output is maximized if and only if the marginal products of both refineries are equal, that is, when MPA MPB.

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Bargaining

1min
page 439

Market Entry

4min
pages 437-438

Equilibrium Strategies

18min
pages 428-436

Strategic Commitments

4min
pages 399-400

Price Rigidity and Kinked Demand

3min
pages 389-390

Price Wars and the Prisoner’s Dilemma

17min
pages 391-398

Competition among Symmetric Firms

5min
pages 386-388

Concentration and Prices

6min
pages 381-383

Industry Concentration

8min
pages 376-380

Natural Monopolies

32min
pages 355-371

Five-Forces Framework

3min
pages 374-375

Barriers to Entry

14min
pages 345-351

Cartels

6min
pages 352-354

Tariffs and Quotas

22min
pages 329-341

Private Markets: Benefits and Costs

21min
pages 319-328

Decisions of the Competitive Firm

4min
pages 312-314

Multiple Products

37min
pages 282-303

Shifts in Demand and Supply

2min
pages 310-311

Market Equilibrium

8min
pages 315-318

Economies of Scope

6min
pages 275-277

Returns to Scale

8min
pages 270-274

A Single Product

3min
pages 278-279

The Shut-Down Rule

3min
pages 280-281

Short-Run Costs

8min
pages 260-264

Long-Run Costs

10min
pages 265-269

Profit Maximization with Limited Capacity: Ordering a Best Seller

6min
pages 257-259

Fixed and Sunk Costs

7min
pages 254-256

Opportunity Costs and Economic Profits

8min
pages 250-253

Multiple Plants

1min
page 234

Returns to Scale

4min
pages 221-222

Estimating Production Functions

1min
page 233

Forecasting Performance

5min
pages 186-188

Optimal Use of an Input

4min
pages 219-220

Barometric Models

2min
page 185

Fitting a Simple Trend

14min
pages 176-184

Interpreting Regression Statistics

10min
pages 164-168

Potential Problems in Regression

8min
pages 169-173

Time-Series Models

2min
pages 174-175

Uncontrolled Market Data

2min
page 155

Price Discrimination

9min
pages 122-125

Consumer Surveys

4min
pages 152-153

Optimal Markup Pricing

8min
pages 118-121

Controlled Market Studies

2min
page 154

Other Elasticities

4min
pages 111-112

Maximizing Revenue

1min
page 117

General Determinants of Demand

2min
page 105

The Demand Function

4min
pages 101-102

Step 6: Perform Sensitivity Analysis

9min
pages 35-38

The Aim of This Book

10min
pages 43-47

Public Decisions

8min
pages 39-42

Step 2: Determine the Objective

4min
pages 30-31

Step 3: Explore the Alternatives

2min
page 32

Step 4: Predict the Consequences

2min
page 33

Marginal Revenue

1min
page 67

Step 5: Make a Choice

2min
page 34
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