Back to Business Topics
5.2.32 min read

Economies and diseconomies of scale in production

IB Business Management • Unit 5

7-day free trial

Know exactly what to write for full marks

Practice with exam questions and get AI feedback that shows you the perfect answer — what examiners want to see.

Start Free Trial

📉 What are economies of scale?

Big Idea: Economies of scale happen when a business grows bigger and its average cost per unit falls. The more you make, the cheaper each one becomes! 📦📦📦

Why do costs fall?

When a business produces more, it can spread its fixed costs over more units and negotiate better deals.

  • Fixed costs are shared across more output → lower average cost
  • Bulk buying gives discounts on raw materials (purchasing economies)
  • Specialist machines and workers become worthwhile (technical economies)
  • Easier and cheaper to borrow money (financial economies)
  • Can afford specialist managers (managerial economies)
  • Marketing costs are spread over more sales (marketing economies)
If an exam asks you to 'define economies of scale', say: the reduction in average cost per unit as a business increases its scale of production.

🏷️ Types of economies of scale

There are several different types, each explaining a different reason costs fall as a business grows.

  • Purchasing — bulk buying discounts from suppliers
  • Technical — using large-scale machinery and technology more efficiently
  • Financial — banks offer lower interest rates to larger, safer businesses
  • Managerial — hiring specialist managers for different departments
  • Marketing — advertising costs are spread over many more units sold
Example: A car manufacturer buys steel in huge quantities, getting a much lower price per tonne than a small workshop.
Remember the types: 'Please Try Finding More Money' — Purchasing, Technical, Financial, Managerial, Marketing! 💡

See how examiners mark answers

Access past paper questions with model answers. Learn exactly what earns marks and what doesn't.

Try Exam Vault Free7-day free trial • No card required

📈 Diseconomies of scale

Big Idea: Diseconomies of scale happen when a business gets too big and average costs start rising again. Bigger isn't always better! 🐘

Why do costs rise?

  • Communication problems — harder to share information across a huge business
  • Coordination difficulties — managing thousands of workers and processes is complex
  • Motivation drops — workers feel like a small cog in a big machine
  • Slow decision-making — too many layers of management
  • Waste and inefficiency — harder to monitor everything
Example: A global fast-food chain may find that some locations waste food because head office can't monitor every store closely.
Exam tip: 'Define diseconomy of scale' = an increase in average cost per unit as a business grows beyond its optimal size.

⚖️ Putting it together

Every business has an optimal size — where average costs are at their lowest. Below that, there are economies of scale. Above that, diseconomies kick in.

  • Small business growing → enjoys economies of scale → costs fall
  • Business gets too large → diseconomies kick in → costs rise
  • The sweet spot is where average costs are lowest
In 10-mark questions, you can argue both sides: growth brings economies of scale BUT may also lead to diseconomies if the business grows too fast.

Ready to master Economies and diseconomies of scale in production?

Practice with MCQs, short answer questions, and extended response questions. Get instant AI feedback to improve your understanding.