Accedi

Economies of scope refer to a firm's cost advantages by producing a wider variety of products rather than focusing on a single product. Economies of scope are achieved when the total cost of producing multiple products together is less than the sum of producing each product independently. This production efficiency is primarily possible due to sharing common resources across the different types of outputs. This includes skilled labor, an efficient managerial team, or advanced technologies that can be used across different products.

Procter & Gamble, a leading conglomerate in consumer goods, uses its marketing expertise to promote multiple products, such as personal care items, alongside pharmaceutical products. Honda has specialized knowledge in internal combustion engines. It uses this expertise to improve the production of engines for a diverse set of products, including cars, motorcycles, lawnmowers, and snow blowers.

Economies of scope offers the opportunity for diversification. For instance, a carrier traditionally focusing on freight shipping might expand into passenger transport or provide logistical support services for other transport companies.

Diseconomies of scope occur when a firm incurs higher average costs by producing multiple products. For example, if a drug company chooses to make two drugs in the same factory, it must complete a stringent cleaning of all equipment to avoid cross-contamination whenever it switches production from one drug to the other. This specific and expensive cleaning step would not be required if they produced only one type of drug.

Dal capitolo 7:

article

Now Playing

7.14 : Economies of Scope

Costs

101 Visualizzazioni

article

7.1 : Sunk and Opportunity Cost

Costs

126 Visualizzazioni

article

7.2 : Fixed and Variable Cost

Costs

84 Visualizzazioni

article

7.3 : Total Fixed, Total Variable, and Total Cost Curves

Costs

137 Visualizzazioni

article

7.4 : Average Fixed, Average Variable, and Average Total Cost I

Costs

121 Visualizzazioni

article

7.5 : Average Fixed, Average Variable, and Average Total Cost II

Costs

78 Visualizzazioni

article

7.6 : Marginal Cost I

Costs

70 Visualizzazioni

article

7.7 : Marginal Cost II

Costs

121 Visualizzazioni

article

7.8 : Relationship between Average and Marginal Costs

Costs

130 Visualizzazioni

article

7.9 : Nature of Costs in the Long Run

Costs

65 Visualizzazioni

article

7.10 : Short-run vs Long-run: Average Costs

Costs

55 Visualizzazioni

article

7.11 : Short-run vs Long-run: Marginal Costs

Costs

210 Visualizzazioni

article

7.12 : Economies of Scale

Costs

59 Visualizzazioni

article

7.13 : Diseconomies of Scale

Costs

50 Visualizzazioni

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati