Operating on the theory that when you dodge a bullet, the
thing to do is to put another target on your chest, I am going to write
something now about the concept of a production function, which, when I first
encountered it, puzzled me for some long while, until I thought it through. I think in an odd way I benefited from never
actually taking an economics course [although I did teach Introductory
Microeconomics at UMass -- see my Autobiography!] I am encouraged in this foolhardy undertaking
by Magpie, who, in his very kind response to my rant about marginal
productivity, referenced John Bates Clark and Joan Robinson.
The first thing I had to get clear in my head when I started
studying Economics was that economists -- whether classical or neo-classical --
never seem to talk about how stuff is actually made in factories or on farms or
in mines or in offices. Indeed, I think
it is fair to say they don't know much at all about how stuff is made. The closest they come is to specify the
collection of physical inputs and the amount of labor required to produce one
unit of this or that -- the "unit input coefficients" as they are
sometimes called. But how all those
inputs are combined exactly is left to someone else -- the engineers,
presumably, who, even though they are located in the Faculty of Science, are at
the absolutely bottom of the status hierarchy there and can therefore be
ignored.
Now, here is the really important thing to understand. All economists simplify, just as do all
physicists and all geologists and all microbiologists. If they did not, if they went on endlessly
about every single detail of every market or factory or consumer or producer or
sector of the economy, they could never carry out any interesting reasoning at
all. But it matters a great deal just how one decides to simplify. To be specific, the Classical Political
Economists [Smith, Ricardo, Marx] assume that at any given time, there is one
dominant technique for making each
commodity that is produced in a factory or on a piece of agricultural land. They know this is not quite true, of course. There might be two or three ways to make straight
pins or to set up the power looms in a fabric factory or to use oxen and seed
corn and plows on a field, but they just abstract from that, figuring that one
of the available techniques will be more profitable, and that fact will become
known to all the entrepreneurs in that line of business, who will then shift to
the best technique. They also know that from
time to time, innovations are introduced, so that for a while there will be two
techniques going rather than one, but they expect that an innovation will
either make a bigger profit for its innovator, in which case it will be adopted
throughout the industry, or it will prove less profitable and be dropped.
Neo-classical economists make exactly the opposite
"simplification." They assume
that there are actually an infinite number of ways in which inputs can be
combined to produce the output of an industry.
These different ways will not only use different amounts of the same
inputs in varying and differing ways, they may also use all manner of
alternative inputs.
Now, if you think about it at a very high level of abstraction
[where economists, like Sherpas, feel most comfortable], there are a finite
number of possible inputs into any
line of production, and each of them, including labor, can be added in any
number of different ways. For example,
suppose you are in the business of growing wheat. On an acre of arable land, you can throw a
cupful of seed at the acre of land from a corner of the acre, cover the acre
with tarpaulins so that no water gets to the ground, and hire one worker to
look at the field every month and cross himself piously. That is indeed one way of growing wheat. The
inputs here are a cupful of seed, one man-day of labor per month, and a stack of
tarpaulins big enough to cover an acre.
The output using the inputs in this manner will be zero bushels of
wheat. But there are many other ways of
combining those exact same inputs for the purpose of growing wheat. One of them, for example, is to have the man
walk across the field for a day the first month poking holes with his fingers
and planting the wheat seeds, and stacking the tarpaulins in a corner of the
field so they do not get in the way of whatever rain should come, and then
spending a day a month weeding. The
output will, we may assume, be several bushels of wheat. There are infinitely many possible
combinations of all the available inputs [which, of course, includes cyanide,
firecrackers, Hope Rain Dance outfits, and much more besides], and many many
different ways of technically combining each set of possible inputs, and each
combination with each way of combining them has some amount of output of wheat associated
with it.
A Wheat Production Function
is a mapping of each of the infinite number of possible combinations of inputs
onto the maximum amount of wheat producible by that combination of inputs, using
one or another of the finite but very numerous possible techniques that can be
run with that combination of inputs.
Now, here is the crucial thing to grasp, which it took me a
very long time to figure out, since none of the books I was reading talked this
way at all. To say that the production function is continuous, and therefore
differentiable, is to say that if you hold all but one of a set of possible
inputs constant, and increase the remaining input a little bit, the maximum
amount of wheat producible with this slightly altered set of inputs will also
be a little bit bigger. BUT THERE IS NO
ASSUMPTION BEING MADE AT ALL THAT THE MAXIMALLY PRODUCTIVE TECHNIQUE WITH THAT
SLIGHTLY ALTERED SET OF INPUTS WILL LOOK ANYTHING LIKE THE MAXIMALLY EFFECTIVE
TECHNIQUE WITH THE ORIGINAL SET OF INPUTS.
Go back and look at the John Bates Clark example cited by
Magpie. Clark imagines that a group of
men are working on a field of grain, and supposes that if you add one man [a
small increase of one of the inputs] you can grow a little bit more grain
[presumably because when one man gets tired the extra hand can step in and keep
the work going, or something like that.]
But that example encourages us, quite incorrectly, to assume that the
new technique, with the extra man, will in some natural way look quite like the
old technique without him. And the concept of a production function
totally abstracts from any such natural way of thinking about the matter.
Joan Robinson pointed out that if you add one shovel instead
of one man, you will not increase the output because there will be no one to
use the shovel. [This was not quite
fair, of course. The shovel might come
in handy if one of the workmen broke the handle of his shovel, but never mind.] But even Robinson took it for granted that
the techniques would look quite similar.
In order for economists to use Euler's Theorem and all the
other really nifty stuff they hijacked from elementary calculus, they have to
assume that the production functions they are working with are continuous, and
hence partially differentiable. But when
you set aside Clark's just-so stories of men working a field, there is no
reason at all to suppose that the mapping of vectors of inputs onto the scalar
of maximum output is in any way, shape, or form continuous, even as an
approximation. No reason at all.
Let me give you a real historical example that played a
rather important role in the American South in the latter years of slavery and
the early years of freedom. Large
Southern plantations used an organization of agricultural labor called the gang
system. Slaves were lined up in a row at
one end of a field and moved forward in a coordinated fashion planting or
weeding or harvesting. This was much
more efficient, for obvious reasons [they could come to the end of a row and
wheel in a coordinated fashion], but to maintain the order of the line required
an overseer, a slave driver with a whip, who walked behind the line of men and
women and whipped them if they lagged.
[Yes, Virginia, there really were slave drivers -- not office bosses who
demand that secretaries finish their typing before going home, but men with
whips who drove the slaves like oxen.]
After liberation, when the slaves were freed [and for a brief time actually
had something resembling the rights of free men and women], they refused to
work in this fashion, regardless of the pay offered by desperate plantation
owners. This was a marginal change in input -- one worker fewer, namely the slave
driver -- but it resulted in a large change in output, not a marginal change.
The concept of a production function, which is central to
modern Economics, is loaded with [or, as people like to say these days, fraught
with] difficulties and implausibilities, none of which, so far as I can tell, is
ever mentioned in Economics textbooks or classes.
Well, that concludes my rant about production
functions. But I thought I would add one
little note about the claim economists make that their field is scientific. Martin Feldstein is one of the most
influential economists in America.
Currently a Professor at Harvard, he served for four years as Reagan's
Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors.
Feldstein in those days taught Economics 10, the enormous intro course with
lectures by himself and a gazillion sections taught by grad students and young
Instructors. While he was away in
Washington, some leftie grad students succeeded in persuading the person who
stood in for Feldstein to allow them to teach a certain number of
"alternative," or as Krugman would say heterodox, sections in which
something other than orthodox economic theory was presented to the lucky
students. When Feldstein returned, he
discontinued that practice, saying, "The purpose of Economics 10 is to
teach students that the market works."
NOT HOW THE MARKET
WORKS, BUT THAT THE MARKET WORKS. Savonarola
could not have put it better!
3 comments:
Prof.
I am not sure I understand the first part of your argument (although the slave gang example in Southern plantations is very clear and illustrates the lack of continuity very well), but I think we may have a little problem here:
"To say that the production function is continuous, and therefore differentiable, is to say that if you hold all but one of a set of possible inputs constant, and increase the remaining input a little bit, the maximum amount of wheat producible with this slightly altered set of inputs will also be a little bit bigger".
Or here
"In order for economists to use Euler's Theorem and all the other really nifty stuff they hijacked from elementary calculus, they have to assume that the production functions they are working with are continuous, and hence partially differentiable."
In reality, a function F(x) may be both (A) continuous in x[0], and (B) not differentiable there.
For instance, let F be the function from R -> ]-oo, 1]
F(x) = if(x < 1, x, 1)
F(x) is continuous for all x and hence is continuous for x[0] = 1, but F(x) is not differentiable there: to the left of x[0] = 1, the derivative is 1; to the right, it is 0.
In other words, if a function is differentiable (over all its domain) it must be continuous (over all its domain); the reciprocal, however, need not be true.
(And, well, the derivative of a production function needs to be non-negative at least for a series of values.)
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It goes without saying that if a function is not continuous for x[0], then it is not differentiable there, which is what we are interested here and what the gang example illustrates.
Actually, after sending the comment, I am wondering: am I making any sense?
The concepts are useful , but discontinuous in some part. Tarpaulins | Poly Tarpaulins
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