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Micro Economics




                    Notes          is increased. Economies of scale explain the down sloping part of the long run AC curve. As the
                                   size of the plant increases, LAC typically declines over some range of output for a number of
                                   reasons. The most important is that, as the scale of output is expanded, there is greater potential
                                   for specialisation of productive factors. This is most notable with regard to labour but may apply
                                   to other factors as well. Other factors contributing to declining LAC include ability to use more
                                   advanced technologies and more sophisticated capital equipment, managerial specialisation,
                                   opportunity to take advantage of lower costs for some inputs by purchasing larger quantities,
                                   effective utilisation of by-products, etc.
                                   9.4.1 Internal Economies and Diseconomies of Scale



                                   When a firm expands in size by increasing the scale of its output, certain cost advantages accrue


                                   to the firm, those are called internal economies. Internal economies to the firm may be of various


                                   types: technical, commercial, financial, managerial and risk spreading. As the firm expands in its
                                   size, it may profitably employ a big machine, capacity under-utilisation may be held in check, an

                                   economic volume of by-product may be turned out – these are technical economies. Similarly, an

                                   expanding firm may arrange the bulk purchase of its materials and the bulk sale of its product, it
                                   may save some transport costs, distribution costs and procurement costs – these are commercial


                                   economies. A growing firm can also furnish good security and can, therefore, float funds easily
                                   from internal as well as external sources at economic terms – these are  fi nancial  economies.

                                   Likewise, a large firm can undertake product diversification and can spread risks.

                                   However, from the standpoint of our subject, the most important internal economies are

                                   managerial economies. When a  firm expands its business, the recruitment of managerial
                                   personnel need not be increased in the same proportion. To manage additional volume of output

                                   produced and marketed, an additional manager is not always required. An efficient manager can
                                   manage a growing business so long as the business does not grow very large. When the scale of

                                   firm increases, the average costs of production fall because of a number of internal economies.
                                   When these internal economies are fully exploited, the LAC reaches the minimum. However,

                                   if the firm continues to increase in size indefinitely, soon several bottlenecks emerge and the

                                   results are internal diseconomies of scale. The point at which the long run average costs are at
                                   a minimum, is the optimum size of the firm. This optimum size is the outcome of the interplay


                                   of various optima – technical, financial, managerial, etc. Beyond the point of technical optimum,
                                   technical diseconomies occur. Beyond the point of  fi nancial/commercial/managerial/risk

                                   optimum, financial/commercial/managerial/risk diseconomies occur. In other words, as a fi rm
                                   grows large and larger, all sorts of cost disadvantages occur and therefore, the long run average
                                   costs start rising. There can be no question about the fact that costs rise and that diseconomies
                                   do exist. But they are mostly the diseconomies of bad management rather than of scale. An
                                   efficient manager, by way of his foresight and planning, should be able to avoid technical and

                                   non-technical diseconomies which are internal to the fi rm.
                                   9.4.2 External Economies and Diseconomies of Scale
                                   In addition to internal economies and diseconomies of scale, there are external economies and
                                   diseconomies. The external economies are the physical and cost advantages which result from
                                   the general development of the industry. When the industry expands, there are advantages from
                                   occupational division labour and cross-fertilisation of ideas. When the industry expands, it offers
                                   scope for specialisation and skill formation and for lateral and vertical integration. As the growing
                                   industry gets localised in a geographical area, facilities are attracted to that area. Simultaneous
                                   investments in other industrial activities are induced. These are “external economies in the market
                                   sense”. Special technical schools for training skilled labour are established, research institutions
                                   are set up; equipment manufacturers build their plants. Ancillary units grow. Interchange of
                                   technical information and ideas occurs through both formal (professional societies) and informal
                                   (golf clubs, etc.) channels. Such external economies are very general in character, all  fi rms



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