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1 The Scope of Business.

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1 1 The Scope of Business

2 What Is Business? An organization that provides goods and/or services to earn profits Profits: The positive difference between revenues and expenses

3 The Nature of Business To earn profits by providing products: Tangible
Cars, food, clothing Intangible A service An idea Go to 16 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

4 Business vs. Nonprofit Organization
An individual or organization that tries to earn a profit by providing products that satisfy people’s needs, ex. IBM, Coca-Cola. Nonprofit Organization Provides products, especially services, for some purpose other than profits, ex. The Salvation Army, 4300 American colleges & universities. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

5 The Goals of Business For-Profit Sector: Nonprofit Sector: Profit
The difference between what it costs to make and sell a product and what the customer pays for it. Nonprofit Sector: Goals May provide goods or services but not for the purpose of earning profits. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

6 Overview of the Business World
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

7 The People and Activities of Business
Management Marketing Finance People: Owners Employees Customers Other stakeholders: Investors Regulatory Agencies Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

8 Management Hiring Issues
Issues Considered by Job Seekers Before Switching Jobs Source: Survey of 970 job seekers by CareerEngine.com, New York in Kemba J. Dunham, “The Jungle,” Wall Street Journal, July 3, 2001, p. B6.

9 Why Study Business? To develop skills and acquire knowledge to prepare for your future career To help you better understand the many business activities that are necessary to provide satisfying goods and services To help you become a well-informed consumer and member of society Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

10 Education Pays Average Annual Salary By Education Level
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

11 Factors of Production Labor Capital Information Resources
Entrepreneurs Physical Resources Go to 16

12 Types of Resources Used by Business
Natural Land, forests, etc. (not made by people) Human Physical/mental abilities used by people to produce goods and services Financial Funds necessary to acquire needed natural and human resources Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

13 What Is An Economic System?
The way a society distributes its resources to produce goods and services Addresses the issue of how to fulfill unlimited demand with limited supply of resources Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

14 What is an Economic System?
A nation’s system for allocating resources among citizens. Assumes resources are scarce thus requiring allocation. Market is mechanism for exchange between Buyer/Seller

15 Types of Economic Systems
Planned Economies Socialism (Mixed Market) Communism Capitalism vs. Market

16 Circular Flow of Economics
Supply Output (Goods & Services) Demand Input (Factors of Production) Demand Supply

17 Basic Questions to Be Asked of Economic Systems
What goods and services and what quantity will satisfy the needs of the consumer? How will the goods and services be produced? Who will produce them and with what resources? How are the goods and services to be distributed to the consumer? Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

18 How Are Factors of Production Allocated?
Planned Economy: An economic system in which the government owns and operates all sources of production Market Economy: An economic system in which buyers and sellers interact based on freedom of choice

19 Types of Economic Systems
Capitalism Communism Socialism Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

20 Capitalism: A Fundamentally Market-Based Economy
Individuals Choose: Where to work What to buy How much to pay Producers Choose: Who to hire What to produce How much to charge Government supports private ownership and encourages entrepreneurship

21 Capitalism Private Ownership of Factors of Production
Economic Decisions Made by Owners Freedom of Decisions/Choices

22 Mixed Economies: Planned and Market
The economies of most countries include both planned and market elements. Worldwide trend is toward more market elements.

23 Communism Planned Economic System Government Owns
All Production Facilities All Citizens Are Employees of Government All Capital All Economic Decisions Controlled By Government

24 Mixed Market Economies
“Pure” Planned “Pure” Market

25 Socialism: Mixed Economy
A planned economic system in which the government owns and operates selected sources of production Privatization: The process of converting government enterprises into privately owned companies

26 Privatization vs. Socialism

27 Comparison of Communism, Socialism, and Capitalism
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

28 Economic Systems and Where They Occur
Communism Socialism Capitalism China Sweden United States North Korea India Canada Cuba Israel Japan Australia Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

29 Mixed Economies Most countries of the world have elements of more than one economic system. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

30 Supply & Demand Demand- Comes From Buyers
As Price Drops Buyers Purchase More Supply- Producers’ Willingness As Price Increase Producers Offer More Buyers & Suppliers Work Towards Equilibrium = Profit Maximization Surplus vs. Shortage

31 Supply and Demand Drive the U.S. Economic System
The willingness and ability of producers to offer a good or service for sale Law of Supply: Producers will supply (offer) more of a product for sale as its price rises and less as its price drops.

32 Supply and Demand Drive the U.S. Economic System (cont’d)
The willingness and ability of buyers to purchase a good or service Law of Demand: Buyers will demand (purchase) more of a product as its price drops and less as its price increases.

33 U.S. Hot Dog Consumption Hot dogs consumed between Memorial Day & Labor: 7 billion Average number of hot dogs eaten/person from Memorial Day to Labor Day: 24 Rate of consumption during this time: 818 hot dogs/second Source: National Hot Dog and Sausage Council, as reported in American Demographics, July/August 2004, p. 48.

34 Demand and Supply Schedules
Quantity of Quantity of Price Pizzas Demanded Pizzas Supplied $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $

35 Pizza Supply At Given Price
High Low High

36 Pizza Demand At Given Price
High D Low High

37 Equilibrium (Market Price)
High Surplus D S Market Equilibrium Shortage Low High

38 The Forces of Supply and Demand
The number of products that businesses are willing to sell at different prices at a specific time Consumers are usually willing to buy more of an item as its price falls because they want to save money. Demand The number of goods and services that consumers are willing to buy at different prices at a specific time. Businesses are willing to supply more of a good or service at higher prices because the potential for profits is higher. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

39 The U.S. Economy is a Private Enterprise System
Individuals are free to pursue their own interests without government restriction. Four Key Elements: Private Property Rights Freedom of Choice Profits Competition

40 The Free-Enterprise System
Individuals must have the right to own property and pass it on to their heirs. People and businesses must have the right to earn profits and use them as they wish. Individuals and businesses must have the right to determine how their businesses operate. Individuals must have the right to choose their career, where to live, and what to buy. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

41 Competition Competition motivates businesses to produce their products better or cheaper

42 The Nature of Competition
Four Competitive Environments Pure Competition Many small businesses sell one standardized product. Monopolistic Competition There are fewer businesses than in a pure competition system, and the differences between the goods they sell are small. Oligopoly Very few businesses sell a product; each business supplies a large portion of the products sold in the marketplace. Monopoly There is only one producer of a product in a given market. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

43 Private Enterprise Private Property Freedom of Choice Profits
Competition

44 Degrees of Competition
Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly One Many Monopoly Perfect Competition Sellers

45 Perfect/Pure Competition
Competition- 2+ Businesses Vie For Same Resources/Customers Condition- No Single Firm Dominant Principles Buyers View Products As Similar Buyers/Sellers Know Each Others’ Prices/Costs Easy To Enter/Leave Marketplace Prices Set By Supply/Demand & Accepted by Sellers/Buyers

46 Monopolistic Competition
Many Buyers Fewer Sellers Than Perfect/Pure Competition Buyer Perception of Product/Brand Differentiation

47 Oligopoly Few Large Sellers
Market Entry Difficult- High Capital Investment Sellers Control Strategies

48 Monopoly Characteristics Natural Monopoly Only One Producer
Controls Industry Pricing Natural Monopoly One Producer Can Efficiently Supply All Goods/Services

49 Economic Cycles and Productivity
Economic expansion occurs when an economy is growing and people are spending more money. Economic contraction occurs when spending declines. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

50 Measuring the Economy One commonly used measure is gross domestic product. GDP is the sum of all goods and services produced by a national economy in a country during a year. GNP is is the sum of all goods and services produced by a national economy regardless of where the factor of production are located during a year Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

51 Overall Unemployment Rate in the U.S. Civilian Labor Force
Source: “Overall Unemployment Rate in the Civilian Labor Force, 1920–2002,” InfoPlease (n.d.), A html (accessed February 16, 2004).

52 Growth in U.S. Gross Domestic Product Dollars
Source: “Gross Domestic Product or Expenditure, 1930–2002,” InfoPlease (n.d.), A html (accessed February 16, 2004)

53 Growth of The American Economy
The Early Economy Primarily agricultural; the use of natural resources The Industrial Revolution The development of new technology and factories The Manufacturing and Marketing Economies Devoted to manufacturing goods and providing services rather than producing agricultural products The Service and Internet-based Economy Devoted to the production of services that make life easier for busy consumers Did You Know? 60 percent of adult women work. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

54 Understanding Economic Performance
KEY CONCEPTS Productivity: The amount a system produces compared to the resources needed to produce it PRODUCTIVITY is impacted by: Balance of Trade National Debt

55 Economic Stability: Balanced Growth of Money and Goods
Two related factors threaten stability: INFLATION UNEMPLOYMENT

56 The Role of the Entrepreneur
An entrepreneur is an individual who risks his or her wealth, time, and effort to develop for profit an innovative product or way of doing something. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

57 The Role of Government in the American Economy
Federal, state, and local governments intervene in the economy with laws and regulations designed to: Promote competition Protect consumers, employees, and the environment Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

58 Recessions and Depressions
Aggregate output declines, unemployment increases Depression: Severe and long-lasting recession

59 Satu


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