Section 6 - External influences Flashcards

0
Q

Unemployment

A

unemployment exists when people who are willing and able to work cannot find a job

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1
Q

Inflation

A

the increase in the average price of goods and services over time

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2
Q

Economic growth

A

when a country’s Gross Domestic product increases - more goods and services are produced than in the previous year

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3
Q

Balance of payments

A

the balance of payments records the difference between a country’s exports and imports

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4
Q

Real income

A

the value of income, and it falls when prices rise faster than money income

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5
Q

What are government’s economic objectives

A

low inflation, low unemployment, economic growth, balance of payments between exports and imports

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6
Q

How does inflation affect a business?

A

Workers real income will fall so they will demand higher wages; prices of goods produced in the country will rise so people will buy foreign goods and there will be unemployment; businesses won’t want to expand and the living standard will fall.

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7
Q

Gross domestic product

A

the total value of output of goods and services in a country in one year

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8
Q

How does unemployment affect a business?

A

labour becomes cheap for the business

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9
Q

How does poor economic growth affect a business?

A

Output is falling so fewer workers are needed; the number of goods or services the population can afford will decrease so businesses will need make cuts

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10
Q

exports

A

goods or services sold from one country to other countries

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11
Q

imports

A

goods or services brought in by one country from other countries.

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12
Q

what is the business/trade cycle?

A

the business cycle is the pattern that the GDP follows. Growth (GDP rises, everything is dandy); Boom (there is too much spending, prices rise and skilled workers become few and far between. Panic at the disco); Recession (too little spending, GDP falls :( workers lose jobs, businesses don’t get good profits); Slump (extended recession, the meteor of the business world; only those that evolve, survive)

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13
Q

How does a balance of payments deficit affect a business?

A

a deficit is when there is too many imports and not enough exports (cough, america, cough, cough). Exchange rates depreciate which is good for exporters but not good for importers

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14
Q

Exchange rate

A

the price of one currency in terms of another, eg £1: $1.5

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15
Q

Exchange rate depreciation

A

the fall in value of a currency compared with other currencies

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16
Q

Fiscal policy

A

any change by the government in tax rates or public-sector spending.
This can be a change in income tax, profit tax, indirect tax, import tariffs and quotas or changes in government spending. What do you think the effect of raising these taxes will be on businesses? (stepping stones!

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17
Q

Direct taxes

A

taxes paid directly from incomes eg income tax or profits tax

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18
Q

Indirect taxes

A

taxes added to the prices of goods and taxpayers pay the tax as the purchase the goods eg VAT

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19
Q

Disposable incme

A

the level of income a taxpayer has after paying income tax

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20
Q

How do governments influence the economy

A

fiscal policy (taxes and government spending); monetary policy (interest rates, supply side policies.

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21
Q

Monetary policy

A

A change in the interest rates by the government or central bank, eg the European Central Bank. What are the main effects of higher interest rates on: firms with loans, managers considering taking loans, consumers who took out loans, individuals making a deposit? (stepping stones?)

22
Q

Exchange rate appreciation

A

the rise in the value of a currency compared to other currencies

23
Q

Supply side policies

A

When a government tries to make their economy more efficient by privatisation (moving public sector businesses into the private sector); improving training/education (ie making DT mandatory in schools); increasing competition in all industries (reducing government controls)

24
Q

How would a business react to increasing income tax?

A

lower price on products (may lead to lower profits); produce cheaper products (may damage brand image, though)

25
Q

How would a business react to increased tariffs on imports?

A

focus more on domestic market (it might still be more profitable to export though depending on tariff); buy local supplies rather than imported ones (quality might go down)

26
Q

How would a business react to increased interest rates?

A

reduce investment (other companies may continue to grow, lose market share); develop cheaper products (might affect quality); sell assets to pay off loans (assets might be needed for later)

27
Q

Social responsibility

A

When a businesses decision benefits stakeholders, eg a decision to protect the environment by reducing pollution by using the latest ‘greenest’ productiono.

28
Q

Environment

A

Our natural world, including pure water and undeveloped country side

29
Q

Private costs

A

private costs of an activity are the costs paid for by the business

30
Q

private benefits

A

private benefits of an activity are the gains to a business

31
Q

External costs

A

External costs are costs paid for by the rest of society, other than the business, as a result of business activity

32
Q

External benefits

A

External benefits are the gains to the rest of society other than the business, resulting from business activity.

33
Q

Social costs

A

Social costs = external costs + private costs

34
Q

Social benefits

A

Social benefits = external benefits + private benefits

35
Q

Externalities

A

the effects of business activity eg an externality of BSC is noise bc kids are annoying.

36
Q

Sustainable development

A

sustainable development is development which does not put at risk the living standards of future generations

37
Q

Sustainable production methods

A

sustainable production methods are those that do minimum damage to the environment

38
Q

Pressure group

A

A pressure group is made up of people who want to change business (or government) decisions and they take action such as organising consumer boycotts.

39
Q

Consumer boycott

A

when consumers decide not to buy products from businesses that do not act socially in a responsible way.

40
Q

What can businesses do for sustainable development?

A

Use renewable energy, recycle waste, use fewer resources, develop ‘environmentally friendly’ products.

41
Q

Pollution permit

A

licenses to pollute up to a certain level. Governments sell them to companies. Sustainable companies can sell theirs for cash inflow.

42
Q

Ethical decisions

A

Ethical decisions are based on a moral code. Sometimes referred to as ‘doing the right thing’

43
Q

Globalisation

A

the term now widely used to describe increase in worldwide trade and movement of people and capital between countries. Reasons include: increasing free trade agreements; cheaper travel links; emerging markets.

44
Q

Free trade agreements

A

free trade agreements exists when countries agree to trade imports/ exports with no barriers such as tariffs and quotas.

45
Q

What are the potential opportunities for businesses?

A

Start selling exports to other countries; open factories/ operations in other countries; import products to sell domestically; import supplies but manufacture domestically.

46
Q

What are the potential threats to globalisation?

A

Increasing imports increases competition; increasing multinationals means increasing competition; employees may leave for other companies

47
Q

Import quota

A

a restriction on the quantity of a product that can be imported

48
Q

Protectionism

A

when a government protects domestic firms from foreign competition using tariffs quotas.

49
Q

Multinational business

A

those with factories, production of service operations in more than one country. Also known as transnational businesses

50
Q

Impact on a country of multinational businesses

A

+jobs created +increase output of goods/services +increase in exports +governments get the businesses taxes +more choice for consumers
-unskilled job creation :( -local firms have more competition -repatriation of profits (profits sent away) -use up resources -lots of power (may ask for big grants etc.)

51
Q

Exchange rate

A

the price of one currency in terms of another eg £1: $1.5

52
Q

Currency appreciation

A

occurs when the value of a currency rises - it buys more of another currency than before. Importing businesses have lower costs :). Exporting businesses have to raise prices :(.

53
Q

Currency depreciation

A

Occurs when the value of a currency falls - it buys less of another currency. Importing firms have higher costs :(. Exporting businesses can lower prices :) (good because then demand increases)