Contemporary Business Midterm Terms
Contemporary Business Midterm Terms
Contemporary Business Midterm Terms
Chapter 1
Value: a customer perception that a product has a better relationship than its competitors
between the cost and the benefits
Whats a business?
o Business: any organization or activity that provides goods and services in an
effort to earn a profit
Profit/Loss
o Profit: the financial reward that comes from starting and running a business
Sales (or revenue) expenses = profit
o Loss: when a business brings in less money than it needs to cover expenses
Expenses > Revenues
Entrepreneurs: people who risk their time, money, and other resources to start and
manage a business
Standard of living: the quality and quantity of goods and services available to the
population
Quality of life: the overall sense of well-being experienced by either an individual or a
group
Business Eras
o Industrial Revolution
Technological advances fuel a period of rapid industrialization in America
from the mid-1700s to mid-18000s
Mass production takes hold huge factories replace artisan workshops
Production efficiency
Loss of individual ownership and personal pride in production
o Entrepreneurship Era
Building on the foundation of the industrial revolution, large scale
entrepreneurs emerged in the second half of the 1800s
Building business empires creating enormous wealth, raising the overall
standard of living
Many companies dominated the market forcing out competitors,
manipulating prices, exploiting workers, and decimating the environment
End of 1800s government steps into business- pass laws to regulate
business and protect consumers and workers, creating a more balanced
economy
o Production Era
Early part of the 1900s major business focused on further refining the
production process and creating greater efficiencies
Jobs become more specialized increasing productivity while lowering
costs and prices
1913 Henry Ford assembly line- becomes standard of manufacturing
industries
o Marketing Era
Monetary policy: refers to the actions that shape the economy by influencing interest
rates and the supply of money
o The Federal Reserve- essentially the central US bank- manages monetary policy
o M1 money supply: all currency plus checking accounts and travelers checks
o M2 money supply: includes M1 money supply plus saving accounts, money
market accounts, and certifications of deposits
o Recession Monetary Policy
Pump in more money
Low interest rates
o Boom Monetary Policy
Recover money
Interest rates increase
Different types of competition
o Pure: many competitors selling identical products
o Monopolistic: many competitors selling differentiated products (perceived
different)
o Oligopoly: handful of competitors selling the products that can be similar or
different
o Monopoly: one producer dominating the industry leaving room for no competitors
Fundamental rights of capitalism
o The right to own a business and keep after tax profits
o The right to private property
o The right to free choice
o The right to fair competition
Socialism/Capitalism/Communism
o Capitalism: economic system (free market/private enterprise) based on private
ownership, economic freedom, and fair competition
o Communism: economic and political system that calls for public ownership of
virtually all enterprises under the direction of a strong central government
o Socialism: economic system based on the principle that the government should
own and operate key enterprises that directly affect public welfare, such as
utilities, telecommunications, and healthcare. Everything else is privately owned
What is GDP?
o Gross domestic product (GDP): measures the total value of all final goods and
services produced within a nations physical boundaries over a give period of
time, adjusted for inflation
All domestic production is included in the GDP even if the firm is foreign
owned
Unemployment rate: percentage of people in the labor force over the age of 16 who do
not have a job and are seeking employment
o Frictional: people looking for jobs w/ certain accolades (marketable skills)
o Structural: industry dies (no marketable skills)
o Cyclical: recession (no jobs)
o Seasonal
Business cycle: the periodic contraction and expansion that occur over time in virtually
every economy
o Contraction: a period of economic downturn, marked by rising unemployment
Recession: when GDP decreases for two quarters
Depression: especially deep and long-lasting recession
o Recover: period of rising economic grown and increasing employment
o Expansion: period of robust economic growth and high employment
What is inflation, disinflation, deflation?
o Inflation: a period of rising average prices across the economy
o Hyperinflation: average monthly inflation rate of more than 50%
o Disinflation: period of slowing average price increases across the economy
o Deflation: a period of falling average prices across the economy
Chapter 3
Opportunity cost: opportunity of giving up the second-best choice when making a
decision
Absolute/comparative advantage
o Absolute advantage: when it can produce more of a good than other nations using
the same amount of resources
o Comparative advantage: when it can produce the goods at a lower opportunity
cost than other countries
Balance of trade: basic measure of the difference between a nations exports and imports
o Trade surplus: exports > imports
o Trade deficit: imports > exports
Balance of payments: measure of the total flow of money into or out of a country
o Balance of payment surplus: inflow > outflow
o Balance of payment deficit: outflow > inflow
Countertrade: international trade that involves the barter of products rather than for
currency
Exchange rate: values of ones currency relative to the currency of other nations
Foreign outsourcing: contracting with foreign suppliers to produce products, usually at a
fraction of the cost of domestic production
Importing/exporting
o Importing: buying products domestically that have been produced or grown in
foreign nations
o Exporting: selling products in foreign nations that have been produced
domestically
Foreign licensing: authority granted by domestic firm to a foreign firm for the rights to
produce and market its product or to uses its trademarks/patent rights in a defined
geographical area
o Licensor- the company that offers the rights
o Licensee- buyer of the rights for a fee
Foreign franchising: firm expands by offering businesses in other countries the right to
produce and market its products according to specific operational requirements
o Franchisor- offers other business
o Franchisees- the one who gets the right to produce and market its products in
agreement to specific operating requirements
o MAJOR DIFFERENCE FROM LICENSING: the franchisees assume the identity
of the franchisor
Direct Investment: firms acquire foreign firms or develop new franchise facilities from
the ground up in foreign countries
Joint ventures: involve two or more companies joining forces- sharing resources, risks,
and profits but not merging companies- to pursue specific opportunities
Strategic alliances: agreement between two or more firms to jointly pursue a specific
opportunity without actually merging their businesses. Strategic alliances typically
involve less for, encompassing agreements than partnerships
Tariffs/Quotes
o Tariffs: tax levied against imports
o Quotas: limitations on amount of specific product that may be imported
Embargos: total ban on the international trade of a certain item or the total halt in trade
with a particular nation
Free trade: unrestricted movement of goods and services across international borders
World Trade Organization (WTO): permanent global institution to promote international
trade and settle international trade disputes
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT): designed to encourage worldwide trade
among its members
North American Free Trade Act (NAFTA): treaty that created free-trading zone among
the US, Mexico and Canada
Chapter 4
Ethics and social responsibility
o Ethics: set of beliefs about right and wrong; good and bad
o Social responsibility: obligation of a business to contribute to society
Legal-Ethical Matrix
o Legal and Unethical
Promoting high-calorie/low nutrient foods with inadequate info about eh
risks
Producing products that will break before their time
Paying non-living wages to workers in developing countries
o Legal and Ethical
Producing high-quality products
Rewarding integrity
Leading by example
Treating employees fairly
Contributing to the community and respecting the environment
Retention of profits
Possible tax advantage
o Disadvantages
Limited financial resources
Unlimited liability
Limited liability to attract & maintain workers
Heavy workload &responsibilities
Lack if permanence
Partnership: voluntary agreement between two or more co-owners of business for profit
(single taxation)
o Advantages
Ability to pool financial resources
Ability to share responsibilities
Multiple skill sets
Ease of formation
Possible tax advantage
o Disadvantage
Unlimited liability
Potential for disagreements
Lack of continuity
Difficulty in withdrawing from business
Limited partnership: includes at least one general partner who actively manages the
company and accepts unlimited liability
o Other partners give up the right to actively manage the company in exchange for
limited liability
Master limited partnership: looks like corporation but has limited liability and taxed like
partnership
LLP: all partners have right to participate in the management and have limited liability
for company debts
o Only unlimited if one partner fraudulent = unlimited liability
C Corporation: business is considered a separate legal entity distinct from its owner
(double taxation)
o Offers limited liability to all its owners who are called stockholders
o Requires filing articles of incorporation, paying filing fees and adoption of
corporate bylaws
o Institutional investors: organization that pools contributions from investors,
clients, or depositors and uses their funds to buy stocks and securities
o Board of directors: elected by stockholders to represent their interests
o Advantages
Limited liability
Permanence
Ease of switching owners
Ability to raise capital
Specialized management
o Disadvantages
Expensive & complex to form
Complications with multiple states
DOUBLE TAZATION of earnings plus additional tax
Paperwork
Must be transparent