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1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates
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1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

Dec 16, 2015

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Carolina Gotts
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Page 1: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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1 & 3. Business and the Economy

Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates

Page 2: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Why Study Business?

• To become a better-informed consumer and investor

• For help in choosing a career

• To be a successful employee

• To start your own business

Page 3: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Business: A Definition

• Business consists of:– The profit-seeking activities of those engaged in

purchasing or selling goods and services to satisfy society’s needs and wants.

• Satisfying needs wants– Ultimate objective of every firm

• Business profit– What remains after business expenses are deducted

from sales revenue

Page 4: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Economic Systems

• Economics: The study of how wealth is created & distributed

– Macroeconomics: national economic issues

– Microeconomics: consumers, individual businesses

• Factors of production: Four inputs to economic systems– Natural resources

– Human resources

– Capital

– Entrepreneurship

Page 5: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Measuring Economic Performance

• Economic indicators

– Productivity measures

• Gross domestic product (GDP)

• Gross national product (GNP)

– Price indexes

• Consumer price index (CPI)

• Producer price index (PPI)

– Employment statistics

• Labor force, employment, unemployment

Page 6: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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More on Economic Systems

• Can be capitalistic, command/planned, or “mixed”

• Address four basic economic questions:– Which & how many goods & services will be

produced?– How will they be produced?– For whom will they be produced?– Who owns & controls the factors of production?

Page 7: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Capitalism: The Private Enterprise System

• Theories of Adam Smith (Wealth of Nations, 1776)– Society’s interests are best served when the individuals

within society are allowed to pursue their own self-interest• Based on four principles:

– Creation of wealth is the concern of private individuals, not government

– Owners of resources should be free to determine how they are used

– Economic freedom ensures existence of competitive markets (market economy)

– Government should act only as rule-maker/umpire

Page 8: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Capitalism: The Private Enterprise System (Cont.)

• Basic rights of capitalist system:– Right to private property– Right of business owners to the profits (after

taxes) generated by their activities– Freedom of choice (employment, purchases,

investments)– Public (i.e, government) sets rules to protect

competition

Page 9: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Market Forces at Work in theCapitalist System

• Supply & demand– Prices influenced by competition– Prices usually respond to forces of supply &

demand

Page 10: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Supply

• Quantities of good/service that producers will provide on particular date at various prices

• Law of supply:– Sellers supply more at higher price, less at

lower

Page 11: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Demand

• Amount of good/service that consumers will buy on that date at various prices

• Law of demand:– Buyers buy more at lower price, less at higher

Page 12: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Theory Of Supply & Demand

• Quantity supplied & quantity demanded interact continuously

• Balance between them is reflected by current price

Page 13: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Supply, Demand, & Profit Motive

• Interact to regulate– What is produced– Amounts produced

• Consumers get what they want & producers earn a profit

Page 14: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Relationship Between Supply And Demand

• Demand curve: relationship between price and quantity demanded

• Supply curve: relationship between price and quantity provided

• Equilibrium point: intersection of supply & demand curves

Page 15: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Demand Curve

• Changes in quantity demanded– Movement along curve

• Changes in demand– Curve shifts to right (demand increased) or left

(demand decreased)– Influences: preferences, incomes, substitute

prices, no. buyers

Page 16: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Supply Curve

• Changes in quantity supplied– Movement along curve– Independent of demand

• Changes in supply– Curve shifts to left (lowered supply) or right

(increased supply)– Influence: factors of production

Page 17: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Equilibrium Point

• Point at which demand and supply curves intersect

• Identifies prevailing market price

• Discrepancies between market & equilibrium price are self- correcting

Page 18: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Types of Competition in theCapitalist System

• Pure competition

• Monopolistic competition

• Oligopoly

• Monopoly

Page 19: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Pure Competition

• Products identical

• Perfect information

• No entity large enough to influence prices

• E.g., markets for agricultural commodities

Page 20: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Monopolistic Competition

• Products not identical– Product differentiation possible– Use of branding, etc.

• Many buyers & sellers

• Imperfect information

• Some government regulation

• E.g., consumer goods markets

Page 21: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Oligopoly

• Products: similar or different

• Few, large sellers; many small buyers

• Sellers match rivals’ prices

• Market entry expensive

• Government watches closely

• E.g., steel, automobile markets

Page 22: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Monopoly

• One seller; many small buyers

• Seller controls products & prices--no competition

• Seller keeps other firms from competing

• True monopolies illegal

• E.g., utilities (legal; regulated)

Page 23: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Other Economic Systems: Command/Planned & Mixed

• Socialism

• Communism

• “Mixed” economies

Page 24: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Socialism

• High degree government planning

• Government owns some of land & capital

• Government involvement limited

• Private ownership permitted

Page 25: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Communism

• Allows least degree economic freedom

• Public ownership of factors of production

• Planned resource allocation

Page 26: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Mixed Economies

• Many communist & socialist economies have capitalist elements– Some relaxing of central control– Increased privatization

• Capitalist economies often have socialist elements

Page 27: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Business Cycle

• Pattern of expansion and contraction through which our economy flows

• Characterized by:– Prosperity– Inflation: Recession– Depression– Recovery

Page 28: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Employment Act of 1946

• First formal statement of economic goals & federal government’s responsibility for economic progress

• Brought about by concerns following depression and WWII

• Effort to “flatten” the effects of the business cycle

Page 29: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Federal Economic Responsibilities

• Promote maximum employment

• Promote maximum production

• Promote maximum purchasing power

Page 30: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Maximum Employment

• Goal:full employment of able, willing, & seeking

• Full employment does not equal 0% unemployment– Worker mobility– Worker layoffs & retraining– Unrealistic worker hopes

Page 31: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Four Categories Of Unemployment

• Frictional

• Seasonal

• Cyclical

• Structural

Page 32: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Maximum Production (Economic Growth)

• Generally understood to be 4% production growth per year

• Increased efficiency– Increased production– Conservation of input resources

Page 33: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Maximum Purchasing Power (Stable Prices)

• Control of inflation– Demand-pull– Cost-push– Hyperinflation

• Goal historically considered attained when prices rise at 2-3% per year

Page 34: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Monetary Policy

• Increase/decrease money supply– Expansionary– Restrictive

• Controlled by “The Fed”– Adjusts % deposits of member banks– Adjusts interest rates

Page 35: 1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.

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Fiscal Policy

• Government influences economic activity through– Taxation– Spending

• Policy manifested in federal budget