Manufacturers have to do more than build large manufacturing plants to realize economies of scale. It is true that as the capacity of a manufacturing operation rises, costs per unit of output fall as plant size approaches "minimum efficient scale," where the cost per unit of output reaches a minimum, determined roughly by the state of existing technology and size of the potential market. However, minimum efficient scale cannot be fully realized unless a steady "throughput" (the flow of materials through a plant) is attained. The throughput needed to maintain the optimal scale of production requires careful coordination not only of the flow of goods through the production process, but also of the flow of input from suppliers and the flow of output to wholesalers and final consumers. If throughput falls below a critical point, unit costs rise sharply and profits disappear. A manufacturer's fixed costs and "sunk costs" (original capital investment in the physical plant) do not decrease when production declines due to inadequate supplies of raw materials, problems on the factory floor, or inefficient sales networks. Consequently, potential economies of scale are based on the physical and engineering characteristics of the production facilities—that is, on tangible capital—but realized economies of scale are operational and organizational, and depend on knowledge, skills, experience, and teamwork—that is, on organized human capabilities, or intangible capital.

The importance of investing in intangible capital becomes obvious when one looks at what happens in new capital-intensive manufacturing industries. Such industries are quickly dominated, not by the first firms to acquire technologically sophisticated plants of theoretically optimal size, but rather by the first to exploit the full potential of such plants. Once some firms achieve this, a market becomes extremely hard to enter. Challengers must construct comparable plants and do so after the first movers have already worked out problems with suppliers or with new production processes. Challengers must create distribution networks and marketing systems in markets where first movers have all the contacts and know-how. And challengers must recruit management teams to compete with those that have already mastered these functional and strategic activities.


The passage suggests that which of the following is true of a manufacturer's fixed and sunk costs?


The extent to which they are determined by market conditions for the goods being manufactured is frequently underestimated.

If they are kept as low as possible, the manufacturer is very likely to realize significant profits.

They are the primary factor that determines whether a manufacturer will realize economies of scale.

They should be on a par with the fixed and sunk costs of the manufacturer's competitors.

They are not affected by fluctuations in a manufacturing plant's throughput.

考题讲解

题目分析:

文章细节题:关于固定成本和沉没成本,以下哪点是对的?

原文:当原材料供应不足、工厂有问题、或者销售效率低导致生产下降时,固定成本&沉没成本不会降低。


选项分析:

A选项:市场环境对它俩的额影响是被低估的:没提市场环境对它俩的影响。

B选项:如果能尽可能的降低这俩成本,制造商很可能实现利益:原文没有提它俩对利益的影响,只是说如果throughput低于某值时,会没有盈利。

C选项:它俩是决定公司能否实现规模经济的首要因素:并不是首要因素。

D选项:
它俩应该和竞争者的固定成本&沉没成本相等:没提。

E选项:正确。
他们不受公司的throughput影响:原文说当throughput出现问题时,它俩不会降低,说明是不受影响的。

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