⚙️ How to produce: The economic decision concerning the methods and techniques of production.
🧭 The two great paths: labour vs. machines
When a firm decides how to produce a good, it usually faces two extreme routes — and many mixes in between. Imagine you want to produce wooden chairs. You can hire many skilled carpenters using hand tools (labour‑intensive method) or install an automated robotic assembly line (capital‑intensive method). Most real‑life factories sit somewhere in the middle.
The choice depends on the relative prices of labour (wages) and capital (interest, depreciation). If wages are low and machines are costly, firms usually pick labour‑intensive ways. If labour is expensive and technology is cheap, automation wins. This is the economic heart of the “How to produce?” decision.
📐 The isoquant and isocost — a recipe map
Economists use two simple diagrams to explain the “How to produce?” puzzle: the isoquant and the isocost. An isoquant shows all combinations of labour (L) and capital (K) that produce the same output. An isocost line shows all combinations that cost the same amount. The firm chooses the combination where the isoquant just touches the lowest possible isocost line. That point is the least‑cost combination.
The producer chooses labour (L) and capital (K) so that:
$ \frac{MP_L}{P_L} = \frac{MP_K}{P_K} $
where $MP_L$ = additional output from one more worker, $P_L$ = wage, $MP_K$ = additional output from one more machine, $P_K$ = machine price (rental rate). If the ratios are unequal, the firm can lower costs by switching to the input with a higher ratio.
⚖️ When wages rise: a bakery story
In 2023, a medium‑sized bakery in Manchester paid bakers £12 per hour. They shaped all bread by hand. The city then raised the minimum wage to £15. The bakery’s isocost line became steeper; labour was now relatively more expensive. The owner compared the cost of an automatic dough divider (price: £18,000, expected to last 5 years). The formula $ \frac{MP_L}{wage} $ fell, while $ \frac{MP_K}{rental} $ became relatively higher. Result? They bought the machine and reassigned two workers to packaging. Output per hour rose by 22%. This is the “how to produce” decision in action.
| Method | Typical industry | When is it chosen? | Example output |
|---|---|---|---|
| Labour‑intensive | Handicrafts, premium garments, fruit picking | Low wages, high need for flexibility, customisation | 100 hand‑stitched leather bags/day |
| Capital‑intensive | Car assembly, semiconductor fabs, oil refining | High wages, need for precision, large scale | 1,200 robot‑welded car frames/hour |
| Intermediate / mixed | Fast‑food kitchens, furniture assembly | Balanced factor costs, moderate scale | 350 burgers/hour (grill + 3 cooks) |
📦 How technology shifts the decision
New production techniques (like 3D printing, AI quality control, or vertical farming) change the isoquant map. They make capital more productive — i.e., $MP_K$ rises. If a new robot can now do the work of five people, the firm will substitute capital for labour even if wages haven’t increased. This is called factor substitution. In the long run, almost all inputs are variable, so the “how to produce” choice is constantly re‑optimised.
🍕 Real‑world case: Pizza oven vs. delivery riders
A pizzeria in Tokyo must decide how to expand. Option A: buy a traditional wood‑fired oven ($8,000) and hire two more pizza chefs ($3,200/month each). Option B: lease a high‑speed conveyor oven ($1,200/month) and keep only one chef ($3,200/month). The manager computes the cost per pizza:
Option A: labour cost = $6,400 + oven depreciation $133 = $6,533/month → 800 pizzas → $8.16/pizza.
Option B: labour = $3,200 + oven lease $1,200 = $4,400/month → 750 pizzas → $5.87/pizza.
Even with slightly lower output, the capital‑intensive method wins because labour in Tokyo is expensive. The decision is pure economics.
❓ Important questions about “How to produce?”
Because new machines are expensive. If a company is small or if wages are low, buying robots would raise average cost. The decision depends on the relative price, not just technology. A tailor in a village with low wages and cheap sewing needles will not buy a $50,000 automated sewing unit — it would never pay for itself.
In the short run, some inputs are fixed (e.g., a factory building). You cannot instantly replace all workers with machines. But in the long run (enough time to change everything), the firm can choose any technique. This is why economists separate short‑run and long‑run production decisions.
Absolutely. A method using coal‑powered machines has different pollution than a labour‑intensive method. Some governments tax pollution, which changes the $P_K$ (effective price of capital). Then firms may shift toward cleaner or more labour‑based techniques. This is called internalising external costs.
📈 Productivity and technical efficiency
Choosing the method is not only about cost — it is also about technical efficiency. A method is technically inefficient if you can produce the same output with less of at least one input and no more of others. Firms always avoid technical inefficiency. Then, among all technically efficient methods, they pick the one that minimises cost given today’s factor prices. This is the economic efficiency decision.
A simple measure of productivity is $ \text{Total Factor Productivity} = \frac{\text{Output}}{\text{Combined inputs}} $. If a new technique raises TFP, it usually (but not always) becomes the chosen method.
🧮 Step‑by‑step: How a firm decides
Let’s follow a student’s lemonade stand that grows into a factory. This gradual progression shows how the decision evolves with scale.
🧃 Middle school (200 cups/day): Buy an electric juicer ($200) and hire two helpers. Mixed method.
🏭 High school (5,000 cups/day): Install fully automated bottling line ($150,000). Labour cost per cup drops from $0.30 to $0.05. Capital‑intensive chosen because scale is huge.
📜 Footnote
- Isoquant: From Greek “iso” (equal) + “quantity”. A curve showing all input combinations that yield the same output.
- Isocost: From Greek “iso” (equal) + “cost”. A line showing all input combinations with the same total cost.
- MP_L / MP_K: Marginal product of labour / capital — the extra output from one more unit of that input.
- TFP: Total Factor Productivity — the portion of output not explained by the quantity of inputs used.
- Factor substitution: Replacing one input (e.g., labour) with another (e.g., capital) when relative prices change.
