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Compensation Policy: Chapter 8 Managerial Economics

The document discusses compensation policy and production analysis. It defines compensation policy as how organizations compensate employees in certain situations. It then covers production functions, productivity measures including total, average and marginal product, and guiding production to maximize profit. Finally, it discusses isoquants, isocosts, and how firms minimize costs and optimally substitute inputs in response to price changes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
174 views

Compensation Policy: Chapter 8 Managerial Economics

The document discusses compensation policy and production analysis. It defines compensation policy as how organizations compensate employees in certain situations. It then covers production functions, productivity measures including total, average and marginal product, and guiding production to maximize profit. Finally, it discusses isoquants, isocosts, and how firms minimize costs and optimally substitute inputs in response to price changes.

Uploaded by

zach alexx
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Chapter 8 Managerial Economics

COMPENSATION
POLICY
What is Compensation Policy?
◦ a policy that was used by organizations or cooperation to compensate their
worker or employee if they are in an certain conditions of specific
situations.
Why Compensation Policy Matters
◦ Communicating your organization’s compensation philosophy with employees helps them
understand the “why” behind decisions that are made. In an employee’s day-to-day
experience, though, policies have the most direct impact.
Production Analysis
Production Function
Q = F(K,L)
Q is quantity of output produced.
K is capital input.
L is labor input.
F is a functional form relating the inputs to output.
The maximum amount of output that can be produced with K units of
capital and L units of labor.
Short-Run vs. Long-Run Decisions
Fixed vs. Variable Inputs
Production Function Algebraic Forms
◦ Linear production function: inputs are perfect substitutes.
Q  F  K , L   aK  bL
◦ Leontief production function: inputs are used in fixed proportions.
Q  F  K , L   min  bK , cL
◦ Cobb-Douglas production function: inputs have a degree of substitutability.

Q  F  K , L   K a Lb
Productivity Measures: Total Product
◦ Total Product (TP): maximum output produced with
given amounts of inputs.
◦ Example: Cobb-Douglas Production Function:
Q = F(K,L) = K.5 L.5
◦ K is fixed at 16 units.
◦ Short run Cobb-Douglass production function:
Q = (16).5 L.5 = 4 L.5

◦ Total Product when 100 units of labor are used?

Q = 4 (100).5 = 4(10) = 40 units


Productivity Measures: Average Product of an Input
◦ Average Product of an Input: measure of output produced per unit of input.
◦ Average Product of Labor: APL = Q/L.
◦ Measures the output of an “average” worker.
◦ Example: Q = F(K,L) = K.5 L.5

◦ If the inputs are K = 16 and L = 16, then the average product of labor is
APL = [(16) 0.5(16)0.5]/16 = 1.
◦ Average Product of Capital: APK = Q/K.
◦ Measures the output of an “average” unit of capital.
◦ Example: Q = F(K,L) = K.5 L.5

◦ If the inputs are K = 16 and L = 16, then the average product of capital is
APK = [(16)0.5(16)0.5]/16 = 1.
Productivity Measures: Marginal Product of an
Input
Marginal Product on an Input: change in total output
attributable to the last unit of an input.
- Marginal Product of Labor: MPL = DQ/DL
Measures the output produced by the last worker.
Slope of the short-run production function (with
respect to labor).
- Marginal Product of Capital: MPK = DQ/DK
Measures the output produced by the last unit of capital.
- When capital is allowed to vary in the short run, MPK is the slope of the
production function (with respect to capital).
Increasing, Diminishing and Negative Marginal Returns

Q Increasing Diminishing Negative


Marginal Marginal Marginal
Returns Returns Returns

Q=F(K,L)

AP
L
Guiding the Production Process
◦ Producing on the production function
◦ Aligning incentives to induce maximum worker effort.
◦ Employing the right level of inputs
◦ When labor or capital vary in the short run, to maximize profit a manager will hire
◦ labor until the value of marginal product of labor equals the wage: VMPL = w, where VMPL =
P x MPL.
◦ capital until the value of marginal product of capital equals the rental rate: VMPK = r, where
VMPK = P x MPK .
Isoquant
◦ Illustrates the long-run combinations of inputs (K, L) that yield the
producer the same level of output.
◦ The shape of an isoquant reflects the ease with which a producer can
substitute among inputs while maintaining the same level of output.
Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution (MRTS)

◦ The rate at which two inputs are substituted while maintaining the same
output level.

MPL
MRTS KL 
MPK
Linear Isoquants
◦ Capital and labor are K
perfect substitutes Increasing
◦ Q = aK + bL Output
◦ MRTSKL = b/a
◦ Linear isoquants imply that
inputs are substituted at a
constant rate, independent
of the input levels
employed.
Q1 Q2 Q3
L
Leontief Isoquants
Q3
◦ Capital and labor are perfect K
Q2
complements. Q1 Increasing
◦ Capital and labor are used in Output
fixed-proportions.
◦ Q = min {bK, cL}
◦ Since capital and labor are
consumed in fixed
proportions there is no input
substitution along isoquants
(hence, no MRTSKL). L
Cobb-Douglas
Isoquants
◦ Inputs are not perfectly K
Q3
substitutable. Increasing
Q2
◦ Diminishing marginal rate of Output
Q1
technical substitution.
◦ As less of one input is used in the production
process, increasingly more of the other input must
be employed to produce the same output level.

◦ Q = KaLb
◦ MRTSKL = MPL/MPK

L
Isocost
◦ The combinations of inputs that K New Isocost Line
produce a given level of output at the C1/r
associated with higher
costs (C0 < C1).
same cost:
C0/r
wL + rK = C
◦ Rearranging, C0 C1
C0/w C1/w L
K= (1/r)C - (w/r)L
K
◦ For given input prices, isocosts farther New Isocost Line for
C/r a decrease in the
from the origin are associated with wage (price of labor:
higher costs. w0 > w1).

◦ Changes in input prices change the


slope of the isocost line. L
C/w0 C/w1
Cost Minimization
◦ Marginal product per dollar spent should be equal for all inputs:

◦ But, this is just

MPL MPK MPL w


  
w r MPK r

w
MRTS KL 
r
Cost Minimization

K
Slope of Isocost
= Point of Cost
Slope of Isoquant Minimization

L
Optimal Input Substitution
K

◦ A firm initially produces Q0 by


employing the combination of
inputs represented by point A at a
cost of C0. K0
A

◦ Suppose w0 falls to w1.


ocost curve rotates counterclockwise;
◦ The is B
K1
which represents the same cost level
prior to the wage change.
◦ To produce the same level of output, Q0, Q0
the firm will produce on a lower isocost
line (C1) at a point B.
0 L0 L1 C0/w0 C1/w1 C0/w1 L
◦ The slope of the new isocost line
represents the lower wage relative to the
rental rate of capital.

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