Unit 1: Going Into Business For Yourself
Download
Report
Transcript Unit 1: Going Into Business For Yourself
Unit 1: Going Into
Business For Yourself
Chapter 1 – What is
Entrepreneurship?
1
Key Terms To Know:
Business cycle
Demand
Diminishing marginal utility
Economics
Entrepreneur
Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurial
Equilibrium
Free enterprise system
Factors of production
Goods
Gross Domestic Product
Market structure
Monopoly
Need
Oligopoly
Profit
Scarcity
Services
Supply
Venture
Want
2
Key Concepts To Know
Small Business & Entrepreneurship
Economic Systems
Basic Economic Concepts
Economic Indicators & Business Cycles
What Entrepreneurs Contribute
3
Statistics
1 in 3 households own their own family
business
90% of businesses are small business
having less than 100 employees
62% of small businesses are home-based
4
Going into business for yourself
Considered an entrepreneur
He/she accepts the risks & responsibilities of
owning the business
He/she earns profits & gains personal
satisfaction
Ventures are the new businesses being started
Entrepreneurs have the 3 I’s: initiative;
innovation; imagination
5
Why Be An Entrepreneur?
Generates employment
Sees economic opportunities to satisfy our
demands for G&S
Source of venture capital – getting money from
private investors
Help give employees financial security
Changing society (internet, computers)
Catalysts to making economic progress happen
6
The Start-Up Process
Skilled Entrepreneurs!
Enterprise Zones – Communities give tax benefits/grants if you
open up a business there
Start-Up Resources:
Capital
Skilled Labor
Management Expertise
Legal & Financial Advice
Facilities
Equipment
Customers!
7
Basic Economic Concepts
Goods – tangible items purchased; sold
by a merchandising business
Services – intangible (nonphysical) items;
sold by a service business
Goods & Services will be abbreviated: G&S
8
Basic Economic Concepts
Needs – food, shelter, clothing (basic)
Wants – would ‘like’ to have
wants – winter coat, snow boots
Optional wants – mink coat, UGG boots
Private wants – 1 person wants it
Public wants – “infrastructure” needs of
society
Necessary
Basic Economic Concepts
Values – things you prize or think are
important
Goals – your aims or objectives
Basic Economic Concepts
Opportunity Costs – something given up
because another choice is made; the 2nd
option that wasn’t taken
Trade Off – cutting back on one option so
that you can have some of another option
Choosing
to box up some dinner so that you
can save room for dessert
11
Why are these important when
opening up a business??
Now, think about what type of business
you may want to open up . . .
Will
it satisfy peoples’ wants? Or needs?
Will you provide a service? Or sell goods?
Base your business choice on what you value
Base your business choice on what goals you
have
4 Economic Questions Every
Economic System Must Face:
What G&S will be produced?
What amount of G&S will be produced?
How will the G&S be produced?
Who will use/purchase the G&S?
13
Basic Economic Concepts
Resources
Anything used to make or obtain needs or
wants
Resources get pulled together to make a
business “happen”
4 Factors of Production
AKA: Resources; Inputs to Production
The resources needed/used to produce
G&S
They are the basic elements used to
produce G&S
Need these in order to start/run a business
15
4 Factors of Production Are:
1.
Land (Natural Resources) – Earthly things
Renewable Resources: can be re-grown
Nonrenewable Resources: can only be used once (not regrown)
2.
Labor (Human Resources) – employees; labor force
(16 yrs old & over working or seeking work
3.
Capital Resources – equipment, tools, buildings, cash;
4.
‘owned’ property
Entrepreneurship – Management skill needed to start & operate a
business; being able to manage all of these things! Review the 3
I’s of these risk takers
Economic Systems
Traditional Economic System – bartering
Pure Market System – little gov’t control
Command Economic System – total gov’t
control
Mixed Economies (between market &
command) – U.S. & European Union
17
The Free Enterprise System
Most democratic nations have this
People have rights to make decisions on:
What
products they buy
Owning private property
Starting a business to compete with other
businesses
Where voluntary exchange occurs
AKA: Capitalism; Market Economy
18
The Free Enterprise System
A Market Economy is when we have
voluntary exchange
Markets are where the exchanges are
happening
Profit Motive & Competition
Making money is the primary incentive of a
market economy/free enterprise
Competition helps consumers:
Can
get a better quality product
Can get lower prices
Can get a wide variety of products
Competition forces companies to improve
quality & become more efficient
20
Supply & Demand
S&D help us understand prices of goods
S&D interact to determine how much of a
product should be produced based on how
much the consumer is demanding it
21
Laws
Law of Supply – sellers want to sell (or
supply) products to consumers at the
highest possible price
Law of Demand – consumers want to
purchase products at the lowest price
possible
22
Theories of Supply & Demand
If there is a heavy demand for a product but
there is a short supply of it, prices will
INCREASE. Thus, demand comes down,
expanding supply
If there is a heavy supply for a product but there
is a low demand for it, prices will DECREASE.
Thus, demand starts to increase & lower supply
Prices tend to stabilize at the EQUILIBRIUM
PRICE – where supply = demand
23
Scarcity
It’s a problem that all societies must face
Not enough products available for our
demand for them (demand > supply)
Our resources are limited & our wants are
unlimited
Must have OPPORTUNITY COSTS – give
up 1 thing in order to get something else
24
3 Market Structures
Perfect Competition – hardly exist; when
identical products exist; prices aren’t
affected by any particular buyer/seller
Monopoly – differentiated products; tries
to dominate a small portion of the market;
1 seller of a particular commodity
Oligopoly – several large companies sell
the same product/commodity
25
Economic Indicators
1.
2.
3.
Gov’t looks at these to determine the overall health of
our nation:
Employment Rate
Consumer Confidence
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – the total market
VALUES of G&S produced in a nation in a given year
The Federal Reserve is involved in controlling the economy
by regulating the money supply via interest rates!!
26
Business Cycles
Recession – a period of decline, spending falls,
demand for products falls, production of G&S slows
down, layoffs occur
Depression – the lowest point a cycle can reach, high
unemployment, money spent on needs is limited,
production almost stops, businesses close down
Recovery – people start to find jobs & spend money
on G&S
Prosperity – low unemployment rats, demand for G&S
is at it’s highest point
27
Business Cycles, cont.
INFLATION:
Occurs
when people are spending money &
are confident in the economy.
Suppliers raise prices on G&S
Prices are increasing faster than the increase
in people’s paychecks!
Usually occurs during a recovery period
28
Facts About Business Failures
Business Failure – Hurts creditors as the
company files Chapter 7 bankruptcy &
shuts down
Discontinuance – Still is operating, but
under a different name; doesn’t hurt
creditors as they “reorganize” themselves;
could be a Chapter 11 or 13 bankruptcy
29
Circular Flow
Copy the diagram provided by the teacher:
THE END!