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NotesEconomicsTopic 2.4Economies and diseconomies of scale
Back to Economics Topics
2.4.52 min read

Economies and diseconomies of scale

IB Economics โ€ข Unit 2

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Contents

  • Economies of scale: why average costs fall
  • Internal vs external economies of scale (with examples)
  • Diseconomies of scale and competitiveness

๐Ÿ“‰ Economies of Scale

Definition: Economies of scale occur when a firm increases its output and its average cost (AC) per unit falls in the long run.

Average cost (AC) refresher

Average cost is the cost per unit of output. It is calculated as total cost รท quantity produced. When AC falls, each unit becomes cheaper to produce on average.

  • AC = total cost รท output
  • Economies of scale = output increases โ†’ AC falls
  • This is a long-run idea: the firm can change plant size and all inputs

Why does AC fall as output rises?

When a firm grows, it can spread some costs over more units and also become more efficient. The result is lower cost per unit.

In exam answers, always write the chain: output rises โ†’ efficiency/spreading costs โ†’ AC falls.

๐Ÿญ Internal vs External Economies of Scale

The difference: Internal economies of scale reduce AC because the firm itself grows. External economies of scale reduce AC because the industry grows (firms benefit from the environment around them).

Internal economies (firm-level) โ€” examples

  • Technical: using more efficient machinery or production methods at larger scale โ†’ lower unit cost
  • Purchasing: bulk buying inputs โ†’ discounts โ†’ lower input cost per unit
  • Managerial: specialist managers improve productivity and reduce waste โ†’ lower AC
  • Marketing: fixed advertising costs spread over more units โ†’ lower marketing cost per unit
  • Financial: large firms may borrow at lower interest rates โ†’ lower finance costs
Internal economies = caused by growth of the firm. Use the phrase: specialisation, bulk buying, efficient capital.

External economies (industry-level) โ€” examples

  • Skilled labour pool: industry growth attracts trained workers โ†’ lower hiring/training costs
  • Specialised suppliers: more input firms set up nearby โ†’ cheaper and more reliable inputs
  • Shared infrastructure: better transport, broadband, ports โ†’ lower distribution and time costs
  • Knowledge spillovers: ideas spread between firms (clusters) โ†’ faster innovation and efficiency
An external economy example: a growing tech cluster creates a local pool of experienced programmers. Firms spend less on recruitment and training, reducing AC.

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โš ๏ธ Diseconomies of Scale + Competitiveness

Diseconomies of scale: Diseconomies of scale occur when a firm grows beyond an efficient size and its average cost (AC) rises.

Why can AC rise when firms get too big?

  • Coordination problems: harder to organise production across departments/sites
  • Communication breakdowns: slower decisions and mistakes increase costs
  • Managerial inefficiency: layers of management reduce flexibility and productivity
  • Loss of motivation: workers may feel less valued in very large firms, reducing productivity
  • Bureaucracy: rules and procedures increase time and admin costs
Exam chain: firm grows too large โ†’ inefficiency/bureaucracy โ†’ productivity falls or waste rises โ†’ AC rises.

Link to competitiveness

If economies of scale lower AC, firms can often reduce prices while keeping profit margins. Lower prices can increase competitiveness, especially in competitive and international markets. However, if diseconomies of scale set in and AC rises, firms may lose cost advantage and become less competitive.

  • Economies of scale โ†’ AC falls โ†’ lower prices possible โ†’ more competitive
  • Diseconomies of scale โ†’ AC rises โ†’ higher prices or lower profits โ†’ less competitive

Related Economics Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

2.1.1The law of demand
2.1.2Determinants of demand
2.1.3Movements vs shifts of demand
2.2.1The law of supply
View all Economics topics

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Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for Economics

IB Exam Questions on Economies and diseconomies of scale

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How Economies and diseconomies of scale Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Economies and diseconomies of scale.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Economies and diseconomies of scale.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY โ€” cause and effect within Economies and diseconomies of scale.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Economies and diseconomies of scale.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide โ†’

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2.4.4Costs and revenue basics
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Profit maximisation logic2.4.6

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