Law Of Diminishing Returns
The Law of diminishing returns is a key one in
economics. It is used to explain
many of the ways the economy works and
changes. It is a relatively simple idea;
spending and investing more and more
in a product where one of the factors of
production remains the same means
the enterprise will eventually run out of
steam. The returns will begin to
diminish in the long run. If more fertilizer
and better machinery are used on
an acre of farmland, the yield will increase
for a while but then begin to
slow and become flat. A farmer can only get so
much out of the land, and the
more the farmer works, the harder it gets. The
economic reason for
diminishing returns of capital is as follows: When the
capital stock is low,
there are many workers for each machine, and the benefits
of increasing
capital further are great; but when the capital stock is high,
workers
already have plenty of capital to work with, and little benefit is to
be
gained from expanding capital further. For example, in a secretarial pool
in
which there are many more secretaries than computer terminals, each
terminal is
constantly being utilized and secretaries must waste time waiting
for a free
terminal. In this situation, the benefit in terms of increased
output of adding
extra terminals is high. However, if there are already as
many terminals as
secretaries, so that terminals are often idle and there is
no waiting for a
terminal to become available, little additional output can
be obtained by adding
yet another terminal. Another application for this law
is in Athletics, for
runners, their investment is the time and energy put
into training and the yield
is hopefully improved fitness. Early in their
running careers or early in the
training program a couple of weeks of regular
training would be rewarded with a
considerable increase in fitness. Having
achieved a very fit state though, two
weeks of regular training will achieve
a barely perceptible increase in fitness.
But in today’s world, this
famous law seems to have been turned on its head.
In Japan, for example,
huge amounts of investment have resulted in large
increases in the economy
and large increases in capital goods per worker. But
the rate of productivity
growth did not decline the way one would have expected
on the basis of
diminishing returns. Japan got ahead and stayed ahead.