http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • The advantages of large scale production that result in lower unit (average) costs (cost per unit) • AC = TC / Q • Economies of scale – spreads total costs over a greater range of output Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Internal – advantages that arise as a result of the growth of the firm – Technical – Commercial – Financial – Managerial – Risk Bearing Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • External economies of scale – the advantages firms can gain as a result of the growth of the industry – normally associated with a particular area • Supply of skilled labour • Reputation • Local knowledge and skills • Infrastructure • Training facilities Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale Capital Land Labour Output Scale A 5 3 4 100 Scale B 10 6 8 300 TC AC •Assume each unit of capital = £5, Land = £8 and Labour = £2 •Calculate TC and then AC for the two different ‘scales’ (‘sizes’) of production facility •What happens and why? Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale Capital Land Labour Output TC AC Scale A 5 3 4 100 57 0.57 Scale B 10 6 8 300 164 0.54 •Doubling the scale of production (a rise of 100%) has led to an increase in output of 200% - therefore cost of production •PER UNIT has fallen •Don’t get confused between Total Cost and Average Cost •Overall ‘costs’ will rise but unit costs can fall •Why? Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Internal: Technical – Specialisation – large organisations can employ specialised labour – Indivisibility of plant – machines can’t be broken down to do smaller jobs! – Principle of multiples – firms using more than one machine of different capacities more efficient – Increased dimensions – bigger containers can reduce average cost Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Indivisibility of Plant: • Not viable to produce products like oil, chemicals on small scale – need large amounts of capital • Agriculture – machinery appropriate for large scale work – combines, etc. Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Principle of Multiples: • Some production processes need more than one machine • Different capacities • May need more than one machine to be fully efficient Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Principle of Multiples: e.g. Machine A Machine B Machine C Machine D Capacity = Capacity = Capacity = Capacity = 10 per hour 20 per hour 15 per hour 30 per hour Cost = £100 per machine Cost = £50 per machine Cost = £150 per machine Cost = £200 per machine Company A = 1 of each machine, output per hour = 10 Total Cost = £500 AC = £50 per unit Company B = 6 x A, 3 x B, 4 x C, 2 x D – output per hour = 60 Total Cost = £1750 AC = £29.16 per unit Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale Increased Dimensions: e.g. Transport container = Volume of 20m3 Total Cost: Construction, driver, fuel, maintenance, insurance, road tax = 2m £600 per journey AC = £30m3 2m 5m Total Cost = £1800 per journey AC = £11.25m3 4m 4m 10m Transport Container 2 = Volume 160m3 Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Commercial • Large firms can negotiate favourable prices as a result of buying in bulk • Large firms may have advantages in keeping prices higher because of their market power Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Financial • Large firms able to negotiate cheaper finance deals • Large firms able to be more flexible about finance – share options, rights issues, etc. • Large firms able to utilise skills of merchant banks to arrange finance Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Managerial –Use of specialists – accountants, marketing, lawyers, production, human resources, etc. Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale • Risk Bearing –Diversification –Markets across regions/countries –Product ranges –R&D Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale Minimum Efficient Scale – the point at which the increase in the scale of production yields no significant unit cost benefits Minimum Efficient Plant Size – the point where increasing the scale of production of an individual plant within the industry yields no significant unit cost benefits Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Economies of Scale Unit Cost Scale A 82p Scale B 54p LRAC MES Output Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed http://www.bized.co.uk Diseconomies of Scale • The disadvantages of large scale production that can lead to increasing average costs – Problems of management – Maintaining effective communication – Co-ordinating activities – often across the globe! – De-motivation and alienation of staff – Divorce of ownership and control Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed