Types of Business Organisation Flashcards

Learn the different types of business organisation and describe the effects of changes in the structure of organisations.

1
Q

Define

Limited liability

A

When the financial obligation of a firm’s owners in the event it fails is no more than the amount of capital they invested in the enterprise.

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2
Q

Define

Unlimited liability

A

Total liability of a business owner or owners to repay all the debts of their business in the event it fails.

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3
Q

What is fixed capital?

A

Money invested in long-lived man-made resources such as presmises, machinery and other equipment.

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4
Q

What is working capital?

A

Money in a firm tied up in stocks of finished and unfinished products and used to pay day-to-day running costs.

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5
Q

What is a sole trader or sole proprietor?

A

A business organisation owned and usually controlled by one person.

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6
Q

What are the advantages of a sole trader?

A
  1. Easy to set up
  2. Very personal business
  3. Full control over the business
  4. Receive all the profits
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7
Q

What are the disadvantages of a sole trader?

A
  1. Unlimited liability
  2. Full responsibility for managing the business
  3. Lack of capital
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8
Q

What is a partnership?

A

A legal agreement between two or more people, usually no more than 20, to jointly own, finance and run a business, and to share any profits.

Partnerships are popular among solicitors, doctors, accountants and veterinary surgeons.

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9
Q

What different types of partners might you have in a partnership?

A
  • General partners share unlimited liability
  • Limited partners have limited liability
  • Silent or sleeping partners provide money in return for a share of the profits, but are not involved in management
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10
Q

What is a limited liability partnership (LLP)?

A

A partnership in which some or all the partners can have limited liability.

Laws governing may may vary between regions and countries.

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11
Q

What are the advantages of partnerships?

A
  1. Relatively easy to set up
  2. Partners can bring new skills and ideas
  3. Partners invest new capital to finance expansion
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12
Q

What are the disadvantages of partnerships?

A
  1. Partners can disagree
  2. General partners have joint have joint unlimited liability
  3. Lack of capital
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13
Q

What is a limited company?

A

Limited companies (also known as joint-stock companies) sell stocks (shares) to raise capital, and is owned by the investors (shareholders) who have bought its stock.

Shareholders may receive dividends and elect a board of directors.

A person who owns more that 50% of the value of shares with have a controlling interest in that company, and can out vote all shareholders on company issues.

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14
Q

What is a corporation?

A

A corporation is a separate legal body from its owners. In many countries, limited companies are corporations.

  • all shareholders have limited liability
  • the business can own assets, buy shares in other copmanies and borrow money in its own right
  • the business can be taken to court and hekd responsible for any harm done as a result of the activities of the business
  • the business can be taxed and must produce separate financial accounts
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15
Q

What is a private limited company?

A

A business organisation able to raise permanent capital from the issue and sale of shares to private individuals. Shares cannot be transferred without the consent of other shareholders, and cannot be offered to the general public.

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16
Q

What are the advantages of a private limited company?

A
  1. Raise permanent capital
  2. Shareholders have limited liability
  3. Shareholders have no management responsibilities
  4. Separate legal entity
17
Q

What are the disadvantages of a private limited company?

A
  1. May be required to disclose financial information
  2. Cannot sell shares publicly, must have agreement of other shareholders
18
Q

What is a public limited company?

A

A business organisation able to raise permanent capital from the sale of shares to the general public through a stock exchange or bourse.

19
Q

What are the advantages of a public limited company?

A
  1. Can sell shares publicly
  2. Can advertise shares
20
Q

What are the disadvantages of a public limited company?

A
  1. Can be expensive to form
  2. Legally required to publish detailed annual reports and accounts
  3. Must hold AGMs
  4. Management diseconomies
  5. May be vulnerable to takeovers
  6. Can be a divorce of onwership from control
21
Q

What is a multinational?

A

A business organisation with plant and operations in more than one country. It will usually have its headquarters based in its country origin.

22
Q

What are the advantages of being a multinational?

A

A multinational can:

  • reach a huge global customer base and sell more
  • avoid trade barriers by setting up operations in countries that apply tariffs and quotas to imports from businesses located overseas
  • minimise transport costs locating plants across different countries to be near raw materials or large consumer markets
  • minimise wage costs by locating operations in low-wage economies
  • reduce average production costs by large-scale production
  • raise significant capital for business expansion, R&D and to employ highly skilled labour
23
Q

What are the economic benefits of multinationals?

A
  • Increased investment in new business premises, modern equipment and cutting edge technologies (this is called direct inward investment)
  • Jobs and incomes provided for local workers
  • New knowledge and skills that can help domestic firms improve productivity
  • Taxes payed will boost government revenues
  • Export earnings increased through international trade
24
Q

What are the economic costs of multinationals?

A
  • Some multinationals may exploit workers in low-wage economies
  • Natural resources can be exploited and the environment damaged
  • Tax evasion
  • Some multinationals may use their power to secure generous subsidies and tax breaks from a government
  • Local competition may be forced out of business
  • Some multinationals may interfere in government
25
Q

What are cooperatives?

A

Cooperatives are business organisations that are owned and controlled by a group of people to undertake an economic activity to their mutual benefit.

A cooperative provides benefits for its members.

Cooperatives operate a strict policy of one member, one vote.

26
Q

What are the types of cooperative?

A

Main types:

  • Worker cooperatives: owned and controlled by workers
  • Consumer cooperatives: owned and controlled by customers

Other types:

  • Housing cooperatives
  • Building cooperatives
  • Utility cooperatives
  • Farming cooperatives
  • Credit unions and cooperative savings banks
27
Q

What are the advantages of worker cooperatives?

A
  • Workers are in charge and everyone has equal say
  • Workers are likely to work harder because they take part in decision making
  • Workers receive the profits they make
28
Q

What are the disadvantages of worker cooperatives?

A
  • Lack of capital
  • Workers may have little business experience or entrepreneurial abilities
29
Q

What are the aims of public sector organisations?

A

Public sector organisations aim to deliver essential public services, some of which are free of charge. They aim to provide cost-effective public services that are funded from taxes paid by private sector businesses and individuals.

30
Q

What are the four main types of public sector organisation?

A
  1. Central government authorities
  2. Local government authorities
  3. Government agencies
  4. Public corporations
31
Q

What are some key features of public corporations?

A
  • Run by a board of directors
  • Government establishes policy and monitors board of directors
  • Government minister can influence the choice of the board and chairperson
  • Parliamentary select committees and consultative committees may be set up to monitor and investigate public corporations
  • Separate legal enitity from board members and government
  • Finance by government
  • Profits may be used to improve services, finance other public services or reduce tax
32
Q

What are nationalised industries (state-owned industries)?

A

Industries in an economy owned and controlled entirely by the government.

33
Q

What is nationalisation?

A

The transfer of a private sector industry to the public sector.

34
Q

Why are some industries nationalised?

A
  • to control large powerful firms
  • to protect employment
  • for national security (e.g. nuclear energy)
  • industry considered too important
  • to protect public services
  • for political reasons