When firms produce at a point which derives the greatest profit
Sales revenue maximisation
When firms produce at a point which derives the greatest revenue
Sales volume maximisation
When firms produce at a point where they sell as many of their goods and services as possible without making a loss
Growth maximisation
When firms aim to increase the size of their market share, for example through mergers
Utility maximisation
The aim of tying to achieve the highest level of personal satisfaction possible from managing a business
Profit satisficing
When a firm earns just enough profit to keep its shareholders happy
Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
When firms take responsibility for consequences on the environment and behave more ethically
Principle-agent problem
Where the agent makes decisions on behalf of the principle; the agent should maximise the benefits of the principle but have the temptation of maximising their own benefits
Conglomerate integration
The merger of firms with no common connection
Horizontal integration
The merger of firms in the same industry at the same stage of production
Vertical integration
When a firm merges or takes over another firm in the same industry, but at a different stage of production
Diversification
When firms grow by expanding their production through increasing output, widening their customer base, developing a new product or diversifying their range
Profit maximisation
Output where MR = MC
Revenue maximisation
When MR = 0
Sales maximisation
Output where AC = AR
Normal profits
Productive efficiency
Producing goods and services at the lowest possible average cost.
Allocative efficiency
Allocative efficiency refers to the optimal allocation of resources to maximize societal welfare.
output where price = marginal cost
Corporate social responsibility
Where a business includes the public interest in its decision making.
Adopts an ethical code that accepts responsibility for the impact of its activities on stakeholders
Revenue maximisation
Attempt to maximise sales revenue
where MR = 0
satisfying is where an economic agent aims to perform satisfactory rather than to a maximum level, in order to be able to pursue other goals, such as leisure time
Growth maximisation?
firms may have their target to achieve growth in the short run, rather than prodit, in order to gain a large market share and then dominate the market in the long run.
Can be measured by quantity of sales, number of employees or percentage market share
Profit maximising level of output
Where MC = MR
Social welfare
When a business aims to make society better through its actions