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Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies Key Terms

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Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies Key Terms Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies Key Terms Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies Key Terms

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  • October 9, 2024
  • 26
  • 2024/2025
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  • Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies Key Terms
  • Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies Key Terms
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Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies Key
Terms
CHAPTER 1 - BUSINESS ACTIVITY - ANS



Business - ANS An organisation which produces goods and services.



Need - ANS A need is a good or service essential for living.



Want - ANS A want is a good or service which people would like to have, but which is not essential for
living. People's wants are unlimited.



Economic problem - ANS There exist unlimited wants but limited resources to produce the goods and
services to satisfy those wants, this creates scarcity.



Scarcity - ANS Scarcity is the lack of sufficient products to fulfill the total wants of the population.



Factors of production - ANS Factors of production are those resources needed to produce goods or
services. There are four factors of production and they are in limited supply.



(factor of production) Land - ANS Land is the term used to cover all of the natural resources provided by
nature and includes fields, forests, oil, gas, metals and other resources.



(factor of production) Labour - ANS Labour is the term used to describe the number of people available
to make products.



(factor of production) Capital - ANS Capital is the finance, machinery and equipment needed for the
manufacture of goods.

,(factor of production) Enterprise - ANS Enterprise is the skill, and risk-taking ability of the person who
brings the factors of production together to produce a good or a service. For example, the owner of a
business. These people are called entrepreneurs.



Opportunity cost - ANS Opportunity cost is the next best alternative given up by choosing another item.



Specialisation - ANS Specialisation occurs when people and businesses concentrate on what they are
best at.



Division of labour - ANS Division of labour is when the production process is split up into different tasks
and each worker performs one of these tasks. It is a form of specialisation.



Added value - ANS Added value is the difference between the selling price of a product and the cost of
bought in materials and components.



CHAPTER 2 - CLASSIFICATION OF BUSINESS - ANS



Primary sector - ANS The primary sector of industry extracts and uses the natural resources of the earth
to produce raw materials used by other businesses



Secondary sector - ANS The secondary sector of industry manufactures goods using raw materials
provided by the primary sector.



Tertiary sector - ANS The tertiary sector of industry provides services to consumers and the other
sectors of industry.



De-industrialisation - ANS De-industrialisation occurs when there is a decline in the importance of the
secondary, manufacturing sector of industry in a country.

, Mixed economy - ANS A mixed economy has both a private sector and a public sector.



Private sector - ANS Businesses not owned by the government.



Public sector - ANS Government owned and controlled businesses and organisations.



CHAPTER 3 - ENTERPRISE, BUSINESS GROWTH AND SIZE - ANS



Entrepreneur - ANS An entrepreneur is a person who organises, operates and takes the risk for a new
business venture.



Business plan - ANS A business plan is a document containing the business objectives and important
details about the operations, finance and owners of the new business.



Value - ANS How much something is worth.



Business size - ANS Measured by: number of employees; value of output; value of sales; value of capital
employed.



Capital employed - ANS Capital employed is the total value of capital used in the business.



Internal growth - ANS Internal growth occurs when a business expands its existing operations.



External growth - ANS External growth is when a business takes over or merges with another business.



Integration - ANS Integration is when one firm is integrated into another one.

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