See
also: List of Economic Topics 
ECONOMIES
OF SCALE - microeconomics
In
economics, returns to scale describe the relationship between the size of a firm
(or a production unit) and its long run average costs per unit. Typically, returns
to scale are initially increasing, and as volume of production increases, eventually
diminishing, which produces the standard U-shaped cost curve of economic theory.
In some economic theory (eg perfect competition) there is an assumption of constant
returns to scale.
An
alternative terminology is economies of scale for increasing returns to scale,
and diseconomies of scale for decreasing returns to scale. Being shorter this
is often more convenient.
Economies
of scale
Economies
of scale tend to occur in industries with high capital costs in which those costs
can be distributed across a large number of units of production.
The
exploitation of economies of scale helps explain why companies grow large in some
industries, why marketplaces with many participants are sometimes more efficient,
and how a natural monopoly can often occur. It is also a justification for free
trade policies, under the idea that a large unified market presents more opportunities
for economies of scale.
Network
externalities resemble economies of scale, but they are not considered such because
they are a function of the number of users of a good or service in an industry,
not of the production efficiency within a business. Economies of scale external
to the firm (or industry wide scale economies) are only considered examples of
network externalities if they are driven by demand side economies.
See
also
microeconomics
production, costs, and pricing
economies of scope
economies of
agglomeration