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Short Run Profit Maximization in a Convex Analysis Framework
Author(s) -
Ilko Vrankić,
Mira Krpan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
interdisciplinary description of complex systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1334-4684
pISSN - 1334-4676
DOI - 10.7906/indecs.15.1.1
Subject(s) - profit maximization , regular polygon , maximization , profit (economics) , convex analysis , mathematical economics , utility maximization , mathematical optimization , economics , computer science , operations research , convex optimization , mathematics , microeconomics , geometry
In this article we analyse the short run profit maximization problem in a convex analysis framework. The goal is to apply the results of convex analysis due to unique structure of microeconomic phenomena on the known short run profit maximization problem where the results from convex analysis are deductively applied. In the primal optimization model the technology in the short run is represented by the short run production function and the normalized profit function, which expresses profit in the output units, is derived. In this approach the choice variable is the labour quantity. Alternatively, technology is represented by the real variable cost function, where costs are expressed in the labour units, and the normalized profit function is derived, this time expressing profit in the labour units. The choice variable in this approach is the quantity of production. The emphasis in these two perspectives of the primal approach is given to the first order necessary conditions of both models which are the consequence of enveloping the closed convex set describing technology with its tangents. The dual model includes starting from the normalized profit function and recovering the production function, and alternatively the real variable cost function. In the first perspective of the dual approach the choice variable is the real wage, and in the second it is the real product price expressed in the labour units. It is shown that the change of variables into parameters and parameters into variables leads to both optimization models which give the same system of labour demand and product supply functions and their inverses. By deductively applying the results of convex analysis the comparative statics results are derived describing the firm's behaviour in the short run

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