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67  Business  and  finance


                    Banks  and  businesses

                    Most  businesses  need  to  borrow  money  to  finance  (=  pay  for)  investments  (=  things  they
                    need  to  buy  in  order  to  help  the  company,  e.g.  machines).  The  money  they  borrow  from  the
                    bank  is  called  a  loan,  and  on  this  loan  they  have  to  pay  interest,  e.g.  if  you  borrow  £1,000
                    and  the  interest  rate  is  10%,  then  you  have  to  pay  back  £1,000,  plus  £100  in  interest.

                    Businesses  and  profit
                    One  of  the  main  aims/objectives  (=  the  things  that  you  hope  to  do/achieve)  of  a  company  is
                    to  make  a  profit  (=  earn/receive  more  money  than  it  spends)  (#  make  a  loss).  If  a  company
                    does  not  make  a  profit  or  a  loss,  it  breaks  even.
                    Most  companies  are  happy  if  they  can  break  even  in  their  first  year  of  business.
                    Companies  receive  money  from  selling  their  products  —  this  money  is  called  the  turnover.
                    The  money  that  they  spend  is  called  the  expenditure  (fml).  They  spend  money  on  these
                    things:  raw  materials  (=  materials  in  their  natural  state  used  to  make  something  else,  e.g.
                    coal  and  oil  are  important  raw  materials  used  to  make  plastics);  labour  (=  employees);
                    overheads  (=  necessary  costs  for  a  company,  e.g.  rent  for  buildings,  electricity,  telephone)

                    Rise  and  fall
                    Business  people  often  need  to  talk  about  the  movement  of  sales,  prices,  interest  rates,  profit
                    and  loss,  etc.  Here  are  some  of  the  words  used  to  describe  these  trends  (=  movements):
                           2                      ss                JS
                    rise  /  go  up  /  increase   rise  slowly   rise  sharply
                                           (also  gradually)
                           ™,                     Ne                 \
                       fall  /  go  down     fall  slowly         go  down
                      (‘decrease’  is  less                        sharply
                    common  as  a  verb)
                    Note:  rise,  increase,  and  fall  are  also  used  as  nouns:  a  slow  rise  in  interest  rates,  a  steady
                    increase  in  sales,  a  sharp  fall  in  profits,  a  dramatic  (=  sharp)  rise  in  inflation.  We  can  also
                    use  be  up/down:  prices  are  up  by  10%;  profits  are  down  by  £2m.

                    Businesses  and  the  economy
                    In  order  to  grow/expand  (=  get  bigger)  and  thrive/prosper  (=  do  well  /  be  successful),  many
                    companies  want  or  need  the  following:
                    low  inflation,  so  prices  do  not  go  up
                    low  interest  rates,  so  the  company  can  borrow  money  without  paying a  lot  of  interest
                    economic  and  political  stability  (=  things  remain  steady  and  stable  and  there  are  no  sudden
                      changes  in  the  economic  and  political  situation)
                    a  healthy/strong  economy  (=  in  good  condition),  and  not  an  economy  in  recession  (=  in  a
                      period  of  reduced  and  slow  business  activity)
                    tax  cuts  (=  tax  reductions  /  lower  taxes),  so  they  can  keep  more  of  their  profit.  This  often
                      depends  on  government  expenditure,  e.g.  The  government  will  not  be  able  to  reduce
                      taxes  if  public  expenditure  continues  to  rise.

         138        English  Vocabulary  in  Use  (pre-intermediate  &  intermediate)
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