ECON2410 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Automatic Train Operation, Capacity Utilization, Fixed Cost

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Lecture 2: the horizontal boundaries of the firm (part a) Economies of scale is the cost advantage that arises with increased output of a product. Economies of scope is increasing the number of different goods produced. If ac declines as output increases, mc < ac, production exhibits economies of scale. If ac increases as output increases, mc > ac, production exhibits diseconomies of scale. Reasons for diseconomies of scale: coordination problem, poor communication, agency problem. In reality, cost curves are closer to being l- shaped than u-shaped. Large firms are rarely at a cost disadvantage relative to smaller firms. U-shaped implies cost disadvantage for very small and very large firms. Capital intensive production processes are more likely to display economies of scale and scope because they can offer cost advantage. Major sources of economies of scale/scope: indivisibilities and the spreading of fixed costs over an ever-greater volume of output.

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