Asked by Barbara Circle on Jun 09, 2024

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Roberta runs a dress factory.She produces 50 dresses per day, using labor and electricity.She uses a combination of labor and electricity that produces 50 dresses per day in the cheapest possible way.She can hire as much labor as she wants at a cost of 20 cents per minute.She can use as much electricity as she wants at a cost of 10 cents per minute.Her production isoquants are smooth curves without kinks and she uses positive amounts of both inputs.

A) The marginal product of a kilowatt-hour of electricity is twice the marginal product of a minute of labor.
B) The marginal product of a minute of labor is twice the marginal product of a kilowatt-hour of electricity.
C) The marginal product of a minute of labor is equal to the marginal product of a kilowatt-hour of electricity.
D) There is not enough information to determine the ratio of marginal products.We'd have to know the production function to know this.
E) The marginal product of a minute of labor plus the marginal product of a kilowatt-hour of labor must equal 50/(20  10) .

Dress Factory

A manufacturing facility where dresses are produced in large quantities.

Production Isoquants

Curves that represent combinations of various inputs that result in the same level of output, used in the analysis of production technology.

Marginal Product

The additional output that is produced by employing one more unit of a particular input, keeping all other inputs constant.

  • Identify the best production quantities and mix of inputs to minimize expenses.
  • Compute the ratios of inputs and determine the best combinations of bundles under various pricing conditions.
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JA
Jessica AcostaJun 11, 2024
Final Answer :
B
Explanation :
If we assume that Roberta is minimizing the cost of production, then the ratio of the marginal products of labor and electricity must be equal to the ratio of their prices. Since labor costs 20 cents per minute and electricity costs 10 cents per minute, the ratio of the prices is 2:1. Thus, the ratio of the marginal product of a minute of labor to the marginal product of a kilowatt-hour of electricity must also be 2:1. Therefore, the marginal product of a minute of labor is twice the marginal product of a kilowatt-hour of electricity.