Learning from Cumulative Volume?

February 27, 2010 behavioral economics, economic theory | Comments (0) Don @ 8:39 pm

If the result of repeated activities by mankind always results in learning, what is it that causes mankind to adopt a new learned procedure? Why does it always work no matter what the activity is? And why does it affect cost of manufacture differently for different products?

The post “The Geometry of Experience Curves” in this blog shows that the answer is: “That Men minimize their Time per unit of dimension”. Thus providing the incentive (less time spent by men) and the reason (geometry difference) for each product being different.


Tags: American Institute of Chemical Engineering, analysis, Bionomics, Bruce Henderson, Donald Garnett, economic ecosystems, economic theory, economics, Economy as Ecosystem, Encyclopedia of Chemical Processing and Design, geometry, macroeconomics, price, scale factors

You tube

February 19, 2010 behavioral economics, economic theory, geometry | Comments (0) Don @ 2:24 pm

The geometry of experience curves can be seen on youtube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EW1DnJg1qY


Tags: economics, Experience Curves

Economic hydroformylation

February 14, 2010 economic theory | Comments (0) Don @ 7:29 pm

Economic hydroformylation with Rhodium


Tags: hydroformylation, palladium, rhodium

Tetrahydro furan ex Dichlorobutane

economic theory | Comments (0) Don @ 6:05 pm

Tetrahydrofuran via dichlorobutane


Tags: butane, tetrahydrofuran, thf

Q:What Law of Nature Determines Price and Volume etc.

November 9, 2009 News, behavioral economics, economic theory, geometry | Comments (0) Don @ 9:44 am



A: For an Economy, like say the U.S. where we have variables Employed Men, Price,Volume,Wages,Investment,Scale of Operation, Production Process Mean Dimensions of Radius R with Number of space dimensions being used = m, Dollars, A Gross National Product, Specific Products and the change in time of these variables then:

For a change in Production of a Product with time the Behavior of Men is to Minimize their time/Per unit of Volume of the product, i.e. that ratio (dMen/dRadius with time)=0.

Using reduced values, or indexed values of these variables based on a given year for GNP, Price, Volume, etc. and the Fact that Dollars=Price*Volume=Wages*Men, and Volume=Radius^m gives a Slope for the Experienc Curve=(1/m-1)*(1-Exp(-k*t)) wherE k=growth rate constant for the product and t=time (usually years) .

Because “All Men involved minimize their time per unit of space dimension, with time”.  Thus this Law of Nature is claimed as Garnett’s Minimization Law

(more)

Inherent in the foregoing is also the fact that Investment=Scale^(1/m).


Tags: Add new tag, American Institute of Chemical Engineering, Bionomics, Bruce Henderson, business, CHEMTECH, Donald Garnett, Donald I. Garnett, economic ecosystems, economic theory, economics, economy, Economy as Ecosystem, ecosystem, Encyclopedia of Chemical Processing and Design, experience curve, Experience Curves, fundamental, geometry, graphs, gravity, industry, investment, Isaac Newton, macroeconomics, math, mathematics, Michael Rothschild, money, Perspective on Experience, Rothschild, scale, scale factors, us dollar, zero population growth, ZPG

Inflation and Real Growth

January 16, 2009 News, behavioral economics, economic theory, geometry | Comments (0) Don @ 4:02 pm

The post titled “Money” shows the GNP or money=k*(employed)^4 and volume=k*(employed)^2.16 and

price=k*(employed)^1.84. In the context of these posts the number of dimensions of the production

facilities, m=2.16 and the price exponent is (4-m). Differenting by parts results is the fraction of the change

in GNP that is real growth is m/4 and the part that is inflation is (4-m)/4. The value of m therefore determines

the fraction that is inflation and real growth. The value of m determine the fraction that is real growth, namely;

m=1 results in 25% real growth,

m=2 results in 50% real growth

m=3 results in 75% real growth.

Obama’s and others “put people to work” with bail-out government money will not help the economy much if

the number of dimensions of  those activities is low (e.g. a shovel in hand ditch digger) vs. high

(like building a petrochemical plant).


Tags: Add new tag, bail, bail-out, Bruce Henderson, business, Donald I. Garnett, economic ecosystems, economic growth, economic theory, economics, economy, Economy as Ecosystem, ecosystem, experience curve, Experience Curves, gdp, geometry, GNP, graphs, industry, investment, Isaac Newton, macroeconomics, math, Michael Rothschild, money, Obama, out, PDF, Perspective on Experience, scale, scale factors, time, unemployment, us dollar

Money

December 29, 2008 Publications, economic theory | Comments (0) Don @ 7:03 am

Article for Chemtech on the dimensions of economic systems and their business applications (money=k*People^4):

Part One: money22
Part Two: money23

Note Figure 5, a GNP as deflater forecast from 1984 forward that is amazingly accurate.


Tags: 1984, business, CHEMTECH, deflation, dimensions, Donald I. Garnett, economic systems, economics, GNP, macroeconomics, money, PDF

The Geometry of Experience Curves

December 27, 2008 economic theory, geometry | Comments (0) Don @ 6:10 am



the-geometry-of-experience-curves-aiche5-cut

Defines what an experience curve really is and why.


Tags: Add new tag, AIChE, Albert Einstein, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Bionomics, Boston Consulting Group, Bruce Henderson, business, capacity, chars, Chemical and Engineering Progress, chemical engineering, CHEMTECH, controlling facility, corporation, costs, cumulative experience, Donald I. Garnett, E. Johnson, economics, Ecosystems, employment, Encyclopedia of Chemical Processing and Design, European Chemical News, Experience Curves, geometry, graphs, gravity, Gregory S. Patience, growth, history, investment, Isaac Newton, literature, mathematics math, mechanics, Michael Rothschild, microeconomics, money, Newton, Perspective_on_Experience, Perspective_on__Experience, polyvinyl chloride, population, price, R. Heinen, Scale up, Scale up Power Laws, space, supply, time, volume, volumetric rates, Walter Kiechel

Scale vs. Investment

December 18, 2008 Publications, economic theory | Comments (0) Don @ 7:15 am

Article for the Encyclopedia of Chemical Processing and Design:

scale

Explains reason power laws work for scale vs investment rules of thumb.


Tags: economic, Encyclopedia of Chemical Processing and Design, investment, PDF, power laws
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