Economies of scale refers to the cost advantage arise from increasing amount of production. Mathematically, it is a situation in which the firm can double its output for less than doubling the cost, which brings cost advantages. Usually, economies of scale can be represented in connection with a cost-production elasticity,
Ec. :Ec = \frac{\Delta C/ C}{\Delta q/ q}. The cost-production elasticity equation can be rewritten to express the relationship between marginal cost and average cost. : Ec = \frac{\Delta C/ C}{\Delta q/ q} = \frac{\Delta C/\Delta q}{C/q} = Marginal Cost(MC)/Average Cost(AC) The minimum efficient scale can be computed by equating
average cost (AC) with
marginal cost (MC): Ec = MC / AC = 1. The rationale behind this is that if a firm were to produce a small number of units, its average cost per unit would be high because the bulk of the costs would come from
fixed costs. But if the firm produces more units, the average cost incurred per unit will be lower as the fixed costs are spread over a larger number of units; the marginal cost is below the average cost, pulling the latter down. The efficient scale of production is then reached when the average cost is at its minimum and therefore the same as the marginal cost. ==Relationship to market structure==