![](/user_photo/2706_HbeT2.jpg)
- •Издательство
- •Ж.Г. Аванесян
- •Для экономистов
- •Isbn 978-5-370-00797-2
- •Учебное издание Редактор л.Н. Волкова Корректор ал. Воробьева Компьютерная верстка к.С. Шахалина, о.Н. Баканковой
- •Отпечатано в полном соответствии с качеством предоставленных лиапозитипов вОао «Дом печати - вятка». 610033. Г. Киров, ул. Московская, 122
- •Isbn 978-5-370-00797-2
- •Business success stories of all time
- •Предисловие
- •Basics of economics
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Exercises
- •9 * Before you listen to Dialogue No 2 match the expressions in the left column with their translation in the right one.
- •10. Workers questioned rated job as more
- •Words and Expressions
- •Types of businesses
- •It is important to realise that a business will have other aims. These include:
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Corporate combinations
- •Words and Expressions
- •Multibillion-dollar corporate mergers occurred
- •Market structure
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Exercises
- •Essentials of marketing
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Interest-free - беспроцентный
- •Exercises
- •Marketing mix in action
- •Isolated by (3) - dividing a market into
- •Words and Expressions
- •Notes to Quotations
- •Pricing policy
- •In addition to adopting particular pricing method, a firm can also follow a number of pricing strategies or tactics. The more common of these include:
- •Exercises
- •Input in this sector is relatively small, second sawa intends to conduct a competitive pricing policy with
- •Selling price for a finished product
- •Demand, supply and market equilibrium
- •Words and Expressions
- •Insurance premium - страховые взносы
- •Irregular demand - неравномерный спрос
- •Consumers are hesitating to buy
- •Robotics and technological change
- •Goals of advertising
- •Introduce a new product or a new price schedule.
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Increase sales увеличить объем продаж
- •Exercises
- •Impact on a product's sales but the exact effect is uncertain.
- •Advertising media
- •Words and Expressions
- •Advertising
- •In general the advertising of a particular product or service during a particular period of time is called an advertising campaign.
- •Sales promotion
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Exercises
- •Discussing a promotional campaign
- •Distribution and sales
- •Words and Expressions
- •Personal selling
- •Notes to Quotations
- •The financial objectives of the business
- •In return for - в оплату за
- •Injection of funds вложение капитала
- •Internal finance - внутреннее финансирование
- •Exercises
- •Planning a new business
- •The financial control of the business
- •Words and Expressions
- •Interest charges - расходы по уплате процентов; процент по займам
- •The functions of money
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Exercises
- •The history of american money and ranking
- •5* Before you listen to Talk No 1 use Glossary to match the words and expressions below with their definitions.
- •What Is a Gold American Eagle?
- •12 Federal Reserve banks, each representing a section
- •Inability to control credit during the 1920s. (15)
- •5,100 Banks failed, some 4,000 in 1933 alone.
- •Industry. Today, Americans have a wide choice of financial
- •Institutions where they are offered a variety (30)
- •Words and Expressions
- •Insurance payment - страховой платеж
- •Installment loan - ссуда с оплатой в рассрочку
- •Interest rate - процентная ставка
- •Usually run from one to five years
- •4. As long as the company does well the profits will be very high.
- •7 Английский язык для экономистов
- •Bill gates and microsoft corporation
- •Essential Vocabulary
- •Information technology - информационные технологии
- •Exercises
- •5* Before you listen to Talk No 1 use Glossary to match the words and expressions below with their definitions.
- •Isaakson did not start at the top of (4) . She
- •In 1980 she founded a (6) research and con- sulting firm Future Computing.
- •In 1981 Isaakson learned of ibm's plans to market a new personal computer. In a published report she predicted that the ibm pc would have a dramatic effect on the
- •Instant success а. Приводить в восторг, очаро-
- •Honorary degree вывать
- •In 1976, he (2) a television station, wtbs,
- •Corporation
- •In 1929, Ford, General Motors and the newly formed Chrysler Corporation - known then and now as the Big Three - accounted for 80 percent of the market.
- •Words and Expressions
- •Chapter two
- •Chapter three
- •Chapter four
- •I mean: show cards, special display stands — where we can
- •Относительная стоимость
- •Подсчитывать прибыли и убытки
- •Налоговые поступления
- •Задача бухгалтерского учета
- •Накапливать состояние
- •Не поддаваться износу
- •Чеканить монеты
- •Стабильность ценности
- •Долговечность
- •Chapter ten
- •In 1963, she decided to form her own direct-sales cosmetics company. Mary Kay built a new corporate culture based on the education, participation, and authority of women. I
- •In 1966, she decided to rebuild her personal life. She married Mel Ash, a businessman whom she had met on a blind date.
- •In 1928, Walt Disney produced a mouse character Mickey Mouse which was an overnight success and changed animation forever. As Mickey's creator Disney became a celebrity.
- •In 1952, he came up with an idea to build an amusement park, that would be entertaining for adults as well as for children. 1
- •10 Английским ялы к для 'jkohovmctOn
- •11 Am минский язык для экономистов
- •Increase or decrease the quantity supplied, eminent domain: the right of governments to take private
- •Interview: a formal meeting in which someone asks you questions to find out if you are suitable for a job, course of study, etc.
- •Inventory: stock of goods held by a business.
- •Investment: placing of money so that it will increase in value or
- •Incomes regardless of size.
- •Vaults.
- •Income is divided by common stock equity, revenue tariff: tax on imports designed to raise money for the
- •Identify a product, service or company, trade-off: giving up one thing in order to obtain something
Demand, supply and market equilibrium
Price in a market is determined by supply and demand forces.
The needs of producers and consumers are best met at a point called the market equilibrium. Market equilibrium occurs when the supply and demand for a product are equal and the prices charged for the product are relatively stable. The market equilibrium is established by combining the supply and demand curves for a product on the same graph. The point at which these two curves intersect is called the equilibrium point.
The demand for a product is the amount of a good that people are willing to buy over a given time period at a particular price. For most goods and services the amount that consumers wish to buy will increase as price falls.
The desired demand is the information showing the amount of the product that consumers are willing to buy at different prices - not what they actually do buy. The demand for a product is not only influenced by price. An individual may be influenced by factors such as personal tastes, the size of income, advertising and the cost and availability of credit. The total market demand will be affected by the size and age distribution of the population and government policy.
States of Demand
Marketing managers might face any of the following states of demand.
Negative demand. Marketers must analyse why the market dislikes the product, and whether product redesign, lower prices, or more positive promotion can change the consumer attitudes.
No demand. Target consumers maybe uninterested in the product. The marketer must find ways to connect the product's benefits with the market's needs and interests.
•
Latent demand. Consumers have a want that is not satisfied by any existing product or service. The marketing task is to measure the size of the potential market and develop effective goods and services that will satisfy the demand.
Falling demand. Sooner or later, every organization faces falling demand for one of its products. The marketer must find the causes of market decline and restimulate demand by finding new markets, changing product features, or creating more effective communications.
Irregular demand. Demand varies on a seasonal, daily, or even hourly basis, causing problems of idle or overworked capacity. Marketers must find ways to change the time pattern of demand through flexible pricing, promotion, and other incentives.
Full demand. The organization has just the amount of demand it wants and can handle. The marketer works to maintain the current lev'el of demand in the face of changing consumer preferences and increasing competition. The organization maintains quality and continually measures consumer satisfaction to make sure it is doing good job.
Overfull demand. Demand is higher than the company can or wants to handle. The marketing task, called demarketing is to find ways to reduce the demand temporarily or permanently. Demarketing involves such actions as raising prices and reducing promotion and service. Demarketing does not aim to destroy demand, but only to reduce it.
Demand is concerned with the buying side of the market. Supply is concerned with the firm's or producer's side of the market. Unlike demand, the quantity supplied of a good will increase as price rises.
Production decisions are affected by the costs of production and productivity. In figuring the costs of production, business owners are concerned with fixed costs and marginal costs.
Supply
The supply of a product is not only influenced by price.
Supply will be affected by anything that helps or hinders production or alters the costs of production.
The prices of goods and services are continually changing and so is the amount that is bought and sold. In winter the price of tomatoes tends to be a lot higher than in the summer and fewer tomatoes are bought in the winter. Similarly, the price of turkey tends to increase at Christmas and so too does the number of turkeys bought. These changes can be explained by an increase in demand. To show the effect of an increase in demand on the market equilibrium consider what happens if there is a successful advertising campaign which increases demand by 20 units per week at each and every price.
Changes in the market equilibrium can also come about as a result of a decrease in demand, an increase in supply or a decrease in supply.
Changes in the costs of production can affect the supply of goods. Producers must pay the cost of production, which may change over time.
Production Costs
Production costs are generally divided into fixed costs, variable costs, and total costs. Producers also calculate the average total costs and marginal costs of production. Analyzing these costs of production helps producers determine production goals and profit margins.
Fixed costs. The costs that producers incur whether they produce nothing, very little, or large quantities are their fixed costs. Total fixed costs are called overhead. Fixed costs include interest payments on loans and bonds, insurance premiums, local and state property taxes, rent payments, and executive salaries. The significance of fixed costs is that they do not change as output changes.
Variable costs. The costs that change with changes in output are variable costs. Unlike fixed costs, which are usually associated with such capital goods as machinery, salaries, and rent, variable costs are usually associated with labor and raw materials. Variable costs reflect the costs of items that businesses can control or alert in the short run.
Total costs and average total costs. The sum of fixed and variable costs of production is the total costs. At zero output, a firm's total costs are equal to its fixed costs. Then as production increases, so do the total costs as the increasing variable costs are added to the fixed costs.
Producers are equally concerned with their per u ait production costs. The average total costs of production are the sum of the average fixed costs and the average variable costs. Each of these average costs is calculated by dividing the cost by the total units produced.
Marginal costs. One final measure of costs is marginal costs, i. e. extra costs incurred by producing one more unit of output. Marginal costs are an increase in variable costs because fixed costs do not change. Marginal costs allow the business to determine the profitability of increasing or decreasing production by a few units.
Many economic factors affect the supply of a product. The major influence, however, is price because the quantity of a product offered for sale varies with its price. Profit is the key consideration when producers determine a supply schedule.