Up Learn – A Level economics (aqa) – Costs
Internal Economies of Scale
An economy of scale is when an increase in output leads to a decrease in long run average cost. There are 6 different types of internal economies of scale: purchasing, technical, managerial, marketing, financial and risk-bearing.
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More videos on Costs:
Costs Introduction (free trial)
Short Run vs Long Run (free trial)
Fixed & Variable Costs (free trial)
Total Fixed Cost & Average Fixed Cost (free trial)
Marginal Cost Formula (free trial)
Productivity and Marginal Cost (free trial)
Diminishing Marginal Returns (free trial)
Diminishing Marginal Returns Are ONLY in the SHORT RUN! (free trial)
Revenue, Costs & Profits
2. Average and Total Revenue (free trial)
3. Average and Total Revenue Diagrams (free trial)
4. Marginal and Total Revenue (free trial)
5. Average Revenue and Zero Quantity (free trial)
6. Marginal Revenue Formula (free trial)
7. Marginal Revenue Curve (free trial)
8. Total Revenue Curve (free trial)
9. Total Revenue and Elastic Demand (free trial)
10. Total Revenue and Inelastic Demand (free trial)
11. Revenue and PED (free trial)
12. Why Does Price Elasticity Change Along the Demand Curve? (free trial)
13. Wait…WTF!? (free trial)
14. Revenue Maximisation (free trial)
2. Short Run vs Long Run (free trial)
3. Fixed & Variable Costs (free trial)
4. Total Cost (free trial)
5. Total Fixed Cost & Average Fixed Cost (free trial)
6. Marginal Cost (free trial)
7. Marginal Cost Formula (free trial)
8. Productivity and Marginal Cost (free trial)
9. Diminishing Marginal Returns (free trial)
10. Diminishing Marginal Returns Are ONLY in the SHORT RUN! (free trial)
11. Marginal Cost Curve (free trial)
12. Total Variable Cost and Average Variable Cost (free trial)
13. AVC & MC Misconceptions (free trial)
14. Average Total Cost (free trial)
15. Long Run Average Cost Curve (free trial)
16. Internal economies of scale introduction (free trial)
17. Purchasing Economies (free trial)
18. Technical Economies (free trial)
19. Managerial Economies (free trial)
20. Marketing Economies (free trial)
21. Financial Economies (free trial)
22. Risk-Bearing Economies (free trial)
23. Summary: Internal Economies of Scale (free trial)
24. Internal Diseconomies of Scale (free trial)
25. The Minimum Efficient Scale (free trial)
26. L-shaped LRAC Curve (free trial)
27. External Economies of Scale (free trial)
28. Total, Average and Marginal Returns (free trial)
29. Returns to Scale (free trial)
30. Returns to Scale & Economies of Scale (free trial)
31. Factor Prices and Input Choices (free trial)
2. Losses, Normal & Supernormal Profit (free trial)
3. Costs & Revenue Diagram (free trial)
4. Profit Maximisation (free trial)
5. Showing Profits (free trial)
6. Showing Losses (free trial)
7. Increase in Revenue (free trial)
8. Decrease in Revenue (free trial)
9. Increase in Variable Costs (free trial)
10. Decrease in Variable Costs (free trial)
11. Increase in Fixed Costs (free trial)
12. Short Run Shut Down Points (free trial)
13. Short Run Shut Down Point Diagrams (free trial)
14. Long Run Shut Down Points (free trial)
15. Long Run Shut Down Point Diagrams (free trial)
Our LRAC curve slopes downwards and then upwards.
Let’s start with the first half of our LRAC, where long run average costs decrease as the firm’s output increases.
We see this frequently in real life: when big firms expand and scale up, they’re able to drive their average costs down super low…which is how McDonalds are able to sell a cheese burgers and chips for less than £2.
It’s also how Apple are able to pack their iPhone with an HD camera, all the functionality of a computer, and thousands of apps that do everything from help users find love, get a taxi home or kill space pigs…apparently, they also make phone calls. But Apple sell its iPhones on phone contracts at just £20/month.
If Apple and McDonalds were small companies selling only a few units each year…there’s no way they’d be able to get their costs and prices down that low.
But, by scaling up and expanding, Apple and McDonalds have both successfully driven their costs down super low, by taking advantage of internal economies of scale.
Internal economies of scale reduce long run average costs, as a firm increases its production.
And there are 6 different types of internal economies of scale:
Purchasing, technical, managerial, marketing, financial and risk-bearing.
And we’ll be looking at each of these internal economies of scale next!
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