Thursday 24 September 2009

The law of diminshing return

law of diminishing returns in economics, law stating that if one factor of production is increased while the others remain constant, the overall returns will relatively decrease after a certain point.

Thus, for example, if more and more laborers are added to harvest a wheat field, at some point each additional laborer will add relatively less output than his predecessor did, simply because he has less and less of the fixed amount of land to work with. The principle, first thought to apply only to agriculture, was later accepted as an economic law underlying all productive enterprise. The point at which the law begins to operate is difficult to ascertain, as it varies with improved production technique and other factors. Anticipated by Anne Robert Jacques Turgot and implied by Thomas Malthus in his Essay on the Principle of Population (1798), the law first came under examination during the discussions in England on free trade and the corn laws. It is also called the law of decreasing returns and the law of variable proportions.

4 comments:

chris sivewright said...

How is this related to marginal cost?

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CHEE said...

Since the diminishing return is about the increased cost in additional output. And the marginal cost is the change in total cost resulting by one extra output per unit.
Thus once the diminishing return start, the marginal cost curve slop upwards.

By the way, Si, check your spelling.

SIYI said...

Well thank you for your comment~!

表姐 - -By the way 这个是我粘的:P

chris sivewright said...

Chee

Check your spelling.

'SLOP' is what cleaners clean.

'SLOPE' is what you should have written.

Does MC start at the same place as AVC then?