DocumentCode
962962
Title
Debunking the Learning Curve
Author
Goddard, Charles T.
Author_Institution
Bell Lab, PA, USA
Volume
5
Issue
4
fYear
1982
fDate
12/1/1982 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
328
Lastpage
335
Abstract
The learning curve relates manufacturing cost to cumulative production. It is shown that for every well-behaved learning curve there is a corresponding relationship between unit cost and the annual rate of production. Cause and effect are assignable to this new function which is dubbed the opportunity curve. The growth in annual demand creates opportunities and provides the funds for increased mechanization and larger batch facilities in process dominated manufacture. In the absence of growth, both are seriously curtailed. The concept of the opportunity curve is developed from available data related to the U.S. integrated circuit industry. The opportunity curve in combination with the warranted growth curve permits an analysis of corporate strategies which remain obscure in interpretations of the learning curve. Reductions in cost are enhanced by growth, and a firm which holds a very significant share of the market--either across the board or in a segregated sector of the technology--will have a cost advantage. There is nothing wrong with the learning curve. But in combining annual production and time in the single variable, cumulative production, it hides more than it reveals.
Keywords
Integrated circuit economics; Manufacturing economics; Costs; Displays; Electronic components; Electronics industry; Helium; Investments; Manufacturing processes; Mathematical model; Optical propagation; Production;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Components, Hybrids, and Manufacturing Technology, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0148-6411
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCHMT.1982.1136009
Filename
1136009
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