3.2 Costs and economies of scale

Cards (19)

  • Fixed Costs
    Costs that remain constant as output changes e.g. rent or mortgage repayments.
  • Variable Costs
    Costs that change as output changes e.g. raw materials
  • Total Costs
    The sum of fixed and variable costs
  • Average cost
    Total costs/output
  • Marginal costs
    The extra cost of producing one more unit of output
  • Short run (in terms of fixed and variable factors)
    The period of time during which at least one of a firm’s factors of production is fixed
  • Long-run
    The time period in which all inputs can be varied
  • The law of diminishing returns
    When additional units of a variable input are added to fixed inputs after a certain point, the marginal product of the variable input declines.
  • Internal economies of scale
    The cost reductions enjoyed by a single business as it grows
  • Reasons for internal economies of scale - link to Q rising faster than TC
    1)Financial - negotiate lower interest rates with banks due to reputation
    2)Marketing - bulk buy advertisement and negotiate a lower unit price spread costs
    3)Technical - Specialist machinery boosts productivity
    4)Management - employ managers and boost productivity
    5)Purchasing - firms are able to buy in bulk and spread costs over a wider range of products
  • External economies of scale
    The cost reductions avaliable to all businesses as the industry grows
  • Reasons for external economies of scale link to TC falling
    1. Concentration of businesses
    2. Infrastructure
    3. Technology and skills
  • Diseconomies of scale
    The situation in which a firm’s long run average costs rise as firm increases output
  • Reasons for diseconomies of scale - link to TC rising faster than Q
    1. Control - drift for managers to control workforce bc of size and productivity falls
    2. Communication problems - can't spread messages about efficient ways quickly enough so productivity falls
    3. Coordination (poor) and decision - making sure everyones is working the same
    4. Motivation of the workforce - individuals feel less values and motivation falls decreasing productivity
  • Minimum efficient scale
    The lowest rate of output at which a firm takes full advantage of economies of scale.
  • The extent to which a business benefits from or is limited by economies and diseconomies of scales depends upon:
    1. Demand for the product or service
    2. The nature of production
    3. Technological advancement
    4. The importance of price
    5. The nature of the product or service
  • Diagram to illustrate economies & diseconomies of scale
    A) Average Cost
    B) Output
    C) Economies of Scale
    D) Diseconomies of scale
  • Returns to Scale
    This is how the output of a business responds to a change in all factor inputs. These can be increasing, decreasing or constant.
  • Divorce of ownership from control:
    This may lead to conflict between the board of directors and shareholders for example, as different stakeholders may have different objectives.