Institutions that conduct business purely on profit motive
Primary Functions of Banks
Accepting Deposits
Granting of Loans and Advances
Savings Deposit
Encourages saving habit among the public, low interest rate, withdrawals allowed with restrictions, suitable for salary and wage earners, can be single or joint name
Fixed Deposit
Lump sum amount deposited for a specific period, higher interest rate, withdrawals not allowed before expiry
Current Deposit
Operated by businessmen, freely allowed withdrawals, no interest paid, service charges, overdraft facility
Recurring Deposit
Operated by salaried persons and petty traders, periodic deposits, withdrawals allowed after a certain period, higher interest rate
Types of Loans and Advances
Overdraft
Cash Credits
Loans
Discounting Bill of Exchange
Secondary Functions of Banks
Agency Functions
General Utility Functions
Agency Functions
Bank acts as an agent of its customers such as trustees, executors, advisers and administrators
Agency Functions
Transfer of Funds
Collection of Cheques
Periodic Payments
Portfolio Management
Periodic Collections
General Utility Functions
Issue of Drafts and Letter of Credits
Locker Facility
Underwriting of Shares
Dealing in Foreign Exchange
Project Reports
Social Welfare Programs
Corporations
The most common form of business organizations, chartered by a state and given many legal rights as an entity separate from its owners, viewed as legal persons
Corporations
Limited liability of its owners, issuance of shares of easily transferable stock, existence as a going concern
Key Responsibilities and Functions of Corporations
Selecting a CEO
Providing Continuity
Managing Resources Effectively
Increasing Profits
Social Responsibilities
Cooperatives
Autonomous associations of persons united voluntarily to meet their common economic, social, and cultural needs and aspirations through a jointly-owned and democratically-controlled enterprise
Trade Unions
Organizations based on membership of employees in various trades, occupations, and professions, whose major focus is the representation of its members at the workplace and in the wider society
Functions of Trade Unions
Militant Functions
Fraternal Functions
Social Functions
Political Functions
Reciprocity
Exchange of goods or labor between individuals in a community
Transfer
Redistribution of income that is not matched by the actual exchange of goods and services
Redistribution
Combination of the features of transfer and reciprocity, where the economic exchange involves the collection of goods from members, the pooling of these goods, and then the redistribution of these goods among the same members
Market system
Allows the free flow of goods between and among private individuals and firms with very limited participation from the government
Invisible hand
Integrates both the idea of self-interest and competition in the market place, which brings about a socially optimum result even in the absence of government intervention
Market
A mechanism and not necessarily a place that brings buyers and sellers together for the desired transaction
Prices
Serve as a signaling device to indicate the value of a good or service to both the buyers and the sellers and guide their actions on whether they should buy or not or supply more or less
Specialization
Critical to the market economy, allows for efficient production of goods and services
Division of labor
Human specialization, contributes to efficiency by taking advantage of the differences in every person's abilities
Barter
The traditional means of exchange, swapping of goods for goods
Market transaction
Involves parties who sell their goods and services in exchange for cash from consumers
Free-market economy
The price of a good or service is determined by the forces of supply and demand
State regulation
The state, through the government, comes in to regulate prices to protect the interest of the consuming public
Minimum wage
The below which no employer would allow paying their workers
Command economy
The government takes over the functions of the market in producing and distributing essential goods and services
Taxes
Compulsory contributions to government coffers, normally levied on the worker's income, business profits, and consumption of goods and services, to raise revenues for government spending
Market and economic organizations
Corporate environmental users
Financial institutions such as banks
Corporations
Stock corporations
Nonstock corporations
Cooperatives
Trade or Labor Unions
Civil society organizations
Academic and Science-Based Organizations
Mass Media
Religious Organizations
Nongovernmental Organizations
People's Organizations
International organization
An organization established by a treaty or other instrument governed by international law and possessing its own international legal personality
Transnational advocacy group
Self-organized advocacy groups undertaking voluntary actions across state borders in pursuit of what they deem the wider public interest
Development agencies
Formed as a response to crises like war damage and industrial decline, to stimulate economic development
Kinship
Social institution that refers to relations formed between members of society