The law of diminishing returns (also law of diminishing marginal returns or law of increasing relative cost) states that in all productive processes, adding more of one factor of production, while holding all others constant, will at some point yield lower per-unit returns.[1] The law of diminishing returns does not imply that adding more of a factor will decrease the total production, a condition known as negative returns, though in fact this is common.
For example, the use of fertilizer improves crop production on farms and in gardens; but at some point, adding more and more fertilizer improves the yield less and less, and excessive quantities can even reduce the yield. A common sort of example is adding more workers to a job, such as assembling a car on a factory floor. At some point, adding more workers causes problems such as getting in each other's way, or workers frequently find themselves waiting for access to a part. In all of these processes, producing one more unit of output per unit of time will eventually cost increasingly more, due to inputs being used less and less effectively.
The law of diminishing returns is one of the most famous laws in all of economics. It plays a central role in production theory.
什么叫做报酬递减律?
报酬递补减率首先是欧洲经济学家杜尔哥和安德森提出来的,它反映了在技术条件不变的情况下投入与产出的关系。它的意思是:从一定土地上所得到的报酬随着向该土地投入的劳动和资本的增多而有所增加,但随着投入的增加每单位劳动量或资本量的报酬却在逐渐减少。例如在施肥上,某种养分的效果,以其在土壤中越不足时效果越大,但若逐渐增加该种养分的施用量,那么,每单位养分的增产量就逐渐减少。所以,获得最高产量的施肥量不一定是最佳施肥量,因经济效益下降使得增产不增收。所以不要盲目加大施肥量。有人根据试验推算,最佳施肥量大约比获得最高产量的施肥量减少5%左右