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AMERICAN BUSINESS 3 MAJOR TYPES –SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP –PARTNERSHIP –CORPORATION.

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Presentation on theme: "AMERICAN BUSINESS 3 MAJOR TYPES –SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP –PARTNERSHIP –CORPORATION."— Presentation transcript:

1 AMERICAN BUSINESS 3 MAJOR TYPES –SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP –PARTNERSHIP –CORPORATION

2 SOLE PROPRIETORSHIPS A business owned and operated by one person Advantages –Relatively easy to begin –Claims all of the profits –Your own boss

3 SOLE PROPRIETORSHIPS DISADVANTAGES –Unlimited liability – responsible for all of the debts of the company –Responsible for all aspects of the business –Difficult to raise revenue

4 PARTNERSHIPS 2 or more individuals agree to own and operate a business together ADVANTAGES –They pool their resources and their business skills –Relatively easy to create

5 PARTNERSHIPS –Share business responsibilities –Can have some sort of specialization –Share risks DISADVANTAGES –Relatively difficult to raise revenue –Must share profits

6 PARTNERSHIPS –Partnership has unlimited liability –Decision making can lead to conflict among partners

7 CORPORATIONS A legal creation that can –Acquire resources –Own assets –Produce and sell products –Incur debts (sell bonds) –Sue and be sued

8 CORPORATIONS ***A CORPORATION IS SEPARATE FROM THE STOCKHOLDERS THAT OWN IT

9 CORPORATIONS ADVANTAGES –Effective at raising revenue Selling stocks Issuing bonds

10 STOCKS Part ownership in a corporation Stock owners vote for the corporate officers (those who run the corporation) Vote is in proportion to percentage of stocks owned Stock owners get a share of the corporate profits (dividends)

11 BONDS If you purchase a corporate bond, you are lending money to the corporation The corporation promises to pay the value of that bond plus interest Stocks and bonds are also known as SECURITIES

12 The Dow Jones Industrial Average The Dow A single measurement of 30 top U.S. companies Indication of how the stocks of these companies are doing ****Serves as a barometer of the health of U.S. stocks in general

13 The Dow Jones Industrial Average AT&T Coca-Cola Boeing Caterpillar Inc. Chevron Exxon GE Hewlett Packard Home Depot McDonald’s Microsoft Walmart Walt Disney

14 History of the Dow http://stockcharts.com/charts/historical/djia 1900.html

15 CORPORATIONS LIMITED LIABILITY – Stockholders only risk what they have invested –The corporation can be sued but the stockholders cannot Can mass produce product and specialize human resources Tend to have a longer life than partnerships and proprietorships

16 CORPORATIONS DISADVANTAGES –Some red tape and expense to get a corporate charter –Double taxation Corporate profits are taxed Dividend income is taxed

17 CORPORATIONS Separation of ownership and management –Can lead to conflicting views on the running of the corporation

18 Legal Forms of Business Sole Proprietorship Partnership Corporation Domestic Output by Business Type Percentage of FirmsPercentage of Sales Sole Proprietorships Partnerships Corporations Sole Proprietorships Partnerships Corporations 72% 8% 20% 5% 11% 84% Source: U. S. Census Bureau

19 FORTUNE 500 Annual listing of the top corporations in America in terms of sales What companies do you think were on the 2010 list? http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune500/2009/full_list/

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23 America’s Top Corporations 2010 Walmart - $408 billion in sales; $14 billion in profits Exxon Mobil - $285 billion in sales; $19 billion in profits Chevron - $164 billion in sales; $10 billion in profits General Electric (GE) - $157 billion in sales; $11 billion in profits

24 America’s Top Corporations 2010 Rest of the top 10 5 – Bank of America 6 – Conoco Phillips 7 – AT&T 8 – Ford Motor 9 – JP Morgan Chase & Co. 10 – Hewlett-Packard

25 America’s Top Corporations 2010 Other notables 13 - Verizon Communications 15 – General Motors 18 – CVS Caremark 23 – Kroger 25 – Costco 30 – Target 36 – Microsoft 45 – Best Buy 50 – Pepsi Co 56 – Apple 57 – Walt Disney 72 – Coca-Cola 87 – Tyson Foods 100 – Amazon.com 102 – Google 108 – McDonald’s 124 – Nike 241 - Starbucks

26 America’s Top Corporations 2009 (last year’s list) 1. Exxon Mobil - $443 Billion in sales; $45.2 billion in profits 2. Walmart - $406 Billion in sales; $13.4 Billion in profits 3. Chevron - $263 Billion in sales; $23.9 Billion in profits 4. Conoco Phillips - $231 Billion in sales; LOST $17 Billion

27 America’s Top Corporations 2009 Rest of the top 10 5. General Electric 6. General Motors (GM) Lost $30.8 B 7. Ford Motor Lost $14.6 B 8. AT&T 9. Hewlett Packard 10. Valero Energy

28 America’s Top Corporations 2009 Other notables 17. Verizon 19. CVS 22. Kroger 24. Costco 25. Home Depot 28. Target 33. Dell 35. Microsoft 36. Walgreens 52. Pepsi 56. Best Buy 60. Disney

29 REALLY BIG BUSINESS Sometimes corporations merge together with other corporations These mergers can create more efficient firms that produce goods at lower prices The mergers can also create monopolies!

30 TYPES OF CORPORATE MERGERS Horizontal Merger –2 or more firms competing in the same market –Example – McDonald’s purchases Wendy’s

31 TYPES OF CORPORATE MERGERS Vertical Merger –2 or more firms involved in the production of the same product –Example – McDonald’s buys the trucking company that delivers its meat and buns

32 TYPES OF CORPORATE MERGERS Conglomerates –When firms buy other firms that make unrelated products –More than 3 businesses merged –No one business in the conglomeration makes a majority of the firm’s profits

33 TYPES OF CORPORATE MERGERS Which of these types of mergers (horizontal, vertical, conglomerate) do you think government regulators have their closest eye on? Why?

34 THE MULTINATIONAL Corporations that produce and sell their goods throughout the world Headquartered in one country with branches in many other countries

35 THE MULTINATIONAL They must follow the laws and pay taxes in whatever country they are operating in 30 years ago, only the U.S. and England had the largest multinationals Now, the largest multinationals are multinational! Toyota, Shell, BP Clever, eh?

36 OTHER TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS Franchise –An entrepreneur pays a fee to a “parent company” for the right to sell that company’s product –Usually associated with fast food restaurants but is more broad than that (H&R Block, 7-Eleven, Ace Hardware, Jiffy Lube)

37 FRANCHISE ADVANTAGES Name recognition Standardized quality Parent company trains and supports the franchise employees National advertising Financial assistance Buying from large parent company can mean lower prices

38 FRANCHISE DISADVANTAGES Must pay a franchise fee and share profits with the parent company Must strictly follow the parent company guidelines for running the business

39 OTHER TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS Non-Profit Organizations – an organization that exists for the purpose of benefiting society, NOT for making a profit Examples – YMCA, American Red Cross, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, The Better Business Bureau

40 OTHER TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS Almost all of them provide services instead of goods They are exempt from income taxes by government

41 LEVELS OF COMPETITION Some businesses compete in a market with large numbers of sellers Some businesses compete in a market with relatively few sellers Some businesses “compete” in a market with no competition

42 LEVELS OF COMPETITION Thus, the MARKET STRUCTURE for an American business depends on their unique competitive situation There are 4 basic levels of market competition –Pure Competition –Monopolistic Competition –Oligopoly –Pure Monopoly

43 PURE COMPETITION Sometimes called PERFECT COMPETITION CHARACTERISTICS –Relatively large number of independently acting sellers in the market –All the sellers produce the same, homogeneous product; Consumers make no difference between Product A, B, C, D, etc… (No differentiation)

44 PURE COMPETITION Sellers make no attempt to differentiate their product from their competitors Because there are so many sellers, no one business can increase or decrease their output to affect the market price In other words, businesses do not control the price of their product

45 PURE COMPETITION It is very easy to enter and to leave this type of market In other words, no significant legal, financial or technological obstacles exist Relatively rare market structure – agricultural goods (farmer’s market)

46 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION Characteristics –Relatively large numbers of sellers –Sellers try to differentiate their product from others; usually through advertising –Easy entry to and exit from this market

47 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION The 1 st and 3 rd characteristics (many sellers, easy entry) represent the “competition” part of monopolistic competition The 2 nd characteristic (differentiation) represents the “monopolistic” part of monopolistic competition Monopolistically competitive industries are more competitive than monopolistic

48 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION How do businesses try to differentiate (other than price) their product from competitors? In other words, what is the NONPRICE COMPETITION that takes place among businesses?

49 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION Product Quality – businesses try to convince consumers that there is a real difference in the quality of their product Services Offered – Pizza delivery? Same day furniture delivery? Polite workers?

50 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION Location, Location, Location and accessibility –Open 24 hours, close to the interstate, MiniMarts Advertising and Packaging – companies try to create brand name loyalty; attractive packaging

51 OLIGOPOLY A market dominated by a few large producers (they control 75% or more of a market) Breakfast Cereals –Big Three –Kelloggs, Post, General Mills

52 OLIGOPOLY Automobile Industry –Big Six –Ford, GM, Chrysler, Toyota, Honda, Nissan Tobacco Motion Pictures Passenger aircraft Sellers try to differentiate their products

53 OLIGOPOLY Oligopolies can form when there are significant barriers to entering a market Why is the automobile industry an oligopoly?

54 OLIGOPOLY Oligopolistic companies have greater control over the price of their product than monopolistic competition or pure competition companies

55 OLIGOPOLY However, these companies must take into account the reaction of their rivals 3 oligopolistic practices that are of concern to government regulators –Price Leadership –Collusion –Cartels

56 OLIGOPOLY Price Leadership – an influential company takes the lead in announcing price increases that lead the other companies to do the same. –Sometimes the effect is a price war that hurts producers (but helps consumers)

57 OLIGOPOLY Collusion – an agreement among the companies to fix prices at a high level in order to maximize profits Collusion is illegal in the United States

58 OLIGOPOLY Cartels – a formal organization of producers that fix output and prices Illegal in the U.S. OPEC

59 Pure Monopoly Characteristics –Single Seller – the firm IS the industry –Total control over price and output (restrained by the law of demand) –Entry to this market is not possible

60 Pure Monopoly Pure monopoly is relatively rare “Near” Monopolies exist when a single firm controls 75% or more of a market Intel Wham-O (frisbees) Cable TV companies like Comcast Microsoft operating systems

61 Types of Monopoly Government issued patents – gives a single firm exclusive rights (20 years) to sell a product Why? Incentive to invent and create

62 Types of Monopoly Geographic Monopoly – gas station in the middle-of- nowhere Texas


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