Evaluating Competing Expansion Strategies
Based on the case study below, critique Proposal B. Justify which proposal poses a greater risk of creating diseconomies of scale, even though Proposal B appears to be the lower-cost option in terms of management salaries.
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CORE Econ
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.7 The firm and its customers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
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A firm organizes its workforce based on two rules: 1) each supervisor oversees exactly 10 production workers, and 2) each manager oversees a maximum of 8 supervisors. The firm currently has 80 production workers. If the firm decides to hire 10 additional production workers, what will be the effect on the ratio of management staff (supervisors and managers) to production workers?
Analyzing Growth at a Manufacturing Firm
Analyzing Costs of Scaling a Business
A company maintains a strict policy that each supervisor can manage a maximum of 10 workers. To maintain constant per-worker productivity as the company grows, the total number of management staff must increase at the same rate as the number of production workers.
Evaluating Expansion Strategies for a Growing Firm
A company has a strict organizational rule that each supervisor can effectively manage a maximum of 8 production workers. The company currently employs 64 production workers and 8 supervisors. If the company expands to 512 production workers, and also introduces a new rule that each manager can oversee a maximum of 8 supervisors, what is the primary organizational consequence of this eightfold increase in production staff?
A company has a two-tiered management structure. Each supervisor oversees a maximum of 12 production workers, and each manager oversees a maximum of 12 supervisors. To manage 144 production workers, the company requires 12 supervisors and 1 manager. If the company expands its workforce to 145 production workers, it will need a total of ____ management staff (supervisors and managers) to maintain the same level of oversight.
A company follows a strict hierarchical structure where each supervisor can oversee a maximum of 8 production workers, and a new manager is hired for every group of up to 8 supervisors (i.e., 1-8 supervisors require 1 manager, 9-16 supervisors require 2 managers, etc.). Match each growth scenario for the company with its most direct organizational consequence.
Evaluating Competing Expansion Strategies
A small manufacturing firm, initially managed directly by its owner, experiences rapid growth. Arrange the following events in the logical sequence that illustrates how this growth can lead to an increase in the average cost per unit.