Chap17

Subdecks (1)

Cards (124)

  • Economies of scale
    Falling average costs due to expansion
  • Diseconomies of scale
    Rising average costs when a firm becomes too big and as result inefficient
  • Internal economies of scale
    • Cost benefits that an individual firm can enjoy when it expands
  • Internal economies of scale
    • Purchasing economies
    • Marketing economies
    • Financial economies
    • Managerial economies
    • Technical economies
    • Risk-Bearing economies
  • Purchasing economies
    Discounts on bulk purchases
  • Marketing economies
    • Larger businesses can afford to purchase their own vehicles to distribute goods
    • Advertising costs (fixed cost) can be spread over more units when larger firm
    • The amount of sales staff will not increase in the same proportion as the number of product lines
  • Technical economies
    • Larger firms can now afford to buy specialised and latest equipment which makes them more efficient
  • Financial economies
    • Easier for larger businesses to borrow money from banks with lower interest rates
    • Larger firms have wider variety of sources to choose from i.e. limited companies -> sell shares – not available for sole traders
  • Managerial economies
    • Larger businesses can now afford specialist managers in all departments, increasing efficiency
  • Risk-Bearing economies
    • Larger firms have wider product ranges and sell into a variety of markets which reduces the risk
  • External economies of scale
    Cost benefits that all firms in an industry can enjoy when the industry expands
  • Skilled labour
    • When industry concentrated on an area -> build-up of labour with the skills and work experience required -> less training costs
    • Schools/colleges will provide vocational courses required
  • Infrastructure
    • When an industry dominates a region, roads, ports, railways will be shaped to suit industry' s needs
  • Access to suppliers
    • Suppliers encouraged to set up close by i.e. banks, waste disposal, distribution, component suppliers – this means all firms in the industry will benefit from their services
  • Similar businesses in the area
    • Similar firms located close to each other are likely to cooperate and all benefit from each other i.e. work together to share cost and benefits of a research and development centre
  • Diseconomies of scale
    • Bureaucracy
    • Communication problems
    • Lack of control
    • Distance between senior staff and shop floor workers
  • Bureaucracy
    When a business becomes too large – > too many resources are used in administration (bureaucratic) -> too much time spent on filling in forms/ reports -> decision making gets too slow and communication too long
  • Communication problems
    Too many employees all over the world – different languages and cultures, time differences -> communication more difficult
  • Lack of control
    Difficult to control and coordinate a large firm - -more supervision and more layers of management needed which raise costs
  • Distance between senior staff and shop floor workers
    • Too many layers of management –> senior managers might be so far removed from those at the bottom of the organisation – not aware of their needs
    • Lack of understanding – workers become demotivated
    • Conflicts may occur and resources may be wasted resolving them