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Home›The Economy›Firms & Markets›The Firm & Production

Marginal and Average Product: How Much Does One More Worker Add?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
5 sources3 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Marginal product of labor (MPL) is the additional output produced by hiring one more worker, holding capital fixed
  • Average product of labor (APL) is total output divided by the number of workers — output per worker
  • When MPL > APL, the average is rising; when MPL < APL, the average is falling — marginal always pulls the average toward it
  • Firms hire additional workers as long as the value of the marginal product (VMP = MPL × Price) exceeds the wage
On this page
  • The formula
  • Reading the result
  • Worked example
  • Where it&#39;s used

A bicycle repair shop with one mechanic services 8 bikes per day. Adding a second mechanic raises output to 18 bikes — the second mechanic added 10 bikes (marginal product = 10), and average output per mechanic is now 9. Add a third: total output is 25, the third mechanic added 7 (marginal product = 7), average output is 8.3. The marginal product is falling — diminishing returns are setting in — and as it falls below the average, the average also falls. This relationship between the margin and the average is one of the most reliable patterns in production economics.

The formula

Marginal Product of Labor (MPL) = ΔTotal Product ÷ ΔLabor

Average Product of Labor (APL) = Total Product ÷ Labor

For the bicycle shop:

Workers Total Output MPL APL
1 8 — 8.0
2 18 10 9.0
3 25 7 8.3
4 29 4 7.3

MPL is falling after worker 2. Once MPL falls below APL (between workers 2 and 3), APL begins to fall.

Reading the result

The relationship between marginal and average is a mathematical identity: the marginal pulls the average toward it. When MPL > APL, each new hire raises the average (they contribute more than the average worker). When MPL < APL, each new hire lowers the average. The crossover is the maximum of APL.

This relationship governs the shape of cost curves. Because MPL typically first rises then falls (as workers specialize and then experience diminishing returns), marginal cost first falls then rises — producing the U-shaped cost curve that underpins firm output decisions.

Worked example

A firm is deciding whether to hire a fifth assembly worker at $200 per shift. The fifth worker would produce 12 additional units per shift (MPL = 12). Each unit sells for $25. The value of the marginal product (VMP = MPL × Price = 12 × $25 = $300) exceeds the wage ($200). Hire the worker — the additional revenue exceeds the additional cost.

The sixth worker would produce only 8 additional units (MPL = 8 after diminishing returns). VMP = 8 × $25 = $200 = wage. Hire or don't hire — it's exactly break-even. A seventh worker (MPL = 5) yields VMP = $125 < $200 wage. Don't hire.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics Productivity and Costs data tracks output per worker-hour — the aggregate expression of average product across the U.S. economy. Quarterly productivity releases showing whether output per worker hour is rising or falling are one of the most closely watched economic indicators because they directly track the average product of labor economy-wide.

Where it's used

Marginal product analysis determines the demand for labor in competitive markets. Firms hire until VMP = wage — the labor demand condition. When MPL is high (skilled, productive workers), firms can afford to pay high wages. When MPL is low, wages are constrained. The entire relationship between education, productivity, and wages runs through marginal product: higher education increases MPL, which raises VMP, which supports higher wages in a competitive labor market.

◆ Sources

  1. Labor Productivity and Costs — Bureau of Labor Statistics
  2. Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — Bureau of Labor Statistics
  3. Marginal Product — Investopedia
  4. Production — Library of Economics and Liberty
  5. Industry Economic Accounts — Bureau of Economic Analysis
On this page
  • The formula
  • Reading the result
  • Worked example
  • Where it&#39;s used
◆ Related reading
  • Short Run vs. Long Run: Why the Same Firm Behaves Differently Over Time
  • Why Cost Curves Are U-Shaped — and What That Shape Tells Every Business
  • Marginal Cost: The Only Cost That Matters for the Next Decision
  • Sunk Cost: Why Past Spending Shouldn't Drive Future Decisions
All The Firm & Production →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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