agenda: fri 2/24 & mon 2/27 review market quiz qod #16: i’m the boss of me! i’m lovin’ it!...
TRANSCRIPT
AGENDA: Fri 2/24 & Mon 2/27•Review Market Quiz•QOD #16: I’m the boss of me!•I’m lovin’ it!•Business Firms (Computer lab next class)
•HW: pg 155 #1-10
QOD #16: I’m the boss of me! Explain why you would or would not want
to run your own business. Regardless of your first response, assume
you are going to start your own business. Would you rather buy an existing business or start from scratch? Explain.
What products/services would your business sell and why?
How would your guarantee profit for your business?
History of McDonald’s
Take notes on a T-chart. Left side = History events Right side = Problems encountered Summary at the bottom discussing following
questions:1. How would you rate Ray Kroc as an entrepreneur?2. How would you rate Ray Kroc based on his
character?3. Would you want to be friends w/ Ray Kroc?
Why do business firms exist?
People working together can produce more than individuals working alone.
Shirking: putting forth less than the agreed upon effort How does one person shirking
impact others? Monitor: coordinates team
production & seeks to reduce shirking (Can hire/fire) Monitoring the monitor
incentives – reward for doing your job
Residual Claimant: receives excess revenue after costs (profits) as income profit sharing bonus
Sole Proprietorship business owned by one
individual makes all the decisions receives profits or losses legally responsible for firms
debts
Advantages of Sole Proprietorships
Easy to form and dissolve All decision making power
with the sole proprietor Profit of the company only
taxed once personal income tax
Disadvantages of Sole Proprietorships
Unlimited liability you may lose your house
because your business fails Limited ability to raise funds
for business expansion borrowing funds getting harder
Limited Life – business usually ends with death/retirement Employees like to work for
companies that have permanency
Partnerships owned by 2 or more co-owners or partners
who share profits and are legally responsible for any debts incurred by the firm. like sole proprietorship with more than one owner
Advantages of partnership
Specialization: As one person is better at public relations, while another person is better at artwork, each can work at the specialty they are best suited
Taxation: Only personal income taxes apply- Corporate taxes do not apply to the owners in the partnership.
Disadvantages of Partnerships
Liability is unlimited- General Partners: These
partners are in charge of managing the firm; the have unlimited liability even if debt is incurred by other partners
Limited Partners: The liability is restricted to the how much he/she invested in the firm; yet, they do not participate in the management sometimes called silent
partners
Decision Making problems- Some people might disagree on
certain situations
Corporations
A legal entity that can operate business in its own name in the same way that an individual does
It is owned by the stockholders who buy shares of stock (assets) in the corporation. Stockholders- People who buy shares if stock in a corporation. stock represents a claim on the assets Assets- Anything of value to which the firm has legal claim.
The law treats a corporation like a person. Example: 2,000 people want to construct a corporation called
ABC. Suppose ABC is in debt of $5 million and it only has $2 million to pay the debt. Legally, the remainder of the debt is the corporation that owes the money, not the owners of the corporation, because the owners have limited liability.
Corporations
Advantages Limited liability-
stockholders cannot be sued for the corporation’s failure to pay its debts.
Continue to exist even if one or more owners sell their shares or die.
Usually able to raise large sums of money by selling stock.
Disadvantages Corporations are subject
to double taxations US federal corporate
income tax ( 39.3% rate)
and dividends are taxed
through personal income tax.
Corporations are difficult to set up.
Country / Corporate income tax rates - 2008
Japan – 39.5United States – 39.3France – 34.4Belgium – 34.0Canada – 33.5Luxembourg – 30.4Germany – 30.2Australia – 30.0New Zealand – 30.0Spain – 30.0Mexico – 28.0Norway – 28.0Sweden – 28.0United Kingdom – 28.0Italy – 27.5
Korea – 27.5Portugal – 26.5Finland – 26.0Netherlands – 25.5Austria – 25.0Denmark – 25.0Greece – 25.0Switzerland – 21.2Czech Republic – 21.0Hungary – 20.0Turkey – 20.0Poland – 19.0Slovak Republic – 19.0Iceland – 15.0Ireland – 12.5
Typical Corporate Structure
Stockholders
Board of Directors
Secretary (COE) President (CEO) Treasurer (CFO)
Vice-President Vice-President Vice-President
All other Employees
Corporate structure pg 150 Board of Directors (or
sometimes called board of governors)-
decision making body that decides on corporate policies and goals
elected by the stock/ shareholders of the company.
The company is publicly owned.
BOD do not work for the company but make decisions on behalf of the share holders or the investors
CEO- Chief executive officer (Pres), CFO, COO (VP)
The famous Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook.com is now estimated to be worth between $3 and $5 billion.
How to form a Corporation
1. Promoters advertise the prospectus2. Articles of incorporations3. Corporate charter4. Organizational meeting
• Board of Directors – decision-making body decides corporate policies and goals
• Bylaws – internal rules of the corporation• Corporate officers
AGENDA: Tues 2/28 & Wed 2/29•QOD #17: Business Start-up•Review Homework (pg 155 #1-10)•Business Firms (cont.)•Business Start-up Games•HW: Play your own Game
• Study for Ch 6 Quiz• Progress Report Signed• Permission Slip for Field Trip (if attending)
Other business structures Cooperatives- co-op a business that provides a
service to its members and in most cases is not run for profit Exceptions: non-cooperatives (See next slide!) Farming coops- Land O’Lakes, Sunkist, Ocean Spray, Welch Credit unions, health care & stores including REI
Franchises – a contract by which a firm (usually a corporation) lets a person or group use its name and sell its goods or services. In return, the person or group must make certain payments and meet certain requirements. McDonald’s, Chipotle, Pizza Hut, Rubio’s, Panera Bread, 7-
11, etc.
The truth about cooperatives
Share in the earnings. Some people talk about non-cooperative firms operating "for profit" while cooperatives operate "at cost." This isn't totally accurate. Most cooperatives generate earnings. They differ from non-cooperative firms in how they allocate and distribute their earnings.
A non-cooperative firm retains its earnings for its own account, or perhaps pays part of them out to shareholders as dividends, based on the amount of stock each investor owns. In a cooperative, earnings are usually allocated among the members on the basis of the amount of business each did with the cooperative during the year. A cooperative that has net earnings of $20,000 during the year and conducts 2 percent of its business with Ms. Jones. She is allocated $400 of those earnings ($20,000 x .02).
References
http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rbs/pub/cir55/cir55rpt.htm Arnold, R (2001). Economics in our times, 2nd edition.
Chicago, IL: National Textbook Company . http://computercleaning.files.wordpress.com/2008/03/
mcdonalds.jpg http://micpohling.wordpress.com/2008/08/07/oecd-
corporate-income-tax-rate-2008/