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IGCSE business notes all chapters 1

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Liquid Ratio/ Acid Test Ratio: this is very similar to current ratio but this ratio doesn’t
consider inventory to be a liquid asset, since it will take time for it to be sold and made into cash.
A high level of inventory in a business can thus cause a big difference between its current and
liquidity ratios. So there is a slight difference in the formula:
Uses and users of accounts

Managers: they will use the accounts to help them keep control over the performance of each
product or each division since they can see which products are profitably performing and which are
not.
 This will allow them to take better decisions. If for example, product A has a good gross
profit margin of 35% but its net profit margin is only 5%, this means that the business has very
high expenses that is causing the huge difference between the two ratios. They will try to reduce
expenses in the coming year. In the case of liquidity, if both ratios are very low, they will try to
pay off current liabilities to improve the ratios.

Ratios can be compared with other firms in the industry/competitors and also with
previous years to see how they’re doing. Businesses will definitely want to perform better than
their rivals to attract shareholders to invest in their business and to stay competitive in the market.
Businesses will also try to improve their profitability and liquidity positions each year.
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Shareholders:
Since they are the owners of a limited company, it is a legal requirement that they be presented with
the financial accounts of the company. From the income statements and the profitability ratios,
especially the ROCE, existing shareholders and potential investors can see whether they should
invest in the business by buying shares. A higher profitability, the higher the chance of getting
dividends. They will also compare the ratios with other companies and with previous years to
take the most profitable decision. The balance sheet will tell shareholders whether the business was
worth more at the end of the year than at the beginning of the year, and the liquidity ratios will be
used to ascertain how risky it will be to invest in the company- they won’t want to invest in businesses
with serious liquidity problems.
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Creditors: The balance sheet and liquidity ratios will tell creditors (suppliers) the cash position
and debts of the business. They will only be ready to supply to the business if they will be able to pay
them. If there are liquidity problems, they won’t supply the business as it is risky for them.
Banks: Similar to how suppliers use accounts, they will look at how risky it is to lend to the
business. They will only lend to profitable and liquid firms.
Government: the government and tax officials will look at the profits of the company to fix a
tax rate and to see if the business is profitable and liquid enough to continue operations and thus if the
worker’s jobs will be protected.
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Workers and trade unions: they will want to see if the business’ future is secure or
not. If the business is continuously running a loss and is in risk of insolvency (not being liquid), it
may shut down operations and workers will lose their jobs!
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Other businesses: managers of competing companies may want to compare their
performance too or may want to take over the business and wants to see if the takeover will be
beneficial.
Limitations of using accounts and ratio analysis
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Ratios are based on past accounting data and will not indicate how the business will perform in the
future
Managers will have all accounts, but the external users will only have those published accounts that
contain only the data required by law- they may not get the ‘full-picture’ about the business’
performance.
Comparing accounting data over the years can lead to misleading assumptions since the data will be
affected by inflation (rising prices)
Different companies may use different accounting methods and so will have different ratio results,
making comparisons between companies unreliable.
6.1 – Economic Issues
The Business/ Trade Cycle
An economy will not always go through an economic growth; there is usually a cycle, as
shown below.
Growth– when GDP is rising, unemployment is falling and there are higher living
standards in the country. Businesses will look to expand and produce more and will earn high
profits.
Boom– when GDP is at its highest and there is too much spending, causing inflation to
rapidly rise. Business costs will rise and firms will become worried about how they are going
to stay profitable in the near future.
Recession– when GDP starts to fall due of high prices, as demand and spending falls.
Firms will cut back production to stay profitable and unemployment may rise as a result.
Slump– when GDP is so low that prices start to fall (deflation) and unemployment will
reach very high levels. Many businesses will close down as they cannot survive the very low
demand level.
The economy will suffer.
(When the government takes measures to increase demand and spending in the economy to
take it from a slump to growth, it is called as the ‘recovery’ period). The cycle repeats.
Economic Objectives
Here, we’ll look at the different economic objectives a government might have and how their
absence/negligence will affect the economy as well as businesses.

Maintain economic growth: economic growth occurs when a country’s Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) increase i.e. more goods and services are produced than in the previous year. This will
increase the country’s incomes and achieve greater living standards.
Effects of reducing GDP (recession):
 As output falls, fewer workers will be needed by firms, so unemployment will rise
 As goods and services that can be consumed by the people falls, the standard of living in the
economy will also fall

Achieve price stability: inflation is the increase in average prices of goods and services over
time. (Note that, inflation, in the real world, always exists. It is natural for prices to increase as the
years go by. In the case there is a fall in the price level, it is called a deflation) Maintaining a low
inflation will help the economy to develop and grow better.
Effects of high inflation:
 As cost of living will have risen and peoples’ real incomes (the value of income) will have fallen
(when prices increase and incomes haven’t, the income will buy lesser goods and services- the
purchasing power will fall).
 Prices of domestic goods will rise as opposed to foreign goods in the market. The country’s
exports will become less competitive in the international market. Domestic workers may lose their
jobs if their products and firms don’t do well.
 When prices rise, demand will fall and all costs will rise (as wages, material costs, overheads will
all rise)- causing profits to fall. Thus, they will be unwilling to expand and produce more in the
future.
 The living standards (quality of life) in the country may fall when costs of living rise.

Reduce unemployment: unemployment exists when people who are willing and able to work
cannot find a job. A low unemployment means high output, incomes, living standards etc.
Effects of high unemployment:
 Unemployed people do not produce anything and so, the total output/GDP in the country will fall.
This will in turn, lead to a fall in economic growth.
 Unemployed people receive no incomes, thus income inequality can rise in the economy and
living standards will fall. It also means that businesses will face low demand due to low incomes.
 The government pays out unemployment benefits to the unemployed and this will rise during high
unemployment and government will not enough money left over to spend on other services like
education and health.
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Maintain balance of payments stability: this records the difference between a
country’s exports (goods and services sold from the country to another) and imports (goods and
services bought in by the country from another country). The exports and imports needs to equal each
other, thus balanced.
Effect of a disequilibrium in the balance of payments:
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If the imports of a country exceed its exports, it will cause depreciation in the exchange rate–
the value of the country’s currency will fall against other foreign currencies (this will be
explained in detail here).
 If the exports exceed the imports it indicates that the country is selling more goods than it is
consuming- the country itself doesn’t benefit from any high output consumption.
Reduce income equality/achieve effective income redistribution: the difference/gap between the
incomes of rich and poor people should narrow down for income equality to improve. Improved
income equality will ensure better living standards and help the economy to grow faster and become
more developed.
Effects of poor income equality:
 Inequal distribution of goods and services- the poor cannot buy as many goods as the rich- poor
living standards will arise.
Government Economic Policies
Government can influence the economic conditions in a country by taking a variety of
policies.
Fiscal policy
Is a government policy which adjusts government spending and taxation to influence the
economy. It is the budgetary policy, because it manages the government expenditure and
revenue. Government aims for a balance budget and tries to achieve it using fiscal policy.
Increasing government spending and reducing taxes will
encourage more production and increase employment, driving up
GDP growth
This is because government spending creates employment and increases economic activity in
the economy and lower taxes means people have more money to consume and firms have to
pay lesser tax on their profits. On the other hand, reducing government spending and
increasing taxes will discourage production and consumption, and unemployment and GDP
will fall.
Monetary policy is a government policy that adjusts the interest rate and foreign exchange
rates to influence the demand and supply of money in the economy, and thus demand and
supply. It is usually conducted by the country’s central bank and usually used to maintain
price stability, low unemployment and economic growth.
Increasing interest rates will discourage investments and
consumption, causing employment and GDP to fall
(as the cost of borrowing-interest on loans – has increased, and people prefer to earn more
interest by saving rather than spend). Similarly, reducing interest rates will boost investment,
consumption, employment, and thus GDP.
Supply-side policies: both the fiscal and monetary policies directly affect demand, but
the policies that influence supply are very different.
It can include:
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Privatisation: selling government organizations to private individuals- this will increase
efficiency and productivity that increase supply as well encourage competitors to enter and further
increase supply.
Improve training and education: governments can spend more on schools, colleges and
training centres so that people in the economy can become better skilled and knowledgeable, helping
increasing productivity.
Increased competition: by acting against monopolies (firms that restrict competitors to enter
that industry/having full dominance in the market- refer xxx for more details) and reducing
government rules and regulations (often termed ‘deregulation’), the competitive environment can be
improved and thus become more productive.
For more details on government policies, check out our Economics notes.
*EXAM TIP: Remember that economic conditions and policies are all interconnected; one
change will lead to an effect which will lead to another effect and so on, like a chain reaction
in many different ways. In your exams, you should take care to explain those effects that are
relevant and appropriate to the business or economy in the question*
How might businesses react to policy changes? It will depend varying on how much impact
the policy change will have on the particular business/industry/economy. Here are a few
examples:
6.2 – Environmental and
Ethical Issues
Business’ Impact on the Environment
Social responsibility
Is when a business decision benefits stakeholders other than shareholders i.e. workers,
community, suppliers, banks etc.
This is very important when coming to environmental issues.
Businesses can pollute the air by releasing smoke and poisonous gases, pollute water bodies
around it by releasing waste and chemicals into them, and damage the natural beauty of a
place and so on.
WHY BUSINESSES WANT TO BE
ENVIRONMENT- FRIENDLY
WHY BUSINESSES DO NOT WANT
TO BE ENVIRONMENT-FRIENDLY
Sense of social responsibility that comes
from the fact that their activities are
contributing to global warming and
pollution
It is expensive to reduce and recycle
waste for the business. It means that
expensive machinery and skilled labour
will be required by the business –
reducing profits.
Using up scarce non-renewable
resources (such as rainforest wood and
coal) will raise their prices in the future,
so businesses won’t use them now
Firms will have to increase prices to
compensate for the expensive
environment-friendly methods used in
production- higher prices mean lower
demand.
Consumers are becoming socially-aware
and are willing to buy only environment
friendly products.
High prices can make firms less
competitive in the market and they could
lose sales
Governments, environmental
organisations, even the community could
take action against the business if they
do serious damage to the environment
Businesses claim that it is the
government’s duty to clean up pollution
Externalities
A business’ decisions and actions can have significant effects on its stakeholders. These
effects are termed ‘externalities’. Externalities can be categorized into six groups given below
and we’ll take examples from a scenario where a business builds a new production factory.
Private Costs: costs paid for by the business for an activity.
Examples: costs of building the factory, hiring extra employees, purchasing new machinery,
running a production unit etc.
Private Benefits: gains for the business resulting from an activity.
Example: the extra money made from the sale of the produced goods etc.
External Costs: costs paid for by the rest of the society (other than the business) as a result
of the business’ activity.
Examples: machinery noise, air pollution that leads to health problems among near residents,
loss of land (it could have been a farm land before) etc.
External Benefits: gains enjoyed by the rest of the society as a result of a business activity.
Example: new jobs created for residents, government will get more tax from the business,
other firms may move into the area to support the firm-helping develop the region, new roads
might be built that can be enjoyed by residents etc.
Social Costs = Private Costs + External Costs
Social Benefits = Private Benefits + External Benefits
Governments use the cost-benefit-analysis (CBA) to decide whether to proceed with a
scheme or not and businesses have also adopted it. In CBA, the government weighs up all the
social costs and benefits that will arise if the scheme is put into effect and give them all
monetary values (this is not easy- what is the value of losing natural beauty?). They will only
allow the scheme to proceed if the social benefits exceed the social costs, if the costs exceed
the benefits, it is not allowed to proceed.
Sustainable Development
Sustainable development is development that does not put at risk the living standards of
future generations. It means trying to achieve economic growth in a way that does not harm
future generations.
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Few examples of a sustainable development are:
using renewable energy- so that resources are conserved for the future
recycle waste
use fewer resources
develop new environment-friendly products and processes- reduce health and climatic problems for
future generations
Environmental Pressures
Pressure groups are organisations/groups of people who change business (and
government) decisions. If a business is seen to behave in a socially irresponsible way, they
can conduct consumer boycotts (encourage consumers to stop buying their products) and take
other actions. They are often very powerful because they have public support and media
coverage and are well-financed and equipped by the public. If a pressure group is powerful it
can result in a bad reputation for the business that can affect it in future endeavours, so the
business will give in to the pressure groups’ demands.
Example: Greenpeace
The government can also pass laws that can restrict business decisions such as not
permitting factories to locate in places of natural beauty.
There can also be penalties set in place that will penalize firms that excessively
pollute. Pollution permits are licenses to pollute up to a certain limit. These are very
expensive to acquire, so firms will try to avoid buying the pollution permit and will have to
reduce pollution levels to do so. Firms that pollute less can sell their pollution permits to
more polluting firms to earn money. Taxes can also be levied on polluting goods and
services.
Ethical Decisions
Ethical decisions are based on a moral code. It means ‘doing the right thing’. Businesses
could be faced with decisions regarding, for example, employment of children, taking or
offering bribes, associate with people/organisations with a bad reputation etc. In these cases,
even if they are legal, they need to take a decision that they feel is right.
Taking ethical/’right’ decisions can make the business’ products popular among customers,
encourage the government to favour them in any future disputes/demands and avoid pressure
group threats. However, these can end up being expensive as the business will lose out on
using cheaper unethical opportunities.
6.3 – Business and the
International Economy
Globalization
Globalization is a term used to describe the increases in worldwide trade and movement of
people and capital between countries. The same goods and services are sold across the
globe; workers are finding it easier to find work by going abroad for work; money is sent
from and to countries everywhere.
Some reasons how globalization has occurred are:
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Increasing number of free trade agreements– these are agreements between countries that allows
them to import and export goods and services with no tariffs or quotas.
Improved and cheaper transport (water, land, air) and communications (internet) infrastructure
Developing and emerging countries such as China and India are becoming rapidly industrialized and
so can export large volumes of goods and services. This has caused an increase in the output and
opportunities in international trade, allowing for globalisation
Advantages of globalisation
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Allows businesses to start selling in new foreign markets, increasing sales and profits
Can open factories and production units in other countries, possibly at a cheaper rate (cheaper
materials and labour can be available in other countries)
Import products from other countries and sell it to customers in the domestic market- this could be
more profitable and producing and selling the good themselves
Import materials and components for production from foreign countries at a cheaper rate.
Disadvantages of globalisation
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Increasing imports into country from foreign competitors- now that foreign firms can compete in
other countries, it puts up much competition for domestic firms. If these domestic firms cannot
compete with the foreign goods’ cheap prices and high quality, they may be forced to close down
operations.
Increasing investment by multinationals in home country- this could further add to competition in the
domestic market (although small local firms can become suppliers to the large multinational firms)
Employees may leave domestic firms if they don’t pay as well as the foreign multinationals in the
country- businesses will have to increase pay and conditions to recruit and retain employees.
When looking at an economy’s point of view, globalisation brings consumers more choice
and lower prices and forces domestic firms to be more efficient (in order to remain
competitive). However, competition from foreign producers can force domestic firms to close
down and jobs will be lost.
Protectionism
Protectionism refers to when governments protect domestic firms from foreign
competition using trade barriers such as tariffs and quotas; i.e. the opposite of free trade.
Import quota is a restriction on the quantity of goods that can be imported into the country.
Tariffs are taxes on imports.
Imposing these two measures will reduce the number of foreign goods in the domestic
market and make them expensive to buy, respectively. This will reduce the
competitiveness of the foreign goods and make it easy for domestic firms to produce and sell
their goods. However, it reduces free trade and globalisation.
Free trade supporters say that it is better to allow consumers to buy imported goods and
domestic firms should produce and export goods and services that they have a competitive
advantage in. In this way, living standards across the globe will improve.
Multinational Companies (MNCs)
Multinational businesses are firms with operations (production/service) in more than one
country. Also known as transnational businesses. Examples: Shell, McDonald’s, Nissan etc.
Why do firms become multinationals?
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To produce goods with lower costs– cheaper material and labour may be available in other countries
To extract raw materials for production, available in a few other countries. For example: crude oil
in the Middle East
To produce goods nearer to the markets to avoid transport costs.
To avoid trade barriers on imports. If they produce the goods in foreign countries, the firms will
not have to pay import tariffs or be faced with a quota restriction
To expand into different markets and spread their risks
To remain competitive with rival firms which may also be expanding abroad
Advantages to a country of a multinational setting up in their
country:
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More jobs created by multinationals
Increases GDP of the country
The technology that the multinational brings in can bring in new ideas and methods into the country
As more goods are being produced in the country, the imports will be reduced and some output
can even be exported
Multinationals will also pay taxes, thereby increasing the government’s tax revenue
More product choice for consumers
Disadvantages to a country of a multinational setting up in their
country:
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The jobs created are often for unskilled tasks. The more skilled jobs will be done by workers that
come from the firm’s home country. The unskilled workers may also be exploited with very low
wages and unhygienic working conditions.
Since multinationals benefit from economies of scale, local firms may be forced out of business,
unable to survive the competition
Multinationals can use up the scarce, non-renewable resources in the country
Repatriation of profit can occur. The profits earned by the multinational could be sent back to their
home country and the government will not be able to levy tax on it.
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As multinationals are large, they can influence the government and economy. They could threaten
the government that they will close down and make workers unemployed if they are not given
financial grants and so on.
Exchange Rates
The exchange rate is the price of one currency in terms of another currency.
For example, €1= $1.2. To buy one euro, you’ll need 1.2 dollars. The demand and supply of
the currencies determine their exchange rate. In the above example, if the €’s demand was
greater than the $’s, or if the supply of € reduced more than the $, then the €’s price in terms
of $ will increase. It could now be €1= $1.5. Each € now buys more $.
A currency appreciates when its value rises. The example above is an appreciation of the
Euro. A European exporting firm will find an appreciation disadvantageous as their American
consumers will now have to pay more $ to buy a €1 good (exports become expensive). Their
competitiveness has reduced. A European importing firm will find an appreciation of benefit.
They can buy American products for lesser Euros (imports become cheaper).
A currency depreciates when its value falls. In the example above, the Dollar depreciated.
An American exporting firm will find a depreciation advantageous as their European
consumers will now have to pay less € to buy a $1 good (exports become cheaper). Their
competitiveness has increased. An American importing firm will find a depreciation
disadvantageous. They will have to buy European products for more dollars (imports
become expensive).
In summary, an appreciations is good for importers, bad for exporters; a depreciation is
good for exporters, bad for importers; given that the goods are price elastic (if the price
didn’t matter much to consumers, sales and revenue would not be affected by price- so no
worries for producers).
Confused? Don’t worry, it is a confusing topic. Check out our more detailed Economics notes
on exchange rates.
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