economies of scale

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12 Terms

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Define economies of scale

Economies of scale are the cost advantages a firm experiences as it increases production, leading to a fall in long-run average cost (LRAC) per unit of output.

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internal economies of scale

refers to any cost/ saving benefit that only effects the one firm that has grown

e.g a company upgrading their office through deciding to invest in an elevator

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External economies of scale

refers to any cost/saving benefit that effects every firm in the industry

e.g the introduction of fiber optic cables benefits every broadband company

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Types of Economies of Scale

Internal Economies of Scale (arise within the firm)

-Technical:

Larger machines or production processes are more efficient

e.g Using assembly lines in car production

-Managerial:

Specialization of managers reduces inefficiency

e.g HR, finance, operations departments

-Financial:

Big firms can borrow at lower interest rates

e.g Large firms vs small startups

-Marketing:

Spreading advertising over large output reduces cost per unit

e.g National campaigns for Coca-Cola

-Purchasing / Bulk buying:

Discounts from buying raw materials in large quantities

e.g Supermarkets buying stock in bulk

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Types of Economies of Scale

External Economies of Scale (arise from growth of the industry or market)

-Skilled labour:

--More trained workers available locally

e.g Silicon Valley tech workers

-Infrastructure:

--Better transport, utilities, and supplier networks reduce costs

e.g Ports and roads for manufacturing hubs

-Ancillary services

--Specialized firms emerge to support industry

e.g Legal, accounting, marketing services for financial firms

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Importance of Economies of Scale

1. Lower Average Costs

--As output ↑, long-run average cost (LRAC) ↓.

--Makes firms more efficient and able to produce at lower unit cost.

--Important in competitive markets where price competition is strong.

2. Price Competitiveness

--Lower costs → firms can cut prices without cutting profit margins.

--Increases market share and consumer welfare.

--Example: Aldi & Lidl use bulk buying to offer lower prices.

3. Higher Profits

--Firms may keep prices stable but enjoy higher profit margins.

--Profits → reinvestment (R&D, innovation, expansion).

4. Barriers to Entry / Market Structure

--Large firms benefit most → new entrants may struggle.

--Explains why some industries (airlines, supermarkets, utilities) are oligopolies or natural monopolies.

5. Global Competitiveness

--Firms with EOS can compete internationally.

--Example: China's manufacturing industry benefits from huge scale → lower global prices.

6. Innovation & R&D

--Larger firms with EOS → more retained profits → fund research, improve products.

--Example: Apple, Amazon investing in new tech.

7. Consumer Benefits

--Lower prices.

--Wider range of products (due to marketing economies).

--Better quality due to investment in technology.

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Diseconomies of scale

Diseconomies of scale occur when a firm becomes too large and its long-run average cost (LRAC) starts to rise as output increases.

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causes of diseconomies of scale

-Managerial / Coordination problems:

--As firms grow, it becomes harder to organize production efficiently.

--Too many layers of management → slower decision-making.

-Communication problems:

--Large firms may suffer from poor communication between departments

→ mistakes and delays.

-Worker alienation / motivation issues:

--In very large firms, workers may feel less valued → lower morale → lower productivity.

-Bureaucracy:

--Large organizations require more admin → inefficiency and higher costs.

-Geographical diseconomies:

--If firms expand to multiple locations, transport and logistics costs may rise.

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diagram + labels

U-shaped LRAC curve:

Downward slope → economies of scale.

Bottom → minimum efficient scale (optimum size).

Upward slope → diseconomies of scale.

Label:

Downward slope = Economies of scale.

Lowest point = MES.

Upward slope = Diseconomies of scale.

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explain the movements in the Long-Run Average Cost (LRAC) curve

Downward Slope (Economies of Scale):

-As output ↑, LRAC ↓.

-Firms exploit internal economies of scale:

--Technical economies (better machinery).

--Purchasing economies (bulk buying).

--Managerial economies (specialisation of labour/management).

--Financial economies (cheaper loans).

Costs fall → greater efficiency.

Flat / Constant Section (Minimum Efficient Scale):

-Point where LRAC is at its lowest.

-Known as the minimum efficient scale (MES).

-Firms produce at the lowest average cost per unit.

-Important for competitiveness → firms operating at MES can undercut rivals.

Upward Slope (Diseconomies of Scale):

-Beyond MES, further expansion causes LRAC to rise.

-Diseconomies of scale set in:

--Coordination/communication difficulties.

Bureaucracy.

--Worker motivation falls.

--Firm becomes less efficient as it grows too large.

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consequences of diseconomies of scale

-Higher unit costs → lower competitiveness.

-Reduced profits if costs rise faster than revenue.

-May cause firms to downsize or restructure.

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Evaluation

-Not inevitable → some firms (e.g. tech giants) avoid diseconomies through good management and digital efficiency.

-Depends on industry → service-based firms may experience diseconomies earlier than capital-intensive firms.

-Government intervention (infrastructure, training) can reduce external diseconomies.

-Economies of scale may still outweigh diseconomies in some sectors → explains natural monopolies (e.g. utilities).