The term refers to the expansion of an existing firm into another product line or market. Diversification may be related or unrelated. Related diversification occurs when the firm expands into similar product lines. For example, an automobile manufacturer may engage in production of passenger vehicles and light trucks. Unrelated diversification takes place when the products are very different from each other, for example a food processing firm manufacturing leather footwear as well.
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17 September, 2021
Diversification
Dumping
Dumping is the practices by firms of selling products abroad at below costs or significantly below prices in the home market. The former implies predatory; the latter, price discrimination. Dumping of both types is viewed by pricing many governments as a form of international predation, the effect of which may be to disrupt the domestic market of foreign competitors. Economists argue, however, that price discriminatory dumping, where goods are not sold below their incremental costs of production, benefits consumers of the importing countries and harms only less efficient producers.
Franchising
A special type of vertical relationship between two firms usually referred to as the "franchisor" and "franchisee". The two firms generally establish a contractual relationship where the franchisor sells a proven product, trademark or business method and ancillary services to the individual franchisee in return for a stream of royalties and other payments. The contractual relationship may cover such matters as product prices, advertising, location, type of distribution outlets, geographic area, etc. Franchise agreements generally fall under the purview of competition laws, particularly those provisions dealing with vertical restraints.
Intellectual Property Rights
The general term for the assignment of property rights through patents, copyrights and trademarks. These property rights allow the holder to exercise a monopoly on the use of the item for a specified period. By restricting imitation and duplication, monopoly power is conferred, but the social costs of monopoly power may be offset by the social benefits of higher levels of creative activity encouraged by the monopoly earnings.
Joint Venture
A joint venture is an association of firms or individuals formed to undertake a specific business project. It is similar to a partnership, but limited to a specific project (such as producing a specific product or doing research in a specific area).
Sunk Costs
Sunk costs are costs which, once committed, cannot be recovered. Sunk costs arise because some activities require specialized assets that cannot readily be diverted to other uses. Second-hand markets for such assets are therefore limited. Sunk costs are always fixed costs, but not all fixed costs are sunk.
Nostro and Vostro account- Short Notes
Nostro and Vostro account normally uses in the foreign exchange transactions of the banks or during currency settlement.
Define Gross domestic product
Gross domestic product (GDP) is the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time. GDP per capita is often considered an indicator of a country's standard of living. GDP is usually calculated on an annual basis. It includes all of private and public consumption, government outlays, investments and exports less imports that occur within a country.
GDP = C + G + I + NX
"G" is the sum of government
spending
"I" is the sum of all the
country's businesses spending on capital
"NX"
is the nation's total net exports, calculated as total exports minus total
imports. (NX = Exports - Imports)
Public Goods
Public goods are those which cannot be provided to one group of consumers, without being provided to any other consumers who desire them. Thus they are “non-excludable.” Examples include radio and television broadcasts, the services of a lighthouse, national security, and a clean environment. Private markets typically under invest in the provision of public goods, since it’s very difficult to collect revenue from their consumers.
More broadly, public goods can refer to any goods or services provided by government as a result of an inability of the private sector to supply those products in acceptable quantity, quality, or accessibility.
Price Discrimination
Price discrimination occurs when customers in different market segments are charged different prices for the same good or service, for reasons unrelated to costs. Price discrimination is effective only if customers cannot profitably re-sell the goods or services to other customers. Price discrimination can take many forms, including setting different prices for different age groups, different geographical locations, and different types of users (such as residential vs. commercial users of electricity).
Income Elasticity of Demand
The quantity demanded of a particular product depends not only on its own price and on the price of other related products, but also on other factors such as income. The purchases of certain commodities may be particularly sensitive to changes in nominal and real income. The concept of income elasticity of demand therefore measures the percentage change in quantity demanded of a given product due to a percentage change in income.
Market power / monopoly power
The ability of a firm (or group of firms) to raise and maintain price above the level that would prevail under competition is referred to as market or monopoly power. The exercise of market power leads to reduced output and loss of economic welfare.
Cross Price Elasticity of Demand
Cross Price Elasticity of Demand refers to the percentage change in the quantity demanded of a given product due to the percentage change in the price of another "related" product. If all prices are allowed to vary, the quantity demanded of product X is dependent not only on its own price (see elasticity of demand) but upon the prices of other products as well. The concept of cross price elasticity of demand is used to classify whether or not products are "substitutes" or "complements". It is also used in market definition to group products that are likely to compete with one another.
If
an increase in the price of product Y results in an increase in the quantity
demanded of X (while the price of X is held constant), then products X and Y
are viewed as being substitutes. For example, such may be the case of
electricity vs. natural gas used in home heating or consumption of pork vs.
beef. The cross price elasticity measure is a positive number varying from zero
(no substitutes) to any positive number. Generally speaking, a number exceeding
two would indicate the relevant products being "close" substitutes.
If the increase in price of Y
results in a decrease in the quantity demanded of product X (while the price of
X is held constant), then the products X and Y are considered complements. Such
may be the case with shoes and shoe laces.
Definition of 'Scarcity'
Scarcity is the fundamental economic problem that arises because people have unlimited wants but resources are limited. Because of scarcity, various economic decisions must be made to allocate resources efficiently.
Scarcity states that society
has insufficient productive resources to fulfill all human wants and needs.
Alternatively, scarcity implies that not all of society's goals can be pursued
at the same time; trade-offs are made of one good against others. In an
influential 1932 essay, Lionel Robbins defined economics as "the science
which studies human behavior as a relationship between ends and scarce means
which have alternative uses."
Define 'Opportunity cost
Opportunity cost is the cost of any activity measured in terms of the value of the next best alternative that is not chosen. It is the sacrifice related to the second best choice available to someone, or group, who has picked among several mutually exclusive choices.
The
opportunity cost is a key concept in economics, and has been described as
expressing "the basic relationship between scarcity and choice".
Example: The difference in return between a chosen investment and one
that is necessarily passed up. Say you invest in a stock and it returns a
paltry 2% over the year. In placing your money in the stock, you gave up the
opportunity of another investment - say, a risk-free government bond yielding
6%. In this situation, your opportunity costs are 4% (6% - 2%).
In countries with protected and distorted economies, FDI is harmful to economic welfare
In
countries with protected and distorted economies, FDI is harmful to economic
welfare.
Where
there is little FDI, the harm is little. Where FDI is large, however, the
adverse effect on economic welfare is also large. Conversely, in countries with
low barriers to trade and few restrictions on operations, foreign firms can
increase the efficiency of existing economic activity and introduce new
activities with strongly favorable effects on host country development.
Consequently, host governments should adopt open trade and investment policies.
Developing
country hosts should prohibit domestic content, joint venture, or technology
sharing requirements on foreign investment.
Such
requirements neither increase the efficiency of local producers nor produce
host country growth. To the contrary, such provisions interrupt intrafirm
trade, which is a potent source of host country growth, and lead to inefficient
production processes, outdated technology, and waste of host country resources.
Host
countries should avoid competing to give the best tax incentives to foreign
investors.
Available
resources for promoting investment are better spent on improving local
infrastructure, the supply of information to investors, and education and
training that benefits foreign and local firms alike.
Developed
countries should back only FDI that promotes the economic welfare of developing
country hosts.
Most national political risk
insurance agencies do not screen projects to eliminate those that require trade
protection. Such FDI hurts rather than helps hosts countries. Neither are
taxpayers in developed countries served by FDI projects that lower developing
country welfare and impede trade expansion. Thus these agencies should assess
the degree to which an FDI project promotes host country welfare as a criterion
for agreeing to insure it.
Does Foreign Direct Investment Promote Development
Studies of the linkage between foreign direct investment and development have produced con-fusing and sometimes contradictory results. Some have shown that foreign direct investment (FDI) spurs economic growth in the host countries; others show no such effect. Some find spill-over benefits to the host economy—that is, benefits not appropriated by investors or in the form of superior wages—while others do not discern these benefits.
CONCEPTS OF NATIONAL INCOME, Gross National Product, Net National Product (NNP), Personal income
There are various concepts of national income
Gross
National Product (GNP)
Gross
national product is defined as the total market value of all final goods and
services produced in a year. GNP includes four types of final goods and
services, (i) Consumer goods and services to satisfy the immediate wants of the
people (ii) gross private domestic investment on capital goods consisting of
fixed capital formation, residential constructions and inventories of finished
and unfinished goods, (iii) goods and services produced by government and (ir)
net export of goods and services'
GNP
= government production + private output
Net
National Product (NNP)
The
second concept is Net National Product. The capital goods like machinery wear
out as a result of continuous use. This is called depreciation. This is also
called National income at market prices. Hence NNP = GNP - depreciation.
National
Income at factor cost
National
income at factor cost denotes the sum of all incomes earner by the factors. GNP
at factor cost is the sum of the money value of the income produced by and
accruing to the various factors of production in one year in a country. It
includes all items of GNP less indirect tax. GNP at market price is always more
than GNP at factor cost as GNP at factor cost is the income which the factors
of production receive in return for their service alone.
National
income at factor cost = net national product - indirect taxes + subsidies.
- Personal Income (PI)
Personal
income is the sum of all incomes received by all individuals during a given
year. Some incomes such as Social security contribution are not received by
individuals; similarly some incomes such as transfer payments are not currently
earned, for example Old Age Pension. Therefore,
Personal income = national income -
social security contribution - Corporate income taxes - undistributed corporate
profit + transfer payment.
When
and how Equilibrium is occurred in case of demand and supply?
When
supply and demand are equal (i.e. when the supply function and demand function
intersect) the economy is said to be at equilibrium. At this point, the
allocation of goods is at its most efficient because the amount of goods being
supplied is exactly the same as the amount of goods being demanded.
Thus,
everyone (individuals, firms, or countries) is satisfied with the current
economic condition. At the given price, suppliers are selling all the goods
that they have produced and consumers are getting all the goods that they are
demanding.
What are are the Determinants of Demand/ What Causes a Shift in Demand?
Consumer Income
Income
goes up; consumers will buy more shifting demand to the right. Goes down,
consumers will buy less shifting demand to the left.
Consumer
Expectations
If consumers think prices, for
economy, technology, etc., will change in the future this will have an effect
on their consumption of today.
Population
Population increases the number of
consumers and can shift demand to the right. Decreases shift to the left.
Consumer Tastes and Advertising
Consumer’s change over time the
things that they want. As they change their tastes, their demand shifts to the
right or the left.
Price of Related Goods
Complementary and Substitute items
can have an effect on what consumers will purchase and increase the demand for
products.
What
are are the Determinants of Supply?/ What Causes a Shift in Supply?
Effects
of Rising Costs
Input costs can have a major effect
on the production and supply of goods and services. Gas prices can limit the
services of a landscaper or paper delivery person.
Technology
Increases
in the ability to produce because of technological advances can shift the
supply curve to the right. Breakdowns in technology can shift it to the left.
Subsidies
Government
payments to firms can act as an incentive to produce more, which can affect
supply. If government removes subsidies the curve will shift left.
Taxes
Government
taxation towards firms can act as an incentive to produce, which can affect
supply. If government removes taxes the curve will shift left, increases shift
right.
Future
Expectations
How
suppliers view the future of the economy will affect their production of
inventory today. If they think the economy is strong they will increase
production today and Vice versa.
Number
of Suppliers
Firms increase whenever their profit
is to be made. They decrease whenever profit is reduced. Both will shift the
curve to the right or the left.
Identify the basic characteristics of monopoly, oligopoly, monopolistic competition, and pure competition
Monopoly
One
firm
Complete
barrier to entry
Total
control over price
One
product
Oligopoly
2-3
firms
High
barrier to entry
Control
majority of output
Similar/identical
products
Many
Firms
Few
artificial barriers to entry
Slight
control over price
Differentiated
products
Perfect
(Pure) Competition
Many
Buyers and Sellers
Identical
Products
Informed
Buyers and Sellers
Free Market Entry and Exit
Criticism of Robbins Definition
No doubt, Robbins has made Economics a scientific study and his definition has become popular among some economists. But his definition has also been criticized on several grounds. Important ones are:
(i)Robbins
has made Economics quite impersonal and colorless. By making it a complete
positive science and excluding normative aspects he has narrowed down its
scope.
(ii)Robbins'
definition is totally silent about certain macro-economic aspects such as
determination of national income and employment.
(iii)His definition does not cover
the theory of economic growth and development. While Robbins takes resources as
given and talks about their allocation, it is totally silent about the measures
to be taken to raise these resources i.e. national income and wealth.
Economics
is a Science of material well-being-Explain it.
Some
economists defined Economics as a material well-being. Under this group of
definitions the emphasis is on welfare as compared with wealth in the earlier
group. Two important definitions are as follows:
"Economics
is a study of mankind in the ordinary business of life. It examines that part
of individual and social action which is most closely connected with the
attainment and with the use of the material requisites of well-being. Thus, it
is on the one side a study of wealth and on the other and more important side a
part of the study of the man",
-Alfred Marshall
"The
range of our inquiry becomes restricted to that part of social welfare that can
be brought directly or indirectly into relation with the measuring rod of
money"
-A.C. Pigou.
In
the first definition Economics has been indicated to be a study of mankind in
the ordinary business of life. By ordinary business we mean those activities
which occupy considerable part of human effort. The fulfillment of economic
needs is a very important business which every man ordinarily does. Professor
Marshall has clearly pointed that Economics is the study of wealth but more
important is the study of man. Thus, man gets precedence over wealth. There is
also emphasis on material requisites of well-being. Obviously, the material
things like food, clothing and shelter, are very important economic objectives.
The
second definition by Pigou emphasizes social welfare but only that part of it
which can be related with the measuring rod of money. Money is general measure
of purchasing power by the use of which the science of Economics can be
rendered more precise.
Marshall's
and Pigou's definitions of Economics are wider and more comprehensive as they
take into account the aspect of social welfare. But their definitions have
their share of criticism. Their definitions are criticized on the following
grounds.
(ii)Robbins criticized the welfare
definition on the ground that it is very difficult to state which things would
lead to welfare and which will not. He is of the view that we would study in
Economics all those goods and services which carry a price whether they promote
welfare or not.
Strengths of Robbins Definitions
The definition deals with the following four aspects:
(i)
Economics is a science: Economics
studies economic human behavior scientifically. It studies how humans try to
optimize (maximize or minimize) certain objective under given constraints. For
example, it studies how consumers, with given income and prices of the
commodities, try to maximize their satisfaction.
(ii)
Unlimited ends: Ends refer to wants. Human wants are
unlimited. When one want is satisfied, other wants crop up. If man's wants were
limited, then there would be no economic problem.
(iii)
Scarce means: Means refer to resources. Since
resources (natural productive resources, man-made capital goods, consumer
goods, money and time etc.) are limited economic problem arises. If the
resources were unlimited, people would be able to satisfy all their wants and
there would be no problem.
(iv)
Alternative uses: Not only resources are scarce, they
have alternative uses. For example, coal can be used as a fuel for the
production of industrial goods, it can be used for running trains, it can also
be used for domestic cooking purposes and for so many purposes. Similarly,
financial resources can be used for many purposes. The man or society has,
therefore, to choose the uses for which resources would be used. If there was
only a single use of the resource then the economic problem would not arise.
It
follows from the definition of Robbins that Economics is a science of choice.
An important thing about Robbin's definition is that it does not distinguish
between material and non-material, between welfare and non-welfare. Anything
which satisfies the wants of the people would be studied in Economics. Even if
a good is harmful to a person it would be studied in Economics if it satisfies
his wants.
Economics is a Science of dynamic growth and development-Explain the statements
Although the fundamental economic problem of scarcity in relation to needs is undisputed it would not be proper to think that economic resources - physical, human, financial are fixed and cannot be increased by human ingenuity, exploration, exploitation and development. A modern and somewhat modified definition is as follows:
"Economics
is the study of how men and society choose, with or without the use of money,
to employ scarce productive resources which could have alternative uses, to
produce various commodities over time and distribute them for consumption now
and in the future amongst various people and groups of society".
-Paul
A. Samuelson
The above definition is very
comprehensive because it does not restrict to material well-being or money
measure as a limiting factor. But it considers economic growth over time.
Economics
is a Science of choice making-Explain the statement/ Explain the definition of
L. Robbins
Robbins gave a more scientific definition of Economics. His
definition is as follows:
Economics is a science and as an art-Explain
Under this, we generally discuss whether Economics is science or art or both and if it is a science whether it is a positive science or a normative science or both. Often a question arises - whether Economics is a science or an art or both.
A
subject is considered science if
->It
is a systematized body of knowledge which studies the relationship between
cause and effect.
It
is capable of measurement.
It
has its own methodological apparatus.
It
should have the ability to forecast.
But
it is to be noted that Economics is not a perfect science. This is because
Economists do not have uniform opinion about a particular event.
The
subject matter of Economics is the economic behavior of man which is highly
unpredictable. Money which is used to measure outcomes in Economics is itself a
dependent variable. It is not possible to make correct predictions about the
behavior of economic variables.
(b)
Economics is as an art:
Art
is nothing but practice of knowledge. Whereas science teaches us to know art
teaches us to do. Unlike science which is theoretical, art is practical. If we
analyse Economics, we find that it has the features of an art also. Its various
branches, consumption, production, public finance, etc. provide practical
solutions to various economic problems. It helps in solving various economic
problems which we face in our day-to-day life.
Is Economics Positive Science or Normative Science
i) Economics is a Positive Science:
As
stated above, Economics is a science. But the question arises whether it is a
positive science or a normative science. A positive or pure science analyses cause
and effect relationship between variables but it does not pass value judgment.
In other words, it states what is and not what ought to be. Professor Robbins
emphasized the positive aspects of science but Marshall and Pigou have
considered the ethical aspects of science which obviously are normative.
According
to Robbins, Economics is concerned only with the study of the economic
decisions of individuals and the society as positive facts but not with the
ethics of these decisions. Economics should be neutral between ends. It is not
for economists to pass value judgments and make pronouncements on the goodness
or otherwise of human decisions. An individual with a limited amount of money
may use it for buying liquor and not milk, but that is entirely his business. A
community may use its limited resources for making guns rather than butter, but
it is no concern of the economists to condemn or appreciate this policy.
Economics only studies facts and makes generalizations from them. It is a pure
and positive science, which excludes from its scope the normative aspect of
human behavior.
Complete
neutrality between ends is, however, neither feasible nor desirable. It is
because in many matters the economist has to suggest measures for achieving
certain socially desirable ends. For example, when he suggests the adoption of
certain policies for increasing employment and raising the rates of wages, he
is making value judgments; or that the exploitation of labour and the state of
unemployment are bad and steps should be taken to remove them. Similarly, when
he states that the limited resources of the economy should not be used in the
way they are being used and should be used in a different way; that the choice
between ends is wrong and should be altered, etc. he is making value judgments.
(ii)
Economics is a Normative Science:
As
normative science, Economics involves value judgments. It is prescriptive in
nature and described 'what should be the things'. For example, the questions
like what should be the level of national income, what should be the wage rate,
how the fruits of national product be distributed among people - all fall
within the scope of normative science. Thus, normative economics is concerned
with welfare propositions.
