Photo by Mikhail Nilov on Pexels

Economies of Scale: Why Getting Bigger Sometimes Means Getting Cheaper

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 10, 20263 min read
On this page

Amazon's fulfillment network processes millions of packages per day through robotics, algorithmic routing, and optimized warehouse layouts. A regional e-commerce competitor processing thousands of packages per day cannot spread the fixed cost of that infrastructure across enough orders to match Amazon's per-unit fulfillment cost. This cost gap — the difference in average cost between the giant and the small — is economies of scale, and it is one of the primary forces driving market concentration in logistics, manufacturing, and platform industries.

The setup

Economies of scale occur in the long run when a firm's long-run average cost (LRAC) falls as output increases. As the firm doubles its size, total cost less than doubles — average cost falls.

Four main sources:

Fixed cost spreading: administrative overhead, R&D, branding, and regulatory compliance costs are largely fixed. Spreading them over more units reduces the per-unit contribution from each source.

Input specialization: larger operations allow workers to specialize more narrowly and machines to run closer to full capacity, improving efficiency.

Purchasing power: large buyers negotiate lower input prices — a retailer ordering 10 million units gets better pricing than one ordering 10,000.

Technological efficiency: some production processes — continuous casting in steel, semiconductor fabrication — have minimum efficient scales well above what small firms can reach. Only large producers can access the full efficiency of the technology.

What happens — and why

The LRAC curve is the envelope of all the short-run ATC curves — one for each possible plant size. In the region of economies of scale, the LRAC is declining. At the minimum efficient scale (MES), LRAC reaches its minimum — the most cost-efficient production level. Beyond MES, LRAC is flat (constant returns) or rising (diseconomies).

Diseconomies of scale arise when LRAC rises with output. Large organizations face rising management costs, slower decision-making, coordination complexity, and principal-agent problems that erode efficiency gains. The Bureau of Labor Statistics business formation data shows that in most service industries, average firm size stabilizes well below the size of industrial producers — suggesting diseconomies of scale set in at moderate output levels in labor-intensive services.

Where you see it in the wild

The Bureau of Economic Analysis industry concentration data shows the capital-intensive industries where economies of scale are strongest: petroleum refining, semiconductor manufacturing, commercial aircraft, and electricity generation. Each requires multi-billion-dollar investments that only become efficient at very large output scales — which is why each industry has only a few globally competitive producers.

Why it matters

Economies of scale determine competitive market structure. Where they are strong, markets consolidate toward a few large producers (airlines, semiconductors, utilities). Where they are weak or diseconomies set in quickly, many small firms coexist (restaurants, professional services, retail). Antitrust regulators evaluate merger proposals by asking whether the merged entity will achieve cost efficiencies that justify the reduction in competitive pressure — a direct application of scale economy analysis.

◆ Sources

  1. Business Employment Dynamics — Bureau of Labor Statistics
  2. Industry Economic Accounts — Bureau of Economic Analysis
  3. FTC Economics Policy — Federal Trade Commission
  4. Economies of Scale — Investopedia
  5. Natural Monopoly — Library of Economics and Liberty
Microeconomics GlossaryPart 39 of 129
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

◆ WEEKLY ANALYSIS

Never Miss a Drop

New economic analysis and data breakdowns every week. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.