Economies of Scale


Why Big Businesses Can Be More Efficient

Economies of Scale: As you make more stuff, each unit becomes cheaper to produce.

How does this happen?

  1. Bulk Buying Power:

    • Buying raw materials in huge quantities usually gets you a big discount.
    • Think: Bulk flour is cheaper than a small bag for one cake.
  2. Specialized Equipment & Labor:

    • You can afford expensive, highly efficient machines if you run them all the time.
    • You can hire specialists for specific tasks, making them faster.
    • Think: A robot arm on an assembly line is only worth it for high volume.
  3. Spreading Fixed Costs:

    • The cost of a factory, R&D, or a marketing campaign gets divided by more units.
    • Think: Designing one car model costs millions, but if you sell a million cars, that design cost per car is tiny.
  4. Financial Advantages:

    • Bigger companies often get lower interest rates on loans.

The Downside (Diseconomies of Scale):

  • Too Big: Sometimes, a company can get too big, becoming bureaucratic, slow, and inefficient. Average costs start to rise again.

Golden Rule: Pursue growth to achieve scale, but be aware of the point where bigger stops being better.