Business Essentials - CHAPTER 2 - The Environment of Business
deflation:
A period of generally falling prices.
technology:
All the ways firms create value for their constituents.
process:
Any activity that adds value to some input, transforming it into an output for a customer (whether external or internal).
business process management:
Approach by which firms move away from department-oriented organization and toward process-oriented team structures that cut across old departmental boundaries.
stability:
Condition in an economic system in which the amount of money available and the quantity of goods and services produced are growing at about the same rate.
socio-cultural environment:
Conditions including the customs, values, attitudes, and demographic characteristics of the society in which an organization functions.
economic environment:
Conditions of the economic system in which an organization operates.
political-legal environment:
Conditions reflecting the relationship between business and government, usually in the form of government regulation.
external environment:
Everything outside an organization's boundaries that might affect it.
applied R&D:
Focusing specifically on how a technological innovation can be put to use in the making of a product or service that can be sold in the marketplace.
real GDP:
GDP calculated to account for changes in currency values and price changes.
nominal GDP:
GDP measured in current dollars or with all components valued at current prices.
basic (or pure) R&D:
Improving knowledge in an area without a primary focus on whether any discoveries that might occur are immediately marketable.
unemployment:
Level of joblessness among people actively seeking work in an economic system.
productivity:
Measure of economic growth that compares how much a system produces with the resources needed to produce it.
consumer price index (CPI):
Measure of the prices of typical products purchased by consumers living in urban areas.
inflation:
Occurrence of widespread price increases throughout an economic system.
depression:
Particularly severe and long-lasting recession.
business cycle:
Pattern of short-term ups and downs (expansions and contractions) in an economy.
fiscal policies:
Policies by means of which governments collect and spend revenues.
monetary policies:
Policies by means of which the government controls the size of the nation's money supply.
purchasing power parity:
Principle that exchange rates are set so that the prices of similar products in different countries are about the same.
R&D intensity:
R&D spending as a percentage of a company's sales revenue.
core competency:
Skills and resources with which an organization competes best and creates the most value for owners.
vertical integration:
Strategy of owning the means by which an organization produces goods or services.
outsourcing:
Strategy of paying suppliers and distributors to perform certain business processes or to provide needed materials or services.
viral marketing:
Strategy of using the internet and word-of-mouth marketing to spread product information.
organizational boundary:
That which separates the organization from its environment.
technology transfer:
The process of getting a new technology out of the lab and into the marketplace.
budget deficit:
The result of the government spending more in one year than it takes in during that year.
national debt:
The total amount of money that Canada owes its creditors.
balance of trade:
The total of a country's exports (sales to other countries) minus its imports (purchases from other countries).
research and development (R&D):
Those activities that are necessary to provide new products, services, and processes.
standard of living:
Total quantity and quality of goods and services that a country's citizens can purchase with the currency used in their economic system.
aggregate output:
Total quantity of goods and services produced by an economic system during a given period.
gross national product (GNP):
Total value of all goods and services produced by a national economy within a given period regardless of where the factors of production are located.
gross domestic product (GDP):
Total value of all goods and services produced within a given period by a national economy through domestic factors of production.