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Chapter 5 The Free Enterprise System. Traits of Private Enterprise Section 5.1.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 5 The Free Enterprise System. Traits of Private Enterprise Section 5.1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 5 The Free Enterprise System

2 Traits of Private Enterprise Section 5.1

3 Traits of Private Enterprise  Founders of the United States defined freedom of choice as rights that are central to our society.  Consumers have the freedom to PURCHASE goods and services  They make purchases with the INCOME they earn

4 Traits of Private Enterprise  Business ownership by ordinary people  Also known as Free Enterprise  People are encouraged to start and operate their own businesses

5 Traits of Private Enterprise Basic Principles Basic Elements of Private Enterprise Freedom to own property Freedom to compete Freedom to take risks Freedom to make a profit

6 Freedom of Ownership  Buy what you want and do what you want with it as long as its not prohibited by law  Free to own personal property such as cars, computers, and homes  Free to own natural resources oil and land

7 Business Ownership  Can own a business in two ways 1.Start and run your own business: entrepreneurs 2.Invest: Stockholders

8 Intellectual Property Rights  Patents : exclusive rights to make, use, or sell that invention for 20 years  Trademark : word, name, symbol, sound or colors that identifies a good or service and cannot be used by anyone but the owner  Copyright : anything that is authored by an individual (ie: books, music, art)

9 Traits of Private Enterprise Basic Principles Similarities and Differences

10 Traits of Private Enterprise Traits of the Free Enterprise System

11 Competition  Struggle to gain new customers and keep old ones  Essential to the free enterprise system  Benefits the customer MINE! NO MINE!

12 Price and NonPrice Competition  Price Competition  All other things equal, the consumer will buy the product with the lowest price  Non-Price Competition  Competition based on factors that are not price such as quality, services, location, reputation

13 Traits of Private Enterprise Basic Principles How Price Competition and Nonprice Competition Affect What You Buy

14 Monopolies  No competition and one company controls the market for a given product  Not permitted in a free enterprise system  Prevents competition

15 Examples of Monopolies  Microsoft Case (2000)  Federal Judge declared Microsoft’s Windows operating system was a monopoly  It’s technological dominance was said to have stifled innovation  Ruling stated Window’s dominance was harmful to the free enterprise system

16 Traits of Private Enterprise Basic Principles Monopoly

17 Traits of Private Enterprise Traits of the Free Enterprise System

18 Business Risk  Potential for loss or failure  As potential for earnings gets greater, so does the risk.

19 Traits of Private Enterprise Traits of the Free Enterprise System

20 Profit  Profit: money earned from conducting business after all costs and expenses have been paid  Range of profit is usually 1%-5%  The remaining 95%- 99% pays costs, expenses and business taxes

21 Economic Cost of Unprofitable Firms  Lay off employees  Investors lose money  Pay less money to government in taxes

22 Economic Benefits of Successful Firms  Hire more employees  Investors earn money  Pay more money to the government in taxes  Attract competition

23 Traits of Private Enterprise Traits of the Free Enterprise System

24 Supply and Demand  Supply: the amount of goods producers are willing to make and sell  Price and quantity supplied move in the same direction  Demand: consumer willingness and ability to buy products  Price and demand move in opposite directions

25 Surpluses  Occurs when supply exceeds demand  If price seems too high to consumers they will not buy

26 Shortages  Occurs when demand exceeds supplies  Businesses can raise prices and still sell their merchandise

27 Equilibrium  Occurs when the amount of a product being supplied is equal to the amount being demanded  Everyone wins

28 Traits of Private Enterprise Traits of the Free Enterprise System

29 Business Opportunities Section 5.2

30 Size and Scope  Size: large or small business  Scope: extent of its business operation  Serve a small neighborhood or serve globally

31 Size and Scope Small Businesses :  Operated only by one or a few individuals  Generally less than 100 employees  Large Businesses:  Typically employs 1000 people  National Companies

32 Domestic Versus Global  Domestic: sells its products only in its own country  Opportunities for growth are limited to customers within that country  Global: sells its products in more than one country

33 Business Opportunities Business Functions

34 For-Profit Versus NonProfit Organization  For-Profit : seeks to make a profit from its operations  NonProfit : functions like a business but uses the money it makes to fund the cause identified by its charter  Generate revenue through gifts and donations

35 Public Sector Versus Private Sector  Public: government financed agencies  Private: businesses not associated with government agencies

36 Business Opportunities Business Functions

37 Industry and Markets  Business are classified according to:  The industry they represent  The products they sell  The markets they target  Industry: group of establishments primarily engaged in producing or handling the same product or group of products or in rendering the same services

38 Consumer, Industrial, and Service Markets  Consumer: consists of customers who buy goods for personal use  Industrial: consists of business customers who buy goods for use in their operations  Service: function in both consumer and industrial market

39 Business Opportunities Business Functions

40 4 FUNCTIONS OF BUSINESS 1. Production & Procurement 2. Marketing 3. Management 4. Finance & Accounting

41 Production  Production: process of creating, expanding, manufacturing, or improving on goods and services

42 Procurement  Buying and reselling goods that have already been produced  Example: Supermarket

43 5 “Rights” of Merchandising “Marketing”  The right goods  At the right time  In the right place  At the right price  In the right amount

44 Management  Management: process of achieving company goals by effective use of resources through planning, organizing, and controlling  Planning: establishing company objectives and how to meet them  Organizing: specific operations  Controlling: overseeing and analyzing budgets

45 Business Opportunities The Functions of Business Management Tasks

46 Finance and Accounting  Finance: function of business that involves money management  Accounting: discipline that keeps track of a company’s financial situation  Balance sheet  Profit & loss statement  Cash flow statement

47 Balance Sheet  Reports a company’s assets, liabilities, and owner’s equity  Assets: things a company owns  Liabilities: money owed by a business to its creditors

48 Profit & Loss Statement  Reflect the ongoing operations of a firm  Sales revenue and investments  Costs and expenses of doing business

49 Financial Statements & SWOT Analysis  Financial statements provide important information regarding how well a business is doing financially, therefore they are useful in a SWOT analysis

50 Business Opportunities Business Functions

51 Business Opportunities The Functions of Business Examples of How Each of These Functions Might Be Applied


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