Markets = where buyers and sellers agree to
buy or sell at a price that makes the
transaction worthwhile
Exchange = selling produce for money
Specialisation = creating products we can
make and sell most efficiently
Competition = businesses strive against each other to
attract more customers by keeping prices down and
making the product more appealing. More sellers =
more competition = lower prices
Costs = payments to get product into market
wages
premises
input costs
raw materials
components
inputs from wholesalers
business rates
interest
energy rates
Sales revenue = price x quantity sold
Profit = Revenue - Cost
Investment = spending now
to generate future income
capital equipment such as machinery,
computers, veichles, research,
development, training
Scarcity = when people want to
buy more of a product than there
is being produced
Incentives = rewards to induce
certain behaviour e.g. profit
Supply = quantity of a product produced
Factors that affect supply
Cost of production
New tech
Cost falls, price
falls, supply rises
government policies e.g. VAT
Good prices
Demand = quantity of
product/service
customers want to buy
Factors that affect demand
Fall in prices
incomes
substitutes
products which replace each other
Price of one product rises,
demand for it's substitute rises
Complements
products that go well together
price of one product rises,
demand for complement will fall
Tastes + fashions
affected by advertising
population
if growing,
demand rises
Inferior goods = those that
people buy more of when
their incomes fall
Normal goods = those
that are not inferior
Cost of production = payments
needed to create a products +
make it available in the market
wages, premises, capital equipment, inputs etc
Process innovation = developing
completely new products
uses new tech to produce at a lower cost
Technological change = uses
new scientific knowledge +
improved engineering techniques
to create new products
Market orientation =
business focus of
customer needs
Product orientation =
focus on product,
price + promo
Demand curve =
relationship between price
+ quantity that customers
want to buy
Supply curve = relationship
between price + quantity that
producers want to sell
Equilibrium price = price
both buyers and sellers
are satisfied with