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Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution

Posted on October 17, 2025October 21, 2025 by user

Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution (MRTS)

What MRTS means

The marginal rate of technical substitution (MRTS) measures the rate at which a firm can replace one input (typically labor, L) with another (typically capital, K) while keeping output constant. It describes trade-offs between inputs along an isoquant — the curve showing all input combinations that yield the same level of output.

Key points:
* MRTS quantifies how many units of capital can be given up for an additional unit of labor (or vice versa) without changing output.
* It is a producer-side concept, distinct from the consumer-focused marginal rate of substitution (MRS).
* In practice, MRTS helps firms choose cost-minimizing input combinations and understand how substitutability changes as input use changes.

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Formula

MRTS (L for K) can be expressed as:
MRTS = −ΔK / ΔL = MP_L / MP_K

Where:
* K = capital
* L = labor
* MP_L = marginal product of labor (additional output from one more unit of labor)
* MP_K = marginal product of capital
* −ΔK / ΔL = the reduction in capital when labor is increased by one unit, holding output constant

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Equivalently, the slope of the isoquant is dK/dL = −MRTS, so the absolute value of the isoquant’s slope at a point equals the MRTS at that point.

Interpreting MRTS and isoquants

  • On an isoquant graph with labor on the x-axis and capital on the y-axis, the MRTS at a point tells you how much K can be reduced if L increases by one unit while staying on the same isoquant.
  • A falling MRTS along an isoquant (diminishing MRTS) means successive units of labor replace fewer units of capital — substitutability decreases as you add more of one input.
    Example: If adding one unit of labor lets you reduce 4 units of capital, MRTS = 4. If the next unit of labor allows reducing only 3 units of capital, MRTS = 3, illustrating diminishing MRTS.

Role in production decisions

  • Cost minimization: For a firm choosing input quantities given input prices (wage w and rental price of capital r), the cost-minimizing condition is:
    MP_L / MP_K = w / r
    i.e., MRTS = w/r. At that point, the marginal rate of technical substitution equals the input price ratio.
  • Input allocation: MRTS helps managers decide whether to substitute labor for capital (or vice versa) when relative input prices or technologies change.
  • Productivity trade-offs: Understanding MRTS clarifies how changes in one input affect the effective need for the other while maintaining output.

MRTS vs. MRS

  • MRTS applies to producers and input combinations in production; it measures technical substitutability between inputs.
  • MRS applies to consumers and consumption bundles; it measures the rate at which a consumer is willing to trade one good for another while keeping utility constant.

Takeaways

  • MRTS is the rate at which inputs can be substituted without changing output and equals the ratio of marginal products (MP_L / MP_K).
  • Isoquants visually represent MRTS; the absolute slope of an isoquant at a point equals the MRTS there.
  • Diminishing MRTS is common: as you add more of one input, it typically replaces fewer units of the other.
  • Firms use MRTS together with input prices to identify cost-minimizing input mixes (MRTS = price ratio).

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