SUPPLY AND DEMAND
81
got out of them, nevertheless, would almost
certainly be counteracted by losses in other
directions, due to the fact that the firm be
came too large to be effectively directed and
properly controlled by the one employer, or
the one Board of Directors. Delegation of
authority, implying the creation of depart
mental responsibility, might for a time prevent
any serious rise in the cost of production with
increased growth ; but a limit is to be ex
pected, though a wider examination of human
nature and of the industrial system than can
be attempted here would be required fully to
justify this conclusion. We may take it,
then, that there comes a time when marginal
costs begin to rise, because there comes a
time when the business attains dimensions
too vast for the strength of its central organs.
The question to put to ourselves at
this particular stage of our discussion
may be phrased thus : At what point is it
decided to attempt no further extensions ?
The notion of marginal expense having been
brought in, this question is not a puzzling
one. We may take it for granted that a
small extension of a firm’s output does not
add appreciably to the employer’s work.
Consequently it pays the employer to allow
his business to grow until his marginal