The total product represents the overall output produced by a firm within a specific time frame based on the combination of inputs used. In the context of production during the short run, inputs are classified as fixed or variable.
The total product curve exhibits three stages: (1) increasing marginal returns causes the change in output to increase faster than the change in the variable input, making the positively sloped total product curve convex to the origin, (2) when the decreasing marginal returns sets in, the total output increases slower than the change in variable input, making the positively sloped total product curve concave to the origin, and (3) negative marginal returns causes the total output to decrease despite increases in the variable input, causing the total product curve to become negatively sloped.
The average product is defined as the total product divided by the quantity of variable input used. The average product curve initially increases as the total product rises faster than the input quantity, reaches a maximum where it intersects with the marginal product curve, and finally declines as diminishing returns set in.
From Chapter 6:
Now Playing
Producer Behavior
42 Views
Producer Behavior
68 Views
Producer Behavior
92 Views
Producer Behavior
43 Views
Producer Behavior
37 Views
Producer Behavior
39 Views
Producer Behavior
99 Views
Producer Behavior
39 Views
Producer Behavior
29 Views
Producer Behavior
58 Views
Producer Behavior
115 Views
Producer Behavior
40 Views
Producer Behavior
98 Views
Producer Behavior
66 Views
Producer Behavior
50 Views
See More
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved