Chapter 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are economies of scale

A

when the average cost declines as output increases.
If AC < MC

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2
Q

What are diseconomies of scale

A

When the average cost is increasing, then the marginal cost must exceed the average cost, and we say that production exhibits diseconomies of scale.
If AC > MC

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3
Q

What is the minimum efficient scale (MES)

A

The minimum output to achieve economies of scale

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4
Q

What are economies of scope

A

Economies of scope exist if the firm achieves savings as it increases the variety of goods and services it produces. E.G. Ikea

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5
Q

What are indivisibility

A

Indivisibility simply means that input cannot be scaled down below a certain minimum size, even when the level of output is very small.

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6
Q

How to achieve economies of scale

A
  • spreading of product specific fixed costs
  • trade-offs among alternative technologies
  • indivisibilities (inability to run equipment below a certain output)
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7
Q

Economies of scale rules of thumb

A
  1. Substantial product-specific economies of scale are likely when production is capital-intensive.
  2. Minimal product-specific economies of scale are likely when production is materials or labor-intensive.
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8
Q

sources of economies of scale and scope

A
  1. Economics of density
  2. Purchasing
  3. Advertising
  4. Research and development
  5. Physical properties of production
  6. Inventories
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9
Q

Sources of diseconomies of scale

A
  1. Labor costs and. Firm size
  2. spreading specialized resources too thin
  3. Bureaucracy
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10
Q

What is the learning curve

A

Refers to advantages that flow from accumulating experience and know-how

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11
Q

What is unrelated diversification

A

A firm that creates, for example, medical devices and popular music.
Two totally unrelated markets

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12
Q

The learning curve vs economies of scale

A

Economies of scale refer to the ability to perform an activity at a low unit cost at a certain output.
Learning economies refer to the reductions in unit costs due to accumulating experience over time.

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13
Q

Firm reasons for diversification

A
  1. Benefit the owners by increasing efficiency
  2. Diversification may reflect the preferences of the firm’s managers
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14
Q

Efficiency-based reasons for diversification

A
  1. To achieve economies of scope
  2. To make use of an internal capital market
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15
Q

What is the BCG Growth/Share Matrix: a growing market with a relatively high share

A

Rising star

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16
Q

What is the BCG Growth/Share Matrix: a growing market with a relatively low share

A

Problem child

17
Q

What is the BCG Growth/Share Matrix: a declining market with a relatively high share

A

Cash cow

18
Q

What is the BCG Growth/Share Matrix: a declining market with a relatively low share

A

Dog

19
Q

What are problematic justifications for diversification

A
  1. Diversifying shareholder’s portfolio
  2. Identifying undervalued firms
20
Q

Reasons not to diversify

A
  • Divisions will outperform others which takes away the incentive of managers of the money-losing divisions because they are not stand-alone businesses.
  • Bureaucracy effects
  • Diversifications impose uniform organization design while not being efficient for the business unit
21
Q

Managerial reasons for diversification

A
  1. managers like running larger firms
  2. managers pursue unrelated acquisitions in order to increase their compensation
  3. Managers limit the risk of extremely poor overall profitability
  4. Problems of corporate governance
22
Q

A firm is diversified when…

A

They produce for numerous markets.