Friday, July 22, 2011

Introduction to Business Economics

Business Economics

Business economics is defined as the study of how businesses manage scarce resources. Microeconomics is the study of the decisions of individuals, households, and businesses in specific markets, whereas macroeconomics is the study of the overall functioning of an economy such as basic economic growth, unemployment, or inflation. Scarcity in microeconomics is not the same as poverty. It arises from the assumption of very large (or infinite) wants or desires, and the fact that resources to obtain goods and services are limited.
  • wants exceed resources necessary to obtain them
  • therefore we must make choices
  • every choice leads to a cost

Principles of Economics:

1. People face trade-offs.
Every decision involves choices, and more of one good means less of another good. Income and wealth are not limitless, since there is only so much time available. Trade-offs apply to individuals, families, corporations and societies.
2. Cost of something is what you give up to get it.
When we make a decision we implicitly compare the costs and benefits of our choices. Opportunity cost is whatever must be given up to obtain something. Some costs are obvious – out-of-pocket expenses; other costs are less obvious but must be included in total opportunity cost.
3. Rational people think at the margin.
Basic economics assumes that people act rationally and try to act so as to gain the most benefit for themselves compared to the associated costs. Microeconomics focuses on small or marginal) changes, and it is often rational to consider the marginal rather than the average effects of decisions.
4. People respond to incentives.
If rational people compare costs and benefits, then changes in either one may change decisions. An example of an incentive that people respond to, are changes in prices. In general, people are more likely to buy something if it is cheaper. If an action becomes more costly, then there is an incentive to switch to other choices. Note that all actions have substitutes.
Sometimes people will encounter emergencies with costs that are beyond the cash they have available. In these situations, they may consider getting a cash advance to ease the pressure of liquidity in the present.

Explicit costs vs. Implicit costs

The cost of something, say a business, includes both the explicity cost (usually the price) and the implicit costs. One major implicit cost is the opportunity cost. Opportunity costs includes the next best opportunity given up. Only actions have costs; if there are no choices, then there are no costs. Be aware that cost is subjective. For example, compare the psychological benefit of a new computer. Decide whether you would rather have the a vacation to Europe, or a brand new computer.
Another example is in credit card comparison. Some people might only compare the annual fees, but you should compare the added benefits and features too. Certain features may be more valuable to you and be worth the cost, while others may be more valuable to another individual.

Disagreement in Economics

Business economics is both a science and a study of policy – united by a common “way of thinking”. As a science, economists develop models and deliberately simplify accounts of how cause and effect work in some part of the economy. Based on assumptions of what is important, models are created and used to make suggestions about policy and improve basic economic outcomes. Policy involves decisions about scientific theories, personal values and particular circumstances.
Positive statements are claims about what the world is like, although they may be false. For example, "Minimum wage laws cause unemployment". Normative statements are claims about how the world ought to be, and are based on values as well as positive knowledge. For example, "The government should raise minimum wage". Economists may disagree over either positive or normative statements or both, but the great majority tend to agree over basic positive propositions. As such, most disagreements are over normative/policy issues.

Public Goods

Public goods include things such as fireworks displays, and basic research. According to basic economics, a free market is unlikely to provide enough public goods, due to the “free rider” problem. A free-rider is a person who consumes a good without paying for it. Public goods create a free-rider problem because the quantity consumed is not directly related to the amount paid. As a result:
  • there may not be enough incentive to pay for public goods through individual action;
  • you cannot be prevented from consuming the good even if you do not pay for it and;
  • it creates an external benefit on those not involved.
Business economics state that we can decide how much of a public good to produce, by considering a cost-benefit analysis of public goods. The total benefit is equal to the total dollar value that an individual places on a given level of production of a public good. Total Cost is what we must give up to get more of the public good. These are often difficult to calculate - especially the benefits. For example, what is the benefit of saving a human life, and what is the benefit of more flowers in the downtown?
Once we decide on the benefits, then we want to provide enough of the public good to maximize net benefits. That is, total benefits - total costs. The private market will usually not produce enough of a public good. However, it is often done by government because it can compel everyone to contribute through taxes.
The problem is not that people are selfish, per se, but the free-rider problem. If some people do not voluntarily contribute, others who do contribute will feel that it is unfair and may stop contributing as well.

Common Property Resources

These resources include clean air, oil pools, congested roads, fish, whales and other wild life. The problem here is that it is hard to exclude people, but one person’s use reduces that of others'. Over-use of these resources is sometimes dramatically referred to as, "Tragedy of the Commons". This tragedy refers to the common grazing rights in medieval England, in which:
  • all families could graze sheep on the common land which was collectively owned and;
  • as population and number of sheep increased, common land became over-grazed.
People did not reduce their use, because social and private incentives differed. Each individual’s best move is to get as much of the resource as possible before it is gone. The social optimum is to restrict use. The problem is that each individual creates a negative externality by reducing amount available to others. A few possible solutions were:
  1. Custom or regulations could put a maximum on how much each family could use the resource;
  2. They could have internalized the externality by auctioning off rights to graze and;
  3. They could have created private property rights.

Property Rights

Economists realize that property rights are very important for efficient use of resources. When an individual owns and controls the resource, they have an incentive to increase its value. When everyone owns a resource, or rather, no one owns the resource, there is no one to charge for use, or who can attach a price. An example of such, is air that we breath.
For some goods we can establish property rights, like the pollution permit. For other goods, like national defence or clean air, the government can improve the outcome by regulating or providing the product.

Theory of Consumer Choice

Consumers face trade-offs in their purchase decisions, since their income is limited and choices are numerous. In order to make choices, consumers must combine budget constraints (what they can afford), and preferences (what they would like to consume).
A budget contraint, means what a consumer can purchase is constrained by income. The slope of the budget constraint measures the rate at which one consumer can trade off one good for another, and the relative prices of the two goods. Budget constraints are determined by both the income of the consumers, and the relative prices.
If a consumer equally prefers two product bundles, then the consumer is indifferent between the two bundles. The consumer will get the same level of satisfaction (utility) from either bundles. Graphically speaking, this is known as the indifference curve. This curve shows that all bundles are equally preferred, or have the same utility or same level of satisfaction. The slope of indifference curve is the rate at which a consumer is willing to trade one good for another, which is also known as the marginal rate of substitution (MRS).

Properties of Indifference Curves

  1. Higher indifference curves are preferred to lower ones, since more is preferred to less (non-satiation).
  2. Indifference curves are downward sloping. If the quantity of one goods is reduced, then you must have more of the other good to compensate for the loss.
  3. Indifference curves do not cross (intersect), since this would imply a contradiction.
  4. Indifference curves are bowed inward (in most cases). The slope of indifference curves represent the MRS (rate at which consumers are willing to substitute one good for the other). People are usually willing to trade away more of one good when they have a lot of it, and less willingto trade away goods which are in scarce supply. This implies that MRS must increase as we get less of a good.
Nota bene that two extreme examples exist. Perfect substitutes have straight-line indifference curves. As we get more of the good, we trade off with the substitute at a constant rate because we are indifferent between them (i.e. Coke and Pepsi). Perfect complements have right-angled indifference curves. If goods can only be used together, there is no satisfaction in having more of A without additional amounts of B (i.e. left and right shoe). In general, the better substitutes goods are, the straighter the indifference curve.

Consumers' Optimal Choice

We must combine what a consumer can obtain (budget constraint) and the preferences (indifference curve). The optimum is the highest point on the indifference curve that is still within the budget constraint. This will usually occur where the indifference curve is tangent to budget constraint. At the optimum point, MRS = relative prices of goods since MRS = slope of indifference curve, and relative price = slope of budget constraint. The marginal rate of substitution is the rate at which consumers are willing to trade-off, and is equal to rate at which they can trade.
Changes in income will undoubtedly affect the optimal choice. The budget constraint will shift parallel to the original - upwards for an increase in income, and downwards for a decrease in income. The new equilibrium for a higher income will be on a higher indifference curve, and since income is higher, more of both products could be consumed. For normal goods, as income increases, more of the good will be preferred. For inferior goods, as income increases, less of the good will be chosen.

Changes in Prices

A change in price will change the slope of the curve. A fall in price will rotate the budget constraint outwards, and an increase in price will rotate the budget constraint inwards. Thus a change in price will change both the relative prices of the two products and also the amount that can be bought, ceteris paribus (income). Changes in price has two effects:
  1. Substitution Effect
    • arises from the tendency to buy less of goods which are more expensive
    • can be measured by keeping satisfaction constant (stay on same indifference curve and finding where MRS = new relative prices
  2. Income Effect
    • arises from change in price effect on total amount that can be purchased
    • change in consumption when we shift to a new indifference curve as a result of the price change

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Introduction to international Business- III BBM,III B.Com


Introduction to international Business:-
                Meaning of trade: Trade is exchange of surplus with necessary or exchange of goods.
Why do people, communities, companies trade because no country produce everything  to meet the needs.
                All regions, countries, industrial units produce that for which they are best suited. Hence every one specializes, specialization means concentrating on the production of one product.
For Ex: America ha specialization in production of Machineries and India has specialization in production of wheat and rice. According to its labor, capital an availability of resources. So trade is exchange of surplus with necessary.
·         International trade enables the sellers to maximize their sales and revenue by obtaining the best prices in the world.
·         The buyers buy the best at the cheapest rates and hence buyer maximizes their use values or utilities or satisfaction.
·         Both exports and imports maximized, the government get maximum tax revenues.
Difference in trade and Business:-
·         Trade is exchange of visible items Ex: purchase and sale of cars, computers, food grains.
·         Business is trade between visibles and invisibles
·         Ex: when a truck operator is carrying goods for a company from one place to another the service is being provided. This is business as the truck is not sold.
·         Trade is narrow term and business is wider term.
Reasons for national and international business: National trade is with in the political boundaries of the country and trade between two countries becomes international trade.
Unless the interntional trade is with all the continents of the world. It will not become global.
Ex:Trade between kerala and assam involves long distance thousands of Kilometers it’s a domestic trade, trade between india from bihar to Nepal is international trade but it’s a shortest distance.
For global trade, there should be trade with all the countries and should  open for all countries even if there is no actual trading.
                International trade have greater depth in trade large quantities and products of same kind and also have great scope in trading more commodities and services also.
                International business can be in only currencies without trading in commodities or goods and services. There is a business of buying and selling of foreign currencies when buying exchange rate is low and selling when exchange rate is high.
Bothe the national and international trade are based on specialization and the sellers maximizing their exchange values.
Here trading is barter with the help of money an it a medium of exchange.
In a wide market the sellers do not suffer from infirmity of seling at lowe prices if demand abroad is elastic, the sellers can sell their in other markets.
Ex: if the price offered to the products is low a sellers can shift to the other nation where he gets good price.
Both types of trade depend on the factor endowment – every country differs in factors endowment by nature. Like congo produces copper and gulf countries has petroleum products.
India export jute, tea, jewellery, iron ore, specialization is depends on factor endowment.
Trade is because of immobility of factors of production:
Land and natural resources cannot be moved from one country to another. Labour and capital are mobile but not perfectly mobile.
·         Immobility leads to specialization and specialization leads to trade and trade leads to motilities.
·         Difference in transport cost: Both national and international trae have wider market in the inverse ratio of the cost of transport. Ex: movement of goods is high when transport cost is cheaper and vice versa.
·         Elasticity of demand and supply: if the demand is elastic prie can be raised much , they have tobe  kept low to sell more.
·         If the demand is inelastic abroad higher prices can be changed.
·         If the supply in elastic i.e can be taken  any where and higher prices can be charged.
·         If the supplies are inelastic ( cannot be takes to other market or stored) then lower prices will have to be charged.
Evolution and Stages of international business:
1.       Mercantilism
2.       Physiocrats
3.       Colonization of countries by European nations developed a lot of international trade like India and Brittan before independence, colonial masters used to take out precious metals and raw materials to their countries and used process and manufacturer finished goods through their advanced technology and used to sell at higher prices.
4.       Globalization started from 1991 after the collapse of soviet union and over through of socialistic economies in eastern Europe. There are no socialistic countrie now except cuba  and north korea, china. India used to have nehruvian ideology “Democratic nationalism” or mixed economy concept.
5.       Regulation were diluted or abolished like the permit  and license raj ended, MRTP act abolished, FERA become FEMA.
6.       Fixed exchange rate system diluted, earlier there used to be fixed exchange rate system i.e$ 1=26.5 early in 1970-71.The rate remained same in the open market also. Very frequently inflation used to bring down the exchange rate of rupee in the open market. It adjusted after some time lag to new rate. Now after the reforms fluctuating exchange rate came into force—where rate can change several times during a day.
7.  Non-convertibility was changed to convertibility:- Earlier if India exports goods worth of $1 billion the rate exchange is 26 per dollor.Exchanging  a dollar in the market would invite imprisonment. Now Indian currency is fully convertible on current account, now the dollar can be exchanged. Even the government purchases dollar from authorized dealers.
8. FDI& FII allowed
FDI in production capacities up to 49%, 51%,74% and even 100% in few sectors.
FII in bonds, debentures, derivatives..There are some restrictions improved joint ventures like Hero Honda, Maruthi Suzuki.
9. Globalization then improved to joint ventures, hero Honda, maruthi suzuki are joint ventures previously maruthi was public sector, then  Govt sells all its shares to Suzuki it becomes sole private venture .Rules for mergers, acquisitions, amalgamations, demergers etc. liberalized. Licensing is almost done away with, abolished, licensing remains.
10. Technological co-operations: technological co-operation is now common everywhere..Technology is the single most important reason for globalization. Globalization started to diffuse to technology all over the world.
Indian firms freely buying modern technology on payment of royalty or on profit sharing basis.
Every country prepared to absorb technology, which has vast skilled manpower.
Technological up gradation secures comparative advantage in production and reduces cost of production, quality of the product improves.
MNC’s are free to trade and produce.
11. There is franchising, outsourcing and in sourcing ( If Honda motor cycles produced in India its  in sourcing to India and outsourcing of Japan).All countries of the world trading in large volumes.
12. Funds are flowing freely, no restrictions on remittance, payments for imports and exports can flow freely. Funds for speculation in exchange rate also flow freely in the world.

Advantages of free globalized international trade& Business:-
1.       First it is the exchange of surplus with the necessity.in the home country surplus stock with the producer or seller have low marginal utility asthey are more than the personal requirement –it is getting scarce and necessary imports in lieu of the exports.
2.       Maximises both the use valueand the exchange value—buyers can get the cheapest thing at the most competitive prices, their level of living, satisfaction & welfare improves. The sellers can other hand maximizes sales.  Forex reserves rise with globalization if BOP as surplus.
3.        


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