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Business Information and Economic Systems

Presentations | English

A business is an entity that makes money by offering goods and services that customers want. Consumers' demands are met by businesses offering medical care, automobiles, and a variety of other goods and services. Laptops, for example, are real goods produced by corporations. Business services are intangible goods that can't be held, touched, or stored. Services are provided by doctors, lawyers, hairstylists, car washes, and airlines. Businesses also provide machinery, resale goods, computers, and dozens of other commodities to other organisations such as hospitals, stores, and governments. Countries and governments use economic systems to distribute resources and trade products and services. They are used to manage labour, capital, entrepreneurs, physical resources, and information resources, which are the five components of production. These production elements, in common terms, include a company's personnel and money, as well as access to entrepreneurs, or people who wish to run enterprises or start their own businesses. Production includes the physical materials and resources needed to run a business, as well as the data and expertise that organisations rely on to succeed. The utilisation of these characteristics is viewed differently in different economic systems.

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Lumens

97.00

Lumens

PPTX (194 Slides)

Business Information and Economic Systems

Presentations | English