Experience, Learning, and Returns to Scale
Date
2014-04
Authors
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Publisher
Univ North Carolina
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Abstract
The experience curve is a tool for forecasting future decreases in average cost as a function of cumulative output/volume. The extent of an experience effect has profound implications for both pricing strategy and the focus on market share as a managerial objective. At the same time, the underlying sources of the experience effect are not well understood. This article demonstrates that, as commonly measured, experience effects are aggregated with the effects of increasing returns to scale. This, implies that standard experience curve estimates are misspecified because they suffer from an omitted variable bias. Strategic implications of the experience-scale link are discussed.
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Keywords
Experience curve, Experience-scale link, Direct costing, Cumulative doubling, Economies of scale
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Rights
©2014 Southern Economic Association