In a market with very little competition, a large, highly integrated firm that produces most of its own inputs is guaranteed to be more efficient than smaller firms that outsource because it has greater control over its supply chain.
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A new online service allows people to pay professional mourners to attend funerals to make the deceased's family appear more respected. According to the argument that commodifying certain goods can be morally objectionable, the primary reason to oppose this service is that it is an economically inefficient use of resources.
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Match each corporate strategy regarding its operational boundaries with the most likely long-term consequence in a competitive market.
In a market with very little competition, a large, highly integrated firm that produces most of its own inputs is guaranteed to be more efficient than smaller firms that outsource because it has greater control over its supply chain.
A highly profitable software development firm, known for its innovative applications, decides to expand its operations by building its own factories to manufacture the computer hardware on which its software runs. The CEO's rationale is to 'ensure quality and control the entire user experience.' From an economic perspective that views the market as the ultimate judge of business structure, what is the most significant risk of this strategy?
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A large, diversified corporation that has historically manufactured all its own components, managed its own logistics, and handled its own marketing is now consistently losing market share to smaller, specialized firms. These smaller firms focus on a single part of the value chain (e.g., only manufacturing, or only marketing) and contract with other specialized firms for other needs. From an economic efficiency standpoint, what is the most likely explanation for the large corporation's decline?
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