The document discusses key elements of a country's economic environment that impact business operations. It identifies factors such as gross national income, gross domestic product, per capita income, growth rates, purchasing power, human development index, inflation, employment, debt, income distribution, poverty, labor costs, and productivity. It also explains different economic systems including capitalism, socialism, and mixed economies. Managers must assess the economic environment to make investment and strategy decisions.
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Economic systems
1. ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT
• Economic Environment refers to all those
economic factors, which have a bearing on the
functioning of a business. Business depends on
the economic environment for all the needed
inputs.
• It also depends on the economic environment to
sell the finished goods. Naturally, the
dependence of business on the economic
environment is total and is not surprising
because, as it is rightly said, business is one unit
of the total economy.
2. IMPORTANCE OF ECONOMIC
ENVIRONMENT
• Managers assess economic environment and
forecast market trends in the effort to make better
investment choices and competitive strategies.
• Economic analysis look at several indicators of an
economic environment with emphasis given to how
local conditions require adjusting analysis and
interpratation.
• The economic environments of foreign companies
and markets can help managers predict events that
might affect the company’s future performance.
3. ELEMENTS OF ECONOMIC
ENVIRONMENT
• GROSS NATIONAL INCOME: The income generated
both by total domestic production as well as the
international production activities of national
companies.
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT: The total value of all
final goods and services produced in a country in
a given year equal to total consumer, investment,
and government spending, plus the value of
exports, minus the value of imports.
4. • PER CAPITA CONVERSION:
The per capita GNI is taking GNI of a country
and converting it into a standard currency say
at US DOLLARS at prevailing market rates and
then dividing this sum by its population leads
to a Per Capita Conversion estimator.
it helps to explain an economy’s performance
in terms of people who live in that country.
5. 3. Rate Of Change
• GDP growth rate indicates a country’s
economic potential.
• High GDP rate means rising standard of
living,Business opportunites
• Example- China has been one of the fastest
growing economies over the past 2 decades,
which attracted an immense amount of FDI.
• The developing countries like China and India
have a higher growth rate than the US
6. 4. Purchasing Power Parity
• The purchasing power in terms of foreign exchange
• To compare markets, the per capita income is
converted into foreign terms
• Exchange rate tells how many units of currency it takes
to buy one US dollar
• Per capita income does not consider the difference in
cost of living from one country to another. Like, the
cost of living in the US and India differ, but it assumes
that the dollar of income of US and the dollar of
income of India has the same purchasing power
7. • The number of units of a country’s currency
required to buy the same amounts of goods
and services in the domestic market that one
unit of income would buy in the other
country.
• Estimating the value of a universal basket of
good and services that can be purchased with
one unit of a country’s currency
• Per capita income is higher in India than the
US because of the lower cost of living.
8. 5. Human Development Index
• The actual level of development of a country
• How well a country does in terms of social
liberties, life expectancy, and literacy rates.
• 3 dimensions
Longevity : Life expectancy at birth
Knowledge : Adult Literacy Rate; Combined
primary, secondary and tertiary gross
enrollment ratio
Standard of Living : Per capita income
expressed in Purchasing Power Parity for
US Dollars
9. Features of Economic
Environment
1. Inflation
• Rise in price measured
against a standard level of purchasing power
• It results when aggregate demand grows
faster than aggregate supply
• It affects cost of living, exchange rates, interest
rates
10. Implications of Chronic inflation
• It affects the cost of living as the rising prices
makes it more difficult for consumers to buy
products unless their income rises at same
pace.
•Customers cannot effectively
plan long term investments ,
no incentives to save
11. Employment
•It is number of workers who want to work
but do not have jobs
•Results in low economic
growth, creates social
pressures and provoke
political uncertainty
12. DEBT
• Sum of borrowing from it population, foreign
organization and government
• Larger the debt, more uncertain is the
country’s economy
• Debt of US has increased from $1 trillion in
1980 to $9.4 trillion in 2008
• Types- Internal & External
13. • Internal Debt- When government spends
more than it collects
o Imperfect tax system
• External Debt- When government borrows
money from foreign lenders
• Ex- Zambia and Liberia has slow economic
growth rate
14. Income Distribution
• Fractions of population that are at various
levels of incomes
• Ginni Coefficient – assess degree of inequality
in distribution of
income
15. Income Distribution among wealthy
nations
• US has largest inequality gap
• Share of income to top 1% has increased and
decreased for the poorest 40%
• Urban vs Rural Income- In china urban income
is 7times more than rural income
16. POVERTY
Poverty: Condition where a person or
community is deprived of or lacks the
essentials for minimum standard of well being
and life.
Poverty as per World Bank:
– Extreme Poverty: living less than $1 per day
– Moderate poverty: living less than $2 per day
17. LABOR COST
LABOR COST
– Key element of total cost.
– Companies scan the world to identify the
difference between low cost and high cost
countries.
18. PRODUCTIVITY
• Amount of output created per unit input
used.
• It is the efficiency with which goods and
services are produced.
19. BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
• Statement of country’s trade and financial
transactions created by individuals, business and
government agencies.
20. Components of Economic. Environment
Growth strategy,
Economic systems,
Economic planning,
Industry,
Agriculture,
Infrastructure,
Financial and fiscal sectors,
Removal of regional imbalances,
Price and distribution controls,
Economic reforms,
Human resources, and
Per capita and national income.
21. Economic Systems
Def. The method used by a society to produce
and distribute goods and services.
Or, How the government tells us what we can
get and how to get it!
22. All Economic Systems Must
Consider the Following Questions:
1. What goods and services to produce?
2. How will they produce them?
3. Who will get them?
4. How much will they produce now, and how
much later?
Each economic system answers these questions
in a DIFFERENT WAY.
24. ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
• An economic environment is a mechanism
that deals with the production, distribution
and consumption of goods and services.
• It is a set of structures and processes that
guides the allocation of resources and shapes
the conduct of business activities in a country.
• Types:
– Capitalism (Market Economy)
– Socialism (Planned economy)
– Mixed (Capitalism + Socialism)
25. CAPITALISM/FREE MARKET ECONOMY
Free market system built on private ownership
and control.
Owners of capital have inalienable property rights
that give them right to earn a profit in return of
their effort, investment and risk.
26. Free Market Economy
Economic questions are answered by individual
buyers and sellers.
Supply and demand influence economy
People act out of self interest; motive for profit
(money) drives the economy
Also known as FREE ENTERPRISE or CAPITALISM
Ex. The United States, Western
Europe, Japan
28. Command Economy
The government answers the basic
economic questions
Advantages: able to act quickly in emergencies,
provide for all people equally
Disadvantages: Inefficient, no incentive to work
hard or be creative
Ex. Communist Countries (China, Vietnam, North
Korea, former
Soviet Union, Cuba)
29. Mixed Economy: No economy is pure market,
pure command or pure traditional, elements of
each appear in all economies, some have more
elements of one economy than another.
Market Mixed Command
USA
Great Britain China
30. American Mixed Economy
While the United States is mostly a free market
economy, it does have elements of a command
economy.
31. Features of American Free Market
Economy
1. Economic Freedom: individuals have the
right to choose
2. Competition: more than one producer of
good/services insures choice
3. Private Property: individuals have the right
to own their own property, including
business
32. Features of American Free Market
Economy (cont)
4. Self-Interest: individuals make
decisions based on what is best for them
5. Voluntary Exchange: individuals may freely
buy and sell goods
6. Profit Motive: individuals are driven by a
desire to profit (make money)
33. Features of American Command
Economy
1. Government regulation of some business
practices
• Ex. Wages, labor hours,
safety practice.
2. Government limits certain choices
• Ex. Cannot buy or produce certain goods/services
3. Government provides aid to the needy
• Ex. Medicare, Medicaid, welfare
34. • Benefits of Capitalism
• In years 1000–1820 world economy grew six-fold, in years
1820–1998 world economy grew 50-fold
• Provides Choice to customers
• Provides valuable goods and services
• Capitalism actively rewards positive traits like hard work
• Similarly, it punishes negative traits such as laziness and
theft
• Narrows the gap between common person and wealthy
• Provides opportunity to realize dreams and desires
• Capitalist societies usually do not have large black markets
• Build on democracy
• Social Good
35. • Major limitations/ Criticism:
• Downfall of work ethics
• Free Market + Self Interest
• Accumulation of wealth
• Encourages inequality in a society
• Business lobbying with government
• Monopolistic tendency
• Human resource exploitation
• Results in great disparities between income
of people owning the capital resources and
others
36. Collective ownership and democratic control of the
material means of production by the workers and the
people
•Socialism is a term applied to an economic system in which property
is held in common and not individually, and relationships are governed
by a political hierarchy. Common ownership doesn't mean decisions
are made collectively, however. Instead, individuals in positions of
authority make decisions in the name of the collective group.
•Socialists argue that socialism would allow for wealth to be
distributed based on how much one contributes to society, as
opposed to how much capital one holds.
•A primary goal of socialism is social equality and a distribution of
Wealth based on one’s contribution to society and an economic
arrangement that would serve the interests of society as a whole.
37. • Features of Socialism;
• Social Ownership of means of
production
• Existance of public sector
• Decisive role of Economic Planning
• Production guided by Social Benefits
• Abolition of exploitation of labour
38. • Benefits of Socialism
i. Better salaries
ii. Stable Environment
iii. Eliminates poverty
iv. Better Products
v. Fulfills survival need
vi. Opportunity for citizens to explore non-
economically- productive pursuits
40. BASIS OF
DIFFERENCE
CAPITALIST ECONOMY SOCIALIST ECONOMY
Resources Ownership Privately owned State owned
Foundation belief competition brings out the best
in people
cooperation is the best
way for people to coexist
Earning of wealth everyone works for his own
wealth
everyone works for wealth
which is distributed equally
to everyone
Market Scenario Level playing field Protection to PSUs,
Private enterprises are
permitted in few
businesses only
Govt. interference Only in situations where laws
have been broken
Fully involved
Employees motivation Highly motivated on account
of proportional benefits
Rarely motivated as
performance is not
rewarded
Merit Perception of better
economic growth because
of competition
Equal distribution of
income results in welfare
of all
Demerit Few individuals/groups Hard work is not
41. Mixed Economy
• Any economy in which private corporate enterprises and
public sector enterprises exist side-by-side, and
decisions taken through market mechanism are
supplemented by some form of partial planning, is to be
described as a mixed economy.
• This system overcomes the disadvantages of both the
market and planned economic systems.
42. • Provides a clear demarcation of the boundaries of public
sector and private sector so that the core sector and
strategic sectors are invariably in the public sector.
• The government intervenes to prevent undue
concentration of economic power, and monopolistic and
restrictive trade practices
• The rights of the individual are respected and protected
subject only tothe requirements of public law and order
and morality
43. • Features
• Resources are owned both by the government as
well as private individuals. i.e. co-existence of
both public sector and private sector.
• Market forces prevail but are closely monitored by
the government.
• Monopolies may be existing but under
close supervision of the government.
44. • Advantages
• Producers and consumer have sovereignty to choose
what to produce and what to consume but production and
consumption of harmful goods and services may be
stopped by the government.
• As compared to Market economy, a mixed economy may
have less income inequality due to the role played by the
government.
• A mixed economy represents an achievable balance
between individual initiative and social goals.