Returns to Scale Flashcards
1
Q
Returns to Scale describe the Effects of Increasing the Scale of Production
A
In the long run firms can increase all of their factor inputs. Returns to scale describe the effect on output of increasing all factor inputs by the same proportion.
- Increasing Returns to Scale:
- There are increasing returns to scale when an increase in all factors inputs leads to a more than proportional increase in output. E.g. doubling all of the factor inputs results in a tripling of output. - Constant Returns to Scale:
- There are constant returns to scale when an increase in all factor inputs leads to a proportional increase in output. E.g. doubling all the factor inputs results in a doubling of output - Decreasing returns to scale:
- There are decreasing returns to scale when an increase in all factor inputs => less than proportional increase in output. E.g. tripling all the factor inputs results in a doubling of output.
2
Q
Increasing Returns to Scale contribute to Economies of Scale
A
- Returns to scale and economies of scale are not the same thing.
- Returns to scale describe how much output changes as input is increased,
- Economies of scale descrive reductions in average costs as output is increased. - However, there is a link between the two ideas:
- Increasing returns to scale contribute to economies of scale,
- Decreasing returns to scale contribute to diseconomies of scale - When returns to scale are increasing, long run average cost will fall. An increase in input => more than proportional increase in output, so more output is being produced per unit of input.
- When returns to scale are constant, long run average cost will stay the same - costs are increasing proportionally to output.
- When returns to scale are decreasing, long run average cost will rise. Less output is being produced per unit of input.
* LOOK AT DIAGRAM ON PAGE 47*
3
Q
Long Run Average Costs are Minimised at the MES
A
- The minimum efficient scale of production is the lowest level of output at which the minimum possible average cost can be achieved - it’s the first point at which the LRAC curve reaches its minimum value. This is likely to be the optimal level of production.
- There might be a range of production levels where the LRAC is minimised, or the MES might be the only LRAC minimising level.
- The MES varies between industries - industries with very high fixed costs have a very large MES. This affects the whole structure of an industry - industries with a large MES will favour large firms more.
- LOOK AT DIAGRAM ON PAGE 47*