In microeconomics, economies of scale
are the cost advantages that enterprises obtain due to their scale of
operation (typically measured by the amount of output produced), with cost per unit
of output decreasing with increasing scale. At the basis of economies
of scale there may be technical, statistical, organizational or related
factors to the degree of market control.
Economies of scale apply to a variety of organizational and
business situations and at various levels, such as a production, plant
or an entire enterprise. When average costs start falling as output
increases, then economies of scale occur.
Some economies of scale, such as capital cost of manufacturing
facilities and friction loss of transportation and industrial equipment,
have a physical or engineering basis.
Another source of scale economies is the possibility of purchasing inputs at a lower per-unit cost when they are purchased in large quantities.
The economic concept dates back to Adam Smith and the idea of obtaining larger production returns through the use of division of labor. Diseconomies of scale are the opposite.
Economies of scale often have limits, such as passing the optimum
design point where costs per additional unit begin to increase. Common
limits include exceeding the nearby raw material supply, such as wood
in the lumber, pulp and paper industry.
A common limit for a low cost per unit weight commodities is saturating
the regional market, thus having to ship product uneconomic distances.
Other limits include using energy less efficiently or having a higher
defect rate.
Large producers are usually efficient at long runs of a product
grade (a commodity) and find it costly to switch grades frequently.
They will, therefore, avoid specialty grades even though they have
higher margins. Often smaller (usually older) manufacturing facilities
remain viable by changing from commodity-grade production to specialty
products.
Economies of scale must be distinguished from economies stemming
from an increase in the production of a given plant. When a plant is
used below its optimal production capacity,
increases in its degree of utilization bring about decreases in the
total average cost of production. As noticed, among the others, by Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen (1966) and Nicholas Kaldor (1972) these economies are not economies of scale.
Overview
The simple meaning of economies of scale is doing things more efficiently with increasing size. Common sources of economies of scale are purchasing
(bulk buying of materials through long-term contracts), managerial
(increasing the specialization of managers), financial (obtaining lower-interest charges when borrowing from banks and having access to a greater range of financial instruments), marketing (spreading the cost of advertising over a greater range of output in media markets), and technological (taking advantage of returns to scale in the production function). Each of these factors reduces the long run average costs (LRAC) of production by shifting the short-run average total cost (SRATC) curve down and to the right.
Economies of scale is a concept that may explain real-world
phenomena such as patterns of international trade or the number of firms
in a market. The exploitation of economies of scale helps explain why
companies grow large in some industries. It is also a justification for free trade
policies, since some economies of scale may require a larger market
than is possible within a particular country—for example, it would not
be efficient for Liechtenstein
to have its own carmaker if they only sold to their local market. A
lone carmaker may be profitable, but even more so if they exported cars
to global markets in addition to selling to the local market. Economies
of scale also play a role in a "natural monopoly".
There is a distinction between two types of economies of scale:
internal and external. An industry that exhibits an internal economy of
scale is one where the costs of production fall when the number of firms
in the industry drops, but the remaining firms increase their
production to match previous levels. Conversely, an industry exhibits an
external economy of scale when costs drop due to the introduction of
more firms, thus allowing for more efficient use of specialized services
and machinery.
The determinants of economies of scale
Physical and engineering basis: economies of increased dimension
Some of the economies of scale recognized in engineering have a physical basis, such as the square-cube law,
by which the surface of a vessel increases by the square of the
dimensions while the volume increases by the cube. This law has a
direct effect on the capital cost of such things as buildings,
factories, pipelines, ships and airplanes.
In structural engineering, the strength of beams increases with the cube of the thickness.
Drag
loss of vehicles like aircraft or ships generally increases less than
proportional with increasing cargo volume, although the physical details
can be quite complicated. Therefore, making them larger usually results
in less fuel consumption per ton of cargo at a given speed.
Heat loss from industrial processes vary per unit of volume for
pipes, tanks and other vessels in a relationship somewhat similar to the
square-cube law.
In some productions, an increase in the size of the plant reduces the
average variable cost, thanks to the energy savings resulting from the
lower dispersion of heat.
Economies of increased dimension are often misinterpreted because
of the confusion between indivisibility and three-dimensionality of
space. This confusion arises from the fact that three-dimensional
production elements, such as pipes and ovens, once installed and
operating, are always technically indivisible. However, the economies of
scale due to the increase in size do not depend on indivisibility but
exclusively on the three-dimensionality of space. Indeed, indivisibility
only entails the existence of economies of scale produced by the
balancing of productive capacities, considered above; or of increasing
returns in te utilisation of a single plant, due to its more efficient
use as the quantity produced increases. However, this latter phenomenon
has nothing to do with the economies of scale which, by definition, are
linked to the use of a larger plant.
Economies in holding stocks and reserves
At
the base of economies of scale there are also returns to scale linked
to statistical factors. In fact, the greater of the number of resources
involved, the smaller, in proportion, is the quantity of reserves
necessary to cope with unforeseen contingencies (for instance, machine
spare parts, inventories, circulating capital, etc.).
Transaction economies
A
larger scale generally determines greater bargaining power over input
prices and therefore benefits from pecuniary economies in terms of
purchasing raw materials and intermediate goods compared to companies
that make orders for smaller amounts. In this case we speak of pecuniary
economies, to highlight the fact that nothing changes from the
"physical" point of view of the returns to scale. Furthermore, supply
contracts entail fixed costs which lead to decreasing average costs if
the scale of production increases.
Economies deriving from the balancing of production capacity
Economies
of productive capacity balancing derives from the possibility that a
larger scale of production involves a more efficient use of the
production capacities of the individual phases of the production
process. If the inputs are indivisible and complementary, a small scale
may be subject to idle times or to the underutilization of the
productive capacity of some sub-processes. A higher production scale can
make the different production capacities compatible. The reduction in
machinery idle times is crucial in the case of a high cost of machinery.
Economies resulting from the division of labour and the use of superior techniques
A
larger scale allows for a more efficient division of labour. The
economies of division of labour derive from the increase in production
speed, from the possibility of using specialized personnel and adopting
more efficient techniques. An increase in the division of labour
inevitably leads to changes in the quality of inputs and outputs.
Managerial Economics
Many
administrative and organizational activities are mostly cognitive and,
therefore, largely independent of the scale of production.
When the size of the company and the division of labour increase, there
are a number of advantages due to the possibility of making
organizational management more effective and perfecting accounting and
control techniques.
Furthermore, the procedures and routines that turned out to be the
best can be reproduced by managers at different times and places.
Learning and growth economies
Learning and growth economies
are at the base of dynamic economies of scale, associated with the
process of growth of the scale dimension and not to the dimension of
scale per se. Learning by doing implies improvements in the ability to
perform and promotes the introduction of incremental innovations with a
progressive lowering of average costs. Learning economies are directly proportional to the cumulative production (experience curve).
Growth economies occur when a company acquires an advantage by
increasing its size. These economies are due to the presence of some
resource or competence that is not fully utilized, or to the existence
of specific market positions that create a differential advantage in
expanding the size of the firms. That growth economies disappear once
the scale size expansion process is completed. For example, a company
that owns a supermarket chain benefits from an economy of growth if,
opening a new supermarket, it gets an increase in the price of the land
it owns around the new supermarket. The sale of these lands to economic
operators, who wish to open shops near the supermarket, allows the
company in question to make a profit, making a profit on the revaluation
of the value of building land.
Capital and operating cost
Overall
costs of capital projects are known to be subject to economies of
scale. A crude estimate is that if the capital cost for a given sized
piece of equipment is known, changing the size will change the capital
cost by the 0.6 power of the capacity ratio (the point six to the power
rule).
In estimating capital cost, it typically requires an
insignificant amount of labor, and possibly not much more in materials,
to install a larger capacity electrical wire or pipe having
significantly greater capacity.
The cost of a unit of capacity of many types of equipment, such
as electric motors, centrifugal pumps, diesel and gasoline engines,
decreases as size increases. Also, the efficiency increases with size.
Crew size and other operating costs for ships, trains and airplanes
Operating crew size for ships, airplanes, trains, etc., does not increase in direct proportion to capacity.
(Operating crew consists of pilots, co-pilots, navigators, etc. and
does not include passenger service personnel.) Many aircraft models
were significantly lengthened or "stretched" to increase payload.
Many manufacturing facilities, especially those making bulk
materials like chemicals, refined petroleum products, cement and paper,
have labor requirements that are not greatly influenced by changes in
plant capacity. This is because labor requirements of automated
processes tend to be based on the complexity of the operation rather
than production rate, and many manufacturing facilities have nearly the
same basic number of processing steps and pieces of equipment,
regardless of production capacity.
Economical use of byproducts
Karl Marx noted that large scale manufacturing allowed economical use of products that would otherwise be waste.
Marx cited the chemical industry as an example, which today along with
petrochemicals, remains highly dependent on turning various residual
reactant streams into salable products. In the pulp and paper industry
it is economical to burn bark and fine wood particles to produce process steam and to recover the spent pulping chemicals for conversion back to a usable form.
Economies of scale and returns to scale
Economies
of scale is related to and can easily be confused with the theoretical
economic notion of returns to scale. Where economies of scale refer to a
firm's costs, returns to scale describe the relationship between inputs
and outputs in a long-run (all inputs variable) production function. A
production function has constant returns to scale if increasing all inputs by some proportion results in output increasing by that same proportion. Returns are decreasing if, say, doubling inputs results in less than double the output, and increasing
if more than double the output. If a mathematical function is used to
represent the production function, and if that production function is homogeneous,
returns to scale are represented by the degree of homogeneity of the
function. Homogeneous production functions with constant returns to
scale are first degree homogeneous, increasing returns to scale are
represented by degrees of homogeneity greater than one, and decreasing
returns to scale by degrees of homogeneity less than one.
If the firm is a perfect competitor in all input markets, and
thus the per-unit prices of all its inputs are unaffected by how much of
the inputs the firm purchases, then it can be shown that at a
particular level of output, the firm has economies of scale if and only
if it has increasing returns to scale, has diseconomies of scale if and
only if it has decreasing returns to scale, and has neither economies
nor diseconomies of scale if it has constant returns to scale. In this case, with perfect competition
in the output market the long-run equilibrium will involve all firms
operating at the minimum point of their long-run average cost curves
(i.e., at the borderline between economies and diseconomies of scale).
If, however, the firm is not a perfect competitor in the input
markets, then the above conclusions are modified. For example, if there
are increasing returns to scale in some range of output levels, but the
firm is so big in one or more input markets that increasing its
purchases of an input drives up the input's per-unit cost, then the firm
could have diseconomies of scale in that range of output levels.
Conversely, if the firm is able to get bulk discounts of an input, then
it could have economies of scale in some range of output levels even if
it has decreasing returns in production in that output range.
In essence, returns to scale refer to the variation in the relationship between inputs and output.
This relationship is therefore expressed in "physical" terms. But when
talking about economies of scale, the relation taken into consideration
is that between the average production cost and the dimension of scale.
Economies of scale therefore are affected by variations in input prices.
If input prices remain the same as their quantities purchased by the
firm increase, the notions of increasing returns to scale and economies
of scale can be considered equivalent. However, if input prices vary in
relation to their quantities purchased by the company, it is necessary
to distinguish between returns to scale and economies of scale. The
concept of economies of scale is more general than that of returns to
scale since it includes the possibility of changes in the price of
inputs when the quantity purchased of inputs varies with changes in the
scale of production.
The literature assumed that due to the competitive nature of reverse auctions,
and in order to compensate for lower prices and lower margins,
suppliers seek higher volumes to maintain or increase the total revenue.
Buyers, in turn, benefit from the lower transaction costs and economies
of scale that result from larger volumes. In part as a result, numerous
studies have indicated that the procurement volume must be sufficiently
high to provide sufficient profits to attract enough suppliers, and
provide buyers with enough savings to cover their additional costs.
However, surprisingly enough, Shalev and Asbjornse found, in
their research based on 139 reverse auctions conducted in the public
sector by public sector buyers, that the higher auction volume, or
economies of scale, did not lead to better success of the auction. They
found that auction volume did not correlate with competition, nor with
the number of bidders, suggesting that auction volume does not promote
additional competition. They noted, however, that their data included a
wide range of products, and the degree of competition in each market
varied significantly, and offer that further research on this issue
should be conducted to determine whether these findings remain the same
when purchasing the same product for both small and high volumes.
Keeping competitive factors constant, increasing auction volume may
further increase competition.
Economies of scale in the history of economic analysis
Economies of scale in classical economists
The first systematic analysis of the advantages of the division of labour capable of generating economies of scale, both in a static and dynamic sense, was that contained in the famous First Book of Wealth of Nations (1776) by Adam Smith, generally considered the founder of political economy as an autonomous discipline.
John Stuart Mill, in Chapter IX of the First Book of his Principles, referring to the work of Charles Babbage
(On the economics of machines and manufactories), widely analyses the
relationships between increasing returns and scale of production all
inside the production unit.
The economies of scale in Marx and Distributional consequences
In “Das Kapital” (1867), Karl Marx, referring to Charles Babbage,
extensively analyses economies of scale and concludes that they are one
of the factors underlying the ever-increasing concentration of capital.
Marx observes that in the capitalist system the technical conditions of
the work process are continuously revolutionized in order to increase
the surplus by improving the productive force of work. According to
Marx, with the cooperation of many workers brings about an economy in
the use of the means of production and an increase in productivity due
to the increase in the division of labour. Furthermore, the increase in
the size of the machinery allows significant savings in construction,
installation and operation costs. The tendency to exploit economies of
scale entails a continuous increase in the volume of production which,
in turn, requires a constant expansion of the size of the market.
However, if the market does not expand at the same rate as production
increases, overproduction crises can occur. According to Marx the
capitalist system is therefore characterized by two tendencies,
connected to economies of scale: towards a growing concentration and
towards economic crises due to overproduction.
In his 1844 Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts, Karl Marx
observes that economies of scale have historically been associated with
an increasing concentration of private wealth and have been used to
justify such concentration. Marx points out that concentrated private
ownership of large-scale economic enterprises is a historically
contingent fact, and not essential to the nature of such enterprises. In
the case of agriculture, for example, Marx calls attention to the sophistical nature of the arguments used to justify the system of concentrated ownership of land:
- As for large landed property, its defenders have always sophistically identified the economic advantages offered by large-scale agriculture with large-scale landed property, as if it were not precisely as a result of the abolition of property that this advantage, for one thing, received its greatest possible extension, and, for another, only then would be of social benefit.
Instead of concentrated private ownership of land, Marx recommends that economies of scale should instead be realized by associations:
- Association, applied to land, shares the economic advantage of large-scale landed property, and first brings to realization the original tendency inherent in land-division, namely, equality. In the same way association re-establishes, now on a rational basis, no longer mediated by serfdom, overlordship and the silly mysticism of property, the intimate ties of man with the earth, for the earth ceases to be an object of huckstering, and through free labor and free enjoyment becomes once more a true personal property of man.
Economies of scale in Marshall
Alfred Marshall
notes that "some, among whom Cournot himself", have considered "the
internal economies [...] apparently without noticing that their premises
lead inevitably to the conclusion that, whatever firm first gets a
good start will obtain a monopoly of the whole business of its trade …
". Marshall believes that there are factors that limit this trend toward monopoly, and in particular:
- the death of the founder of the firm and the difficulty that the successors may have inherited his/her entrepreneurial skills;
- the difficulty of reaching new markets for one's goods;
- the growing difficulty of being able to adapt to changes in demand and to new techniques of production;
- The effects of external economies, that is the particular type of economies of scale connected not to the production scale of an individual production unit, but to that of an entire sector.
Sraffa’s critique
Piero Sraffa
observes that Marshall, in order to justify the operation of the law of
increasing returns without it coming into conflict with the hypothesis
of free competition, tended to highlight the advantages of external
economies linked to an increase in the production of an entire sector
of activity. However, “those economies which are external from the
point of view of the individual firm, but internal as regards the
industry in its aggregate, constitute precisely the class which is most
seldom to be met with”. “In any case - Sraffa notes – in so far as
external economies of the kind in question exist, they are not linked
to be called forth by small increases in production”, as required by the
marginalist theory of price.
Sraffa points out that, in the equilibrium theory of the individual
industries, the presence of external economies cannot play an important
role because this theory is based on marginal changes in the quantities
produced.
Sraffa concludes that, if the hypothesis of perfect competition
is maintained, economies of scale should be excluded. He then suggests
the possibility of abandoning the assumption of free competition to
address the study of firms that have their own particular market. This stimulated a whole series of studies on the cases of imperfect competition
in Cambridge. However, in the succeeding years Sraffa will follow a
different path of research that will bring him to write and publish his
main work Production of commodities by means of commodities
(Sraffa, 1960). In this book Sraffa determines relative prices assuming
no changes in output, so that no question arises as to the variation or
constancy of returns.
Economies of scale and the tendency towards monopoly: ‘Cournot's dilemma’
It
has been noted that in many industrial sectors there are numerous
companies with different sizes and organizational structures, despite
the presence of significant economies of scale. This contradiction,
between the empirical evidence and the logical incompatibility between
economies of scale and competition, has been called the ‘Cournot
dilemma’.
As Mario Morroni observes, Cournot's dilemma appears to be unsolvable
if we only consider the effects of economies of scale on the dimension
of scale.
If, on the other hand, the analysis is expanded, including the aspects
concerning the development of knowledge and the organization of
transactions, it is possible to conclude that economies of scale do not
always lead to monopoly. In fact, the competitive advantages deriving
from the development of the firm's capabilities and from the management
of transactions with suppliers and customers can counterbalance those
provided by the scale, thus counteracting the tendency towards a
monopoly inherent in economies of scale. In other words, the
heterogeneity of the organizational forms and of the size of the
companies operating in a sector of activity can be determined by factors
regarding the quality of the products, the production flexibility, the
contractual methods, the learning opportunities, the heterogeneity of
preferences of customers who express a differentiated demand with
respect to the quality of the product, and assistance before and after
the sale. Very different organizational forms can therefore co-exist in
the same sector of activity, even in the presence of economies of scale,
such as, for example, flexible production on a large scale, small-scale
flexible production, mass production, industrial production based on
rigid technologies associated with flexible organizational systems and
traditional artisan production. The considerations regarding economies
of scale are therefore important, but not sufficient to explain the size
of the company and the market structure. It is also necessary to take
into account the factors linked to the development of capabilities and
the management of transaction costs.