Difference between revisions of "Sustainable Need for Economies of Scale"
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==Description== | ==Description== |
Revision as of 00:14, 6 March 2007
Breadcrumbs: The Future of Ubiquitous computing in 2025 --> Economical Driving Forces for the Future of ubicomputing --> Economies of scale
Description
Economies of scale characterizes a production process in which an increase in the number of units purchased causes a decrease in the average cost of each unit.
The Industrial Revolution created pressure for much larger plants that could capture the benefits of the economies of scale offered by the new technologies it had spawned. Cheap and abundant energy combined with good transporation networks and new production technologies to restructure capital-incentive industries. For the first time, companies combined intermediate processes into single plants and developed large-batch or continuous/process technologies to achieve low-cost volume production. (Source: Transnational Management by Bartlett, Ghoshal, Birkinshaw)
More information: Economies of scale in Wikipedia
Enablers
- WTO and falling trade barriers
- Decreasing transport costs
- Investment incentives attracting investors to low-cost-labour countries
- Advanced communication technologies - easier management of a transnational corporation
- Growing demand for products
- Competition pressuring lower prices
Inhibitors
- Cultural differences/conflicts
- Anti-globalization forces
Paradigms
Experts
Timing
19th century: Industrial revolution in Europe
1914: Fordism - Henry Ford's combination of highly efficient factories, highly paid workers, and low prices revolutionized manufacturing