Title: Azerbaijan State Economic University
1Azerbaijan State Economic University
2Lesson 1What is economics?
- Economics is a vast subject and precise
definitions are usually very complex, it is not a
difficult matter to give a simple and sensible
answer to the basic question. Economics is
essentially a study of the ways in which people
apply their knowledge, skills, and efforts to the
gifts of nature in order to satisfy their
material wants. - Economics limits itself to the study of the
material aspects of life, and while it is true
that man cannot live by bread alone, it is
equally true that he cannot live without it. An
underlying problem in economics is that of
survival and we must examine how people have
solved or are trying to solve this problem. In
the more advanced countries this may seem a very
remote problemfew people are conscious of a life
or death struggle for existence. In many other
countries, however, the continuity of human
existence is by no means assuredstarvation is a
very real prospect for millions of human beings. - The Indian peasants have an extremely low
standard of living, yet, left completely to their
own devices, they can survive. Such people have
the abilities to sustain life without outside
assistance. A large percentage of the human race
still lives in very small selfsufficient peasant
communities. These people experience great
poverty, but they can provide on an individual
basis, for their own survival. They have a degree
of economic independence. - If we turn to the inhabitants of New York,
London, or any other great metropolitan area we
must observe the opposite situation a high
standard of living together with an extreme
economic dependence. The inhabitants of cities
are totally incapable of providing for themselves
directly, the means of their survival. They could
not feed themselves, or build their own houses.
Such people depend, each and every day of their
lives, on the efforts and cooperation of many
thousands of specialist workers. In
industrialized societies a high standard of
living is possible only if the organized
cooperation of large numbers of people can be
guaranteed. In the economically developed
countries we are rich, not as individuals, but
only as members of a complex economic
organization.
3Vocabulary
- apply (v.) - ?????? ?????, ???????? ?????
- completely ????????, ??????????
- depend on (v.) - ????? ?????
- directly - ??????????
- effort ????
- equally - ???? ????????, ???????
- essentially - ??????? ??????
- examine (v.) - ??????, ????????, ??????? ?????
- inhabitant - ?????
- means - ?????????
- opposite - ???, ???????
- poverty ?????????
- provide (v.) ????? ?????
- remote - ????, ?????????? ??????? ???????
- satisfy (v.) wants - ???????? ??????
- self-sufficient - ???????? ???????? ????? ???????
- to solve a problem - ???????? ???? ?????
- skill - ???????, ???????, ??????????
- standard of living - ??????? ?????
4Answer the Questions
- 1. What does Economics study?
- 2. Why aren't the inhabitants of big cities
economically independent? - 3. What is an underlying problem of Economics?
- 4. What categories of people can survive without
outside assistance? - 5. Why do they have a very low standard of living?
5?????????? ?????? ????????? ??????????? ?????
???????? ?????
- a) to look at b) to look out
c) to look up to - d) to look for f) to look after
g) To look up - h) to look through i) to look down on j)
to look forward to - k) to look to l) to look into
m) to look over - The police the past record of the suspect.
- the drawer to see if I could find my keys.
- The house the south.
- Weve always our parents.
- Could you help me to my glasses, please
- We are seeing them again.
- Why is it wrong to those who are less fortunate
than ourselves? - I like to walk out and the stars at night.
- for the cars turning in your direction.
- Who is going to your correspondence while you
are away? - the words in the dictionary, and try to
remember their spelling. - Ill your carelessness this time, but be more
careful in future.
6Lesson 2What is macroeconomics?
- The word macroeconomics means economics in the
large. The macroeconomists concerns are with
such global questions as total production, total
employment, the rate of change of overall prices,
the rate of economic growth, and so on.
Macroeconomists measure overall economic
activity analyze the determinants of such
activity by the use of macroeconomic theory
forecast future economic activity and attempt to
formulate policy responses designed to reconcile
forecasts with target values of production,
employment, and prices. - An important task of macroeconomics is to develop
ways of aggregating the values of the economic
activities of individuals and firms into
meaningful totals. To this end such concepts as
gross domestic product (GDP), national income,
personal income, and personal disposable income
have been developed. Macroeconomic analysis
attempts to explain how the magnitudes of the
principal macroeconomic variables are determined
and how they interact. And through the
development of theories of the business cycle and
economic growth, macroeconomics helps to explain
the dynamics of how these aggregates move over
time. - Macroeconomics is concerned with such major
policy issues as the attainment and maintenance
of full employment and price stability.
Considerable effort must first be expended to
determine what goals could be achieved.
Experience teaches that it would not be possible
to eliminate inflation entirely without inducing
a major recession combined with high
unemployment. Similarly, an over ambitions
employment target would produce labor shortages
and wage inflation. - During the 1960s it was believed that
unemployment could be reduced to 4 percent of the
labor force without causing inflation. More
recent experience suggests that reduction of
unemployment to 5.5 percent of the labor force is
about as well as we can do.
7Vocabulary
- total production - ????? ????????????
- total employment - ????? ?????????
- the rate of change of overall prices - ???
??????????? ??????? ????? - the rate of economic growth - ???????? ???????
????? - broad aggregate ????? ????????
- consumers ?????????????
- individual households - ????? ?????????????
- layoffs - ????? ?????????
- economic activity - ???????? ?????????
- determinants - ????????????
- to reconcile - 1) ????????? ?????? 2)
?????????? - target - 1) ?????? 2) ????, ????????
- value ?????
- meaningful totals - ?????? ?????????
- national income - ????? ?????
- personal disposable income - ??????? ?????????
????? ????? ????? ????? - business cycle ???????? ???????
- attainment ?????????
- maintenance ????????
8Vocabulary
- meaningful totals - ?????? ?????????
- national income - ????? ?????
- personal disposable income - ??????? ?????????
????? ????? ????? ????? - business cycle ???????? ???????
- attainment ?????????
- maintenance ????????
- price stability ?????? ?????????
- to eliminate inflation entirely ????????????
???????? ?????? ????????? - induce (v.) ???????????????
- recession 1) ?????????? 2) ?????? ????????
- labor shortages - ???? ?????????? ???????????
- labor force ???? ???????
- reduction of unemployment- ?????????? ???????????
9Answer the Questions
- 1. What are the concerns of the macroeconomist?
- 2. What does the word macroeconomics mean?
- 3. What is the difference between the questions
asked by macroeconomists and microeconomics? - 4. What does macroeconomic analysis attempt to
explain? - 5. What is, according to the text, the important
task of macroeconomist? - 6. What are the concepts of macroeconomics?
- 7. What are the most important theories of
macroeconomics? - 8. What is said about the correlation between the
inflation and unemployment?
10?????????? ?????? ????????? ??????????? ?????
???????? ?????
- a) out e) back i) in
- b) off f) together k) ones foot in it
- c) up with g) down l) on
- d) up h) aside m) before
- If you put the boy all those tall children, he
looks even shorter. - She put her sewing when the telephone rang.
- Its going to rain. Wed better put our things
and go indoors. - Put the book where you found it when you have
finished reading it. - Your suggestion will be put the board of
directors at the next meeting. - He put his heavy suitcase on the ground and
rested for a few minutes. - May I put a word or two?
11Lesson 3Microeconomics
- The word "micro" means small, and microeconomics
means economics in the small. The optimizing
behavior of individual units such as households
and firms provides the foundation for
microeconomics. Microeconomists may investigate
individual markets or even the economy as a
whole, but their analyses are derived from the
aggregation of the behavior of individual units.
Microeconomic theory is used extensively in many
areas of applied economics. For example, it is
used in industrial organization, labor economics,
international trade, cost-benefit analysis, and
many other economic subfields. The tools and
analyses of microeconomics provide a common
ground, and even a language, for economists
interested in a wide range of problems. - At one time there was a sharp distinction in
both methodology and subject matter between
microeconomics and macroeconomics. The
methodological distinction became somewhat
blurred during the 1970s as more and more
macroeconomic analyses were built upon
microeconomic foundations. Nonetheless, major
distinctions remain between the two major
branches of economics. For example,
microeconomist is interested in the determination
of individual prices and relative prices (i.e.,
exchange ratios between goods), where as the
macroeconomist is interested more in the general
price level and its change over time.
Optimization plays a key role in microeconomics.
The consumer is assumed to maximize utility or
satisfaction subject to the constraints imposed
by income or income earning power. The producer
is assumed to maximize profit or minimize cost
subject to the technological constraints under
which the firm operates. Optimization of social
welfare sometimes is the criterion for the
determination of public policy. - Opportunity cost is an important concept in
microeconomics. Many courses of action are valued
in terms of what is sacrificed so that they might
be undertaken. For example, the opportunity cost
of a public project is the value of the
additional goods that the private sector would
have produced with the resources used for the
public project.
12Vocabulary
- behavior - ????????, ????? ??????
- investigate (v.) - ???????? ???????
- to be derived - ????????,
- extensively - ??? ?????, ??? ?????
- applied economics - ??????? ????????????
- economic subfields - ?????????????? ????????
???????? - distinction ????
- subject matter - ???????? ???????
- blur (v.) - ???????? ??????
- remain (v.) - ??????
- exchange ratios - ???????? ??????
- optimization ????????????
- utility ?????????
- satisfaction - ???? ?????
- constraints - ???????????
- criterion ?????????
- public policy - ??????? ???????
- opportunity cost ?????????? ???????
- to be sacrificed - ?????? ????????
13 ?????????? ?????? ????? ????? ??????? ?????
- 1. The company adopted an environmental policy
in order to reduce the damage that may from its
various activities. - a) result b)
cause c) due - 2. We are proud of the fact that last year 25 of
the company's total waste . . . - a) was recycling b) was
recycled c) has been recycled - 3. Many companies do research to . . . ways of
reducing air and water pollution. - a) protest b)
develop c) contribute - 4. An environmental group organized a . . .
against dumping of waste into the river. - a) supply b)
measure c) protest - 5. The firm attempted its nearest competitor.
- a) taking over b) to take
over c) take over - 6. We had to delay . . . the new product.
- a) launching b) to launch
c) launch - 7. Every year we make a . . . to a well known
wild life association.
14Lesson 4The vision of Adam Smith
- The 1776 the Scottish moral philosopher Adam
Smith published the first edition of his
monumental Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of
the Wealth of Nations, and economics soon became
an independent science. Smith lived in an age
when the right of rulers to impose arbitrary and
oppressive restrictions on the political and
economic liberties of their subjects was coming
under strong attack throughout the civilized
world. As other men of that time were arguing
that democracy could and should replace autocracy
in the sphere of politics, so Adam Smith argued
that laissezfaire could and should replace
government direction and regulation in economics. - Smith opened minds to the existence of a
grand design in economic affairs similar to
that which Newton had earlier shown to exist in
the realm of physical phenomena. The impact of
Smiths ideas upon his contemporaries was
widespread and immediate. As one modern scientist
observed Before Adam Smith there had been much
economic discussion with him we reach the stage
of discussing economics. - That Smiths vision of the economy should
ever have been considered original might seem
strange to modern minds, but that would be
because we now see economic phenomena in the
light of his conception. As two leading scholars
recently remarked, The immediate common sense
answer to the question, What will an economy
motivated by greed and controlled by a large
number of different agents look like? is
probably There will be chaos. That is certainly
the answer that would have been given by most of
Smiths contemporaries-before they read his book.
The greatness of Smiths accomplishment lies
precisely in the fact that he unlike his
predecessors, was able to think away extraneous
complications and so perceive an order in
economic affairs that common sense did not
reveal. -
15The vision of Adam Smith
- It is one thing, of course, to say that Smiths
conception of economic phenomena is original
another to suggest that it corresponds to
contemporary experience. According to Smith,
society in its economic aspect is a vast
concourse of people held together by the desire
of each to exchange goods and services with
others. Each person is concerned directly only to
further his own self-interest, but in pursuing
that aim each is led by an invisible hand to
promote the interests of others. As a
consequence, the natural forces of market
competitionthe result of each person attempting
to buy cheap and sell dearcome into play to
establish equality between demand and supply for
each commodity at rates of exchange (prices). - The economic system (so Smith and later
writers argued) is an essentially self regulating
mechanism that, like the human body, tends
naturally toward a state of equilibrium if left
to itself.
16Vocabulary
- arbitrary 1) ???????, ?????????? ??????? 2)
??????? - to impose ??????? ????? ????????
- restriction ???????????
- to argue ???????? ?????
- significance - ?????????
- to conceive ??????? ????????
- realm ????
- impact - ?????
- contemporary ??????
- predecessor - ????f
- perceive (v.) - ????? ?????
- reveal (v.)- ????? ?????
- desire - ?????
- forbidden - ??????? ???????
- acquire (v.) - ???? ?????
- fraud - ???????????, ???????
- stealth - ???????
- attempt (v.) ???? ?????
- obtain (v.) ???? ?????
17Answer the Questions
- 1. When did economics, according to the text,
become an independent science? - 2. In what age did Adam Smith live?
- 3. What was Smiths point of view on the role of
government in economics? - 4. Why does the author refer to Smiths work as a
political tract? - 5. What was Smiths great "accomplishment"?
- 6. What, according to the author, gave the book
"lasting significance"? - 7. What was Smith's vision of "society", each
person, economic system?
18Lesson 5Market economies
- A society may attempt to deal with the basic
economic problems by allowing free play to what
are known as market forces. The state plays
little or no part in economic activity. Most of
the people in the non-communist world earn and
spend in societies which are still fundamentally
market economies. The market system of economic
organization is also commonly described as a free
enterprise or laissez-faire, or capitalism
system. We shall use all these terms to stand for
a market economy. Strictly speaking the pure
market of laissez-faire system has never existed.
Whenever there has been some form of political
organization, the political authority has
exercised some economic functions. It is useful,
however, to consider the way in which a true
market system would operate because it provides
us with a simplified model, and by making
modifications to the model we can approach the
more realistic situations step by step. - The framework of a market or capitalism
system contains six essential features. They are - private property
- freedom of choice and enterprise
- self-interest as the dominating motive
- competition
- a reliance on the price system
- a very limited role for government
19Vocabulary
- according to ??????? ??????
- appearance ????? ????
- argue (v.) ???????? ?????
- arise (v.) ??????? ??????
- bargain (v.) ???????? ??????
- backward ???? ??????
- broad ?????
- carry out (v.) ?????? ????????
- custom ????
- determine (v.) ????? ?????
- develop (v.) ??????? ????????
- devise (v.) ??????? ????????
- distant ??????
- distribution ?????
- division ???????
- exist (v.) ?????? ?????
- equal pay ??????? ??????
- fairly ???????
- familiar ?????
20Answer the Questions
- 1. How are the production problems (What? and
How?) solved in traditional societies? - 2. What does economic society present itself for
an economist? - 3. What broad categories can different economic
systems are grouped into? - 4. What methods of production and distribution do
people in traditional societies use? - 5. What part does tradition play in advanced
countries?
21Lesson 6 Evolution of the marketing concept
- Until the early twentieth century, business was
directed mainly toward the production of goods.
Consumer demand for manufactured products was so
great that manufacturers could almost sell
everything they produced. Business had a strong
production orientation, in which emphasis was
placed on increased output and production
efficiency. Marketing was limited to taking
orders and distributing finished goods. - In the 1920s, production began to catch up
with demand. Now producers had to direct their
efforts toward selling goods to consumers whose
basic wants were already satisfied. This new
sales orientation was characterized by increased
advertising, enlarged sales forces, and selling
techniques. Manufacturers produced the goods they
expected consumers to want, and marketing
consisted primarily of taking orders and
delivering goods, along with personal selling and
advertising. - During the 1950s, however, business people
started to realize that even enormous advertising
expenditures and the most thoroughly proven sales
techniques were not enough. Something else was
needed if products were to sell as well as
expected. It was then that business managers
recognized that they were not primarily producers
or sellers but rather were in business of
satisfying customers wants. Marketers realized
that the best approach was to adopt a customer
orientation-in other words, the organization had
to first determine what customers need and then
develop goods and services to fill those
particular needs. - This marketing concept is a business
philosophy that involves the entire organization
in the process of satisfying customers needs and
achieving the organizations goals. All
functional areas-research and development,
production, finance, human resources, and, of
course, marketing are viewed as playing a role in
providing customer satisfaction. - Finally, the firm must always obtain
marketing information-this time regarding the
effectiveness of its efforts. Can the product be
improved? Is it being promoted properly? Is it
being distributed efficiently? Is the price too
high? The firm must be ready to modify any or all
of its marketing activities on the basis of his
feedback.
22Vocabulary
- Marketing concept ????????? ????????????
- Assess (v.) ??????? ?????, ???????????????
- Satisfy (v.) ???? ?????, ?????????? ??????
- Production orientation ???????? ??????????,
?????? - Production efficiency ?????????? ????????????
- Finished goods ??? ??????
- Catch (v.) up with demand ??????? ??????????
- Basic wants ??????? ??????????
- Sales forces ????? ?????????
- Sales techniques ????? ?????????
- Customers wants ??????????????? ???????????
- Customer satisfaction ??????????????? ????
????????
23Answer the Questions
- How was marketing limited untill the early
twentieth century? - When did production begin to catch up with
demand? - Did advertising play a certain role at that time?
- When did business managers recognize that they
were not primarily producers or sellers but
rather were in the business of satisfying
customers wants? - What are the disadvantages of Production
Orientation as compared to Customer Orientation?
24Lesson 7Major Marketing Functions
- Exchange Functions All companies such as
manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers buy and
sell to market their merchandise. - Buying includes such functions as obtaining raw
materials to make products, knowing how much
merchandise to keep on hand, and selecting
suppliers. - Selling creates possession utility by
transferring the title of a product from seller
to customer. - Physical Distribution Functions These functions
involve the flow of goods from producers to
customers. Transportation and storage provide
time utility, and place utility, and require
careful management of inventory. - Transporting involves selecting a mode of
transport that provides an acceptable delivery
schedule at an acceptable price. - Storing goods is often necessary to sell them at
the best selling time. - Facilitating Functions These functions help the
other functions take place. - Financing helps at all stages of marketing. To
buy raw materials, manufacturers often borrow
from banks or receive credit from suppliers.
Wholesalers may be financed by manufacturers, and
retailers may receive financing from the
wholesaler or manufacturer. Finally, retailers
often provide financing to customers. - Standardizing sets uniform specifications for
products or services. - Grading classifiers products by size and quality,
usually through a sorting process. Together,
standardization and grading facilitate
production, transportation, storage, and selling. - Risk taking even though competent management
and insurance can minimize risks as a constant
reality of marketing because of such losses as
bad debt expense, obsolescence of products, theft
by employees, and product-liability lawsuits. - Gathering market information is necessary for
making all marketing decisions.
25Vocabulary
- Major ????, ???????
- Function ????????
- Manufacturer ??????????
- Wholesaler ?????? ?????
- Retailer ????????? ??????? ?????? ????
- Merchandise ?????, ???
- Obtain (v.) ???? ?????
- Raw materials ??????
- Keep (v.) on hand ???? ????????
- Supplier ??? ????????
- Distribution ?????
- Involve (v.) ???? ?????
- Flow of goods ????? ?????
- Storage ????? ??????????
- Careful management ??????????? ???????? ????
- Provide (v.) ????? ?????
- Acceptable ????? ??????
- Delivery schedule ???????? ?????????? ???????
- Storing ????????
26Vocabulary
- Facilitating function ??????? ????????
- Stage ???????
- Borrow (v.) ???? ?????
- Finally ???????
- Standardizing ?????????????
- Uniform specifications ?????????? ?????????????
- Grading ???????? ??????? ?????????
- Facilitate (v.) ?????????????
- Risk taking ???? ??????
- Insurance ???????
- Loss ????
- Bad debt expense ????? ???????? ????? ????
- Obsolescence ????? ??????????
- Theft ???????
- Product-liability ????? ???????????? ????????
???? - Law-suit ??????? ???????
- Gathering ???????
27Answer the Questions
- What does buying include?
- Why is storing goods necessary?
- Why is risk taking a constant reality of
marketing? - Why is gathering market information necessary?
28Lesson 8Channels for consumer products
- Producer to consumer. This channel, which is
often called the direct channel, includes no
marketing intermediaries. Practically all
services, but very few consumer goods, are
distributed through the direct channel. - Producers sell directly to consumers for several
reasons. They can better control the quality and
price of their products. They dont have to pay
for the services of intermediaries. And they can
maintain closer ties with consumers. - Producer-retailer-consumer channel. A retailer is
a middleman that buys from producers or other
middlemen and sells to consumers. Producers sell
directly to retailers can buy in large
quantities. This channel is most often used for
products that are bulky, such as furniture and
automobiles, for which additional handling would
increase selling costs. It is also the usual
channel for perishable products, such as fruits
and vegetables, and for high-fashion products
that must reach the consumer in the shortest
possible time. - Producer-wholesaler-retailer-consumer channel.
This channel is known as the traditional channel,
because most consumer goods (especially
convenience goods) pass through wholesalers to
retailers. A wholesaler is a middleman that sells
products to other firms. These firms may be
retailers, industrial users, or other wholesalers
when its products are carried by so many
retailers that the producer cannot deal with all
of them. - Producer-agent-wholesaler-retailer-consumer.
Producers may use agents to reach wholesalers.
Agents are functional middlemen that are
compensated by commissions paid by producers.
This channel is used for products that are sold
through thousands of outlets to millions of
consumers. Often, these products are inexpensive,
frequently purchased items. For exemple, millions
of consumers buy candies, which are sold through
numerous outlets. Some candies are sold through
agents to wholesalers who, in turn, supply them
to retail stores and vending machines. This
channel is also used for highly seasonal products
(such as Christmas tree decorations and by
producers that do not have their own sales forces.
29Channels for consumer products
- Multiple channels for consumer goods. Often a
manufacturer uses different distribution channels
to reach different market segments. A
manufacturer uses multiple channels, for exemple,
when the same product is sold to consumers and
industrial users. Multiple channels are also used
to increase sales or to capture a larger share of
the market. With the goal of selling as much
merchandise as possible, market their tires
through their own retail outlets as well as
through independent service stations and
department stores. - CHANNEL FOR INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS. Producers of
industrial products generally tend to use short
channels. Here are the two that are most commonly
used. - Producer to industrial user. In this direct
channel, the manufacturers own sales force sells
directly to industrial useres. Heavy machinery,
large computers, and major equipment are usually
distributed in this way. The very short channel
allows the producer to provide customers with
expert and timely services, such as delivery,
machinery installation, and repairs. - Manufacturer to agent middleman to industrial
user. This channel employed by manufacturers to
distribute such items as, accessory equipment,
small tools, and standardized parts. The agent is
an independent intermediary between the producer
and the user. Generally, agents represent
sellers.
30Vocabulary
- Direct channel ??????? ?????
- Intermediary ????????
- Tie ?????
- Middleman ????????
- Handling ??????, ??????
- Bulky ??? ??? ?????, ????
- Perishable product ??? ????? ???? ??????
- High fashion ?????? ????
- Convenience goods ???????? ??????? ???????
- Wholesaler ?????? ??????? ?????? ????
- Deal (v.) with ?? ??????, ???? ?????
- Commission 1) ?????????? 2) ????????? ?????
- Candy ??????
- Numerous ????????
- Outlet ??????? ????
- In turn ?? ??????????
- Vending machines ????? ?????????
- Decorations ?????
- Multiple channels ????? ????????
31Vocabulary
- Tire ???, ?????
- Provide (with) ?????? ?????
- Timely services ???????? ?????? ??????, ??????
- Installation ???????????
- Repairs ?????
- Accessory equipment ??????? ????????????
- Small tools ????? ???????
- Relevant factors ??????? ?????????
- Production capability ????????????
- Buying pattern ???? ?????????
- Evaluate (v.) ???????????????
32???????? ???? ???????? ???? ?? ?? ??????? ????
??? ??????? ??????? ?????
- 1.The building where our company is located has
been just reconstructed. - a) our premises have b) our headquarters
have c) our warehouse has - 2.The company went bankrupt and had to sell its
buildings and land that it owned. - a) liabilities b) debts
c) property - 3.The company's properties that can be easily
sold for money were bought by its competitors. - a) current liabilities b) net
profits c) liquid assets - 4. Last week we got a few urgent requests from
our customers for the equipment, which we
recently put on the market. - a) complaints b) orders
c) invoices
33Lesson 9Advertising in modern marketing
- It is not possible to live in any modern western
country, and remain unware of advertising. In the
streets, in buses and trains, even, with the
commercial television, in the privacy of our own
homes, the advertisers thrust their claims upon
us. The level of artistic and technical skill
displayed in advertisements is often very high.
The use of colour and design is so forceful that
it has a great impact on our behavior. - Advertising and public relations.
- Public relations officers and public relations
counselors help corporations and individuals to
maintain acceptable and attractive images.They
perform a valuable service for their employers
and sometimes for the public. Public relations
activities are not considered as advertising and
will not be discussed further in this book. - The functions of advertising.
- Advertising affects the consumer in
the following ways - Information. A distinction is often made
between informative and persuasive advertising.
Informative advertising announces a product and
gives potential buyers the details they need. If
consumers are to exercise freedom of choice,
informative advertising is necessary so that they
can know what goods are available and where they
can be bought. - Persuasion. Human memory is short and failable
and repetition is necessary to keep customers
aware of a product. Excessive repetition,
however, is intended to persuade, not to inform.
The borderline is indefinable and all
advertisements contain both persuasive and
informative elements. The advertising of many
consumer goods is almost entirely persuasive in
character. The information given is small, but
all possible pressure is put on the consumer to
buy the advertised product rather than other
goods. - Maintenance of demand. It is arguable that
advertising is necessary to maintain demand at a
sufficiently high level to provide full
employment.
34Advertising in modern marketing
- Without the prodding of the advertisers,
consumers would settle for a lower standard
of living and far less energy would be put into
the task of increasing material well-being. - Creating mass markets. The use of mass-production
methods often results in lower unit costs. Large
scale production requires large markets, however,
and forceful advertising and sales promotion can
provide lower costs and eventually lower prices. - Quality. The fact that a good has been widely
advertised may compel (?????? ?????) a
manufacturer to maintain high standards of
quality. - Advertising and competition.
- Advertising may be used as a weapon of
competition, particularly in a situation where
there are only a few sellers, each of whom is
trying to increase his share of the market. It
may also serve to reduce competition and to reach
a degree of monopoly power. Advertisements that
try to persuade consumers that there is no
substitute for their product are attempting to
create a sub-market in which they will be free
from competitive pressures.
35Vocabulary
- Advertising ??????
- Pervasiveness ???????? ?????????
- Be unaware (of) ????????
- Thrust (v.) claims (upon) ?????????? ?????????
- skill ?????, ???????
- forceful ???????
- impact ?????
- influence (v.) ????? ?????
- behavior ????????
- public relations ??????? ????????????
- officer ?????? ??????
- councellor ???????, ??????????
- maintain (v.) ??????? ?????
- acceptable ????? ??????
- image ?????
- valuable service ???????? ??????
- employer ??????, ??? ???????
- activities ?????????
- be considered ????? ???????
36Vocabulary
- persuasion ??????
- human memory ????? ???????
- failable ??????????
- keep (v.) aware (of) ???????????
- borderline ?????? ?????
- indefinable ?????-???????
- entirely ??????????
- maintenance of demand ???????? ?????
- it is arguable that ?????????? ??????
- employment ?????????
- podding ??????
- well-being ????? ????
- result in (v.) ??????? ????????
- forceful advertising ??????? ??????
- sales promotion ??????? ???????
- compel (v.) ?????? ?????
- compettition ???????
- weapon ??????, ?????
- particularly ????????
37Answer the Questions
- In what situation may advertising be used as a
weapon of competition? - Can it (advertising) also serve to reduce
competition? - What is the benefit for competitors to have a
submarket free from - competitive pressures?
- What are advertisement attempting to create when
they try to persuade consumers that there is no
substitute for their product?
38Lesson 10Finance and financial system
- Finance is the provision of money at the time
when it is needed. It is a system of monetary
relations leading to formation, distribution and
use of money in the process of its turnover
between economic entities. The financial system
is the network of institutions through which
firms, households and units of government get the
funds they need and put surplus funds to work. - Savers and borrowers are connected by
financial intermediaries including banks, thrift
institutions, insurance companies, pension funds,
mutual funds, and finance companies. Finance in
an economic system comprises two parts public
finance and finance of economic entities. Public
finance is the provision of money by the
community through taxes to be spent by national
and local benefit. It is a collective term for
the financial flows and also the financial
institutions of the public sector. - Public finance has the following four
functions 1) the provision of essential
services 2) the encouragement or control of
particular sectors of the economy 3) the
implementation of social policy in sectors of the
economy - 4) the implementation of social policy in respect
of social services, and 5) the encouragement of
the growth of economy as a whole. - The major instrument of any financial system
is the budget. In a market-oriented economy, the
budget is the most important tool for achieving
national priorities and goals through the
allocation and distribution of resources, and the
maintenance of a stable macroeconomic
environment. The budget is an estimate of
national revenue and expenditure exceeds the
revenue the budget has a deficit. Revenue and
expenditure forecasting is the most fundamental
step in the process of budget preparation.
Adequate planning of recurrent and capital
expenditure depends critically on an accurate
forecast of revenue availability. The
determination of the expected overall deficit in
the public sector and therefore the macroeconomic
impact of fiscal policy requires accurate
forecast of tax collection and expenditures. - Budget preparation involves a number of
institutions. The Ministry of Finance is the
central coordinating institution in charge of
compiling and presenting the budget. It has major
input from ministries in various sectors of the
economy and the state tax bodies.
39Vocabulary
- Public finance ?????? ?????????
- Provision ???????
- Monetary relations ??? ????????
- Turnover ??? ??????????
- Economic entity ???????? ???????
- Surplus ?????
- Saver ?????? ????????
- Intermediary ?????
- Thrift institution ?????? ????????????
- Pension fund ?????? ?????
- Benefit ???????, ?????
- Financial flows ??????? ?????
- Encouragement ??????
- Implementation ?????? ???????
- Social policy ?????? ???????
- Goal ??????, ????????
- Maintenance of a stable macroeconomic environment
????? ????????????? ?????????? ??????? ????????
40Vocabulary
- Estimate ??????, ?????
- Fiscal year ??????? ???
- Forecasting - ????????????
- Fundamental step ???? ?????
- Adequate planning ???????? ?????????
- Tax collection ????? ??????
- Extrabudgetery and reserve funds ???????? ?????
?? ?????? ??????? - Availability ????
- Accurate forecast ????? ???????
- It has major inputs from ?, ???? ??????? ????
- Tax bodies ????? ?????????????
- Subnational governments ??????? ?????????
41Answer the Questions
- 1. What is finance and financial system?
- 2. What parts does finance comprise?
- 3. What functions does public finance perform?
- 4. What is countrys budget?
- 5. What does the process of budget preparation
include? - 6. What is the budget organization of the
Azerbaijan Republic?
42Lesson 11International Monetary Fund
- The purpose of International Monetary Fund is to
promote international monetary cooperation
through a permanent institution that provides the
machinery for consultation and collaboration on
international monetary problems. Specifically,
the function of IMF is to facilitate the
expansion and balanced growth of international
trade, to promote orderly and stable foreign
currency exchange market, and to contribute to
balance of payments adjustment. To further these
objectives, the IMF monitors members
macroeconomic policies, makes financial resources
available to them in times of balance of payments
difficulties, and provides them with technical
assistance in a number of areas. - Much of the IMFs work is centered on annual
consultations with each member country to ensure
that its national policies in the area of
economic growth, price stability, financial
conditions and exchange rates take into account
their consequences for the world economy and
avoid unfair exchange policies. To ensure
compliance with these basic tenets, the Fund is
empowered to exercise firm surveillance over the
exchange rate policies of member countries. - History.
- The IMFs charter, embodied in the articles of
Agreement, was agreed upon at the International
Monetary and Financial Conference held at Bretton
Woods, New Hampshire, in July 1944. In December
1945 the required member of countries had
ratified the agreements, and in March 1946 the
first meeting of the Board of Governors was held.
The IMF commenced operations on March 1, 1947, at
its headquarters in Washington, D.C. Other
milestones in the history of the IMF include - - May 1948, first drawing of foreign exchange by
a member country - - January 1962, adoption of the general
agreements to borrow (GAB), which constituted an
important supplement to the IMFs financial
resources
43International Monetary Fund
- - February 1963, establishment of the
compensatory financing facilities, designed to
assist countries that experience a temporary
shortfall in export earnings - - June 1969, inception of the buffer stock
financing facility, which can be used to finance
commodity stockpiles - - July 1969, adoption of the first amendment to
the Articles of Agreement, providing for the
allocation of special drawing rights (SDRs) to
member countries, with the first allocation of
SDRs made on January 1,1970 - - September 1974, implementation of the extended
fund facility, which provides medium-term
assistance to member countries seeking to
overcome structural balance of payments problems - - April 1975, establishment of an oil facility to
help oil-importing countries finance the increase
in petroleum prices - - February 1976, establishment of the Trust Fund,
funded by revenues from gold sales, to aid
developing countries with low interest
assistance - - April 1978, adoption of the second amendment to
the articles providing for liberalized exchange
arrangements, the legalization of floating
exchange rates, steps designed to eliminate the
role of gold in the international monetary
system, and enunciation of the goal to make the
SDR the central international monetary reserve
asset - - August 1988, expansion of the compensatory
financing facility to include a contingency
financing element under which additional
financing may be provided to support adjustment
programs that might be thrown off track by
adverse exogenous developments.
44Vocabulary
- permanent ?????
- machinery ?????? ????????
- collaboration ??????????
- specifically ?????? ??????
- facilitate (v.) ????? ????? ?????????????
- orderly ??????????
- adjustment ???????????
- monitor (v.) ??????? ?????
- annual ?????
- avoid (v.) ??????
- compliance ??????? ????? ????
- tenet ???? ???????
- empower (v.) 1) ????? ?????? 2) ????? ??????
- surveillance ??????? ???? ???????? ????
- embodied ???????? ??????? ?????? ???????
- ratify (v.) ???????????? ?????
- commence (v.) ????????
- milestones ???????? ???????
- shortfall ???????????
45Vocabulary
- buffer ??????
- stockpile ?????????
- amendment ???????
- allocation 1) ???????, ??????? 2) ??????????
- overcome (v.) ???? ?????, ????? ??????
- trust fund ?????? ?????
- enunciation ????? ??????
- contingency ?????
- track 1) ?? 2) ???
- exogenous ?????? ?????????? ?????? ??? ???????
46Answer the Questions
- 1. What is the function of International Monetary
Fund? - 2. What do IMF monitors members do?
- 3. What are the most important milestones in the
history of IMF? - 4. When was IMF established?
- 5. What are the daily affairs in IMF?
47Lesson 12Azerbaijans relations with the
International Monetary Fund
- Azerbaijan joined the IMF on September 18, 1992.
Following the break up of the Soviet Union,
Azerbaijans economy suffered from serious
macroeconomic imbalances. Real Gross Domestic
Product declined by around 60 percent between
1991 and 1995, by which time high inflation had
eroded real incomes, the exchange rate had
weakened and international reserves were nearly
depleted. - During the mid- and late 1990s the Azeri
authorities implemented a comprehensive
stabilization program supported by a series of
financial arrangements with the IMF. Fiscal and
credit policies were tightened, while a number of
structural reforms were introduced, mainly in the
areas of exchange and trade liberalization, the
privatization of small scale enterprises, and the
privatization of agricultural land. The result
was strong economic growth, drive largely by
foreign investment in the oil and oil-related
sectors, and combined with low inflation, as the
budget deficit was reduced and monetary policy
was directed at stabilizing the exchange rate and
restoring confidence in the manat. - The authorities have also made substantial
progress in economic reforms in a number of
areas. These include, the restructuring and
merger of the four state-owned banks and the
strengthening of banking supervision the
establishment of the Chamber of Accounts the
passing of a modern Tax Code and a Budget System
Law the creation of a transparent Oil Fund and,
significant improvements in customs and tax
administration. Initial steps have also been
taken in energy sector reform, for example, the
privatization of the countrys electricity
distribution network. Finally, the authorities
have recently launched the Poverty Reduction
Program consistent with a medium term expenditure
framework and a prioritized public investment
program. - The IMF is currently negotiating with the
authorities in an effort to conclude the second
review of the PRGF program and is urging the
government to take additional measures to
strengthen the management of Oil Fund resources,
to ensure the maintenance of macroeconomic
stability, and its asset management rules. While
the country is implementing economic reforms the
progress is evident, however the IMF believes
much remains to be done to encourage growth in
the non-oil sector and to alleviate poverty. The
authorities need to press ahead with critical
structural reforms in a number of areas,
including improving the financial discipline of
the energy sector, restructuring the Cabinet of
Ministers, and implementing civil service and
pension reforms. - The IMF has provided Azerbaijan with technical
assistance in a number of areas, including public
expenditure management, tax and customs
administration, bank supervision, central bank
management, monetary policy advice, a statistical
support in balance of payments, government
finance, money and banking, and national accounts
and price statistics. In addition, the IMF
Institute has offered a variety of training
courses and seminars to Azerbaijani officials in
economic policy and related disciplines.
48Vocabulary
- Purchase ????, ????
- Loan ????????, ????, ??????
- Agreement ???????
- Arrangement ??????? ?????
- Growth facility ??????? ??????????
- To break up ?????? (??????????), ????????????
- To suffer ??????? ??????, ?????? ??????
- Serious imbalances ????? ?????????????,
??????????? - Decline (v.) ????? ??????, ???????
- High inflation ?????? ??????????
- Deplete (v.) ???? ?????, ???? ???? ?????????
- To be tightened ????????????, ????????
- Trade liberalization ????????? ??????????????
- Small scale enterprise ????? ????????
- monetary policy ??? ????????
- restore (v.) confidence ???-?????? ??????????
??????? ????? ????? - strengthening of banking supervision ?????
??????????? ??????????????? - tax code ????? ????
- transparent Oil Fund ?????? ???? ?????
49???????? ???? ???????? ???? ?? ?? ??????? ????
??? ??????? ??????? ?????
- 5.We have just made an agreement which lets our
company to use a few warehouses outside the town
for 15 years with rent reviews every five years. - a) got the 15 -year lease for b) got the 15-year
contract c) got the 15-year order - 6.The sum of money we pay to the owner of the
building, where our office is located, is very
high. - a) capital for b) rent
for c) interest for - 7.The seminar was organized for young people who
start their own business. - a) accountants b)
entrepreneurs c) shopkeepers - 8. The presentation of the Marketing Manager made
a great impression on all the Board. - a) had a great impact b) had a great
performance c) had a great strength
50Lesson 13World Bank.
- The World Bank is the Worlds foremost
intergovernmental organization concerned with the
external financing of the economic growth of
developing countries. The official title of the
institution is the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). - Before recommending a Bank loan, the staff of the
Bank must be reasonably satisfied that the
productivity of the borrowing country will be
increased and that the prospects for repayment
are good. A country must be judged creditworthy.
Engineering investigations are frequently carried
out to determine the probable relation of a
proposed project to benefits and costs.
Increasingly, however, the Bank has shifted
somewhat away from project lending (e.g., for a
highway or a port) it has become concerned with
education and other human services, the
environment, and through structural adjustment
loans, the modification of governmental policies
that are thought to have impeded long-run growth.
The Bank has also paid increasing attention to
the evaluation of previous lending. Recently,
moreover, it has acceded to the requests of the
American secretary of the treasury to help to
ease the huge, outstanding, largely commercial
bank debt. - Voting power in the Bank is determined by the
size of each member nations subscription.
Subscriptions, in turn based on a formula that
takes into account such variables as the value of
each nations foreign trade and its total output.
Ultimate power, through weighted voting, rests
with the Board of Governors of the Bank. The
governors meet annually in September. The
day-to-day affairs of the Bank are determined
however by executive directors who live
permanently in Washington D.C. they hire a
president, who, in turn, hires a staff. By
tradition, rather than law, the president of the
Bank is an American, usually a banker, proposed
by the president of the United States. - Because of the size of their subscriptions, five
nations the United States, Japan, Germany, the
United Kingdom and France are entitled to
appoint executive directors the remaining
seventeen directors are elected by some
combination of the votes of the other nations.
There are 156 member nations, but, with the
independence of the Baltic States and the
devolution of the Soviet Union into separate
republics, the membership could increase to over
170, thereby including all the independent
nations in the world. - The Soviet Union was one of the forty-four
governments whose representatives signed the
original Bretton Woods Pact it chose not to join
the Bank or the Fund when these organizations
were formally incorporated in 1946. Poland and
Czechoslovakia joined the Bank and the Fund
initially but withdrew when the cold war began in
earnest and a loan to Poland was blocked by the
United States.
51Vocabulary
- foremost ??????? ??????
- reasonably ??????, ???????????????, ?????
- prospects for repayment ?????? ?????????
??????????? - carry (v.) out ?????? ????????
- shift (v.) ????????
- lending ???? ?????
- accede (v.) ??????????, ???? ?????
- ease (v.) ?????????????
- subscription ?????
- ultimate power ??????? ???
- day-to-day affairs ???????? ?????
- appoint (v.) ????? ?????
- devolution ???????, ?????
- in earnest ????? ???????
52Answer the Questions
- 1. What is the procedure of getting a loan from
the World Bank? - 2. What is the World Bank?
- 3. How is the voting power determined?
- 4. What are the latest trends in the policy of
the World Bank? - 5. What countries are the largest subscribers of
the World Bank?
53Lesson 14World Bank in Azerbaijan
- Azerbaijan Republic became a member of the World
Bank in September 1992 and of the International
Development Association in March 1995. - A limited Country Assistance Strategy (CAS), a
major document guiding the Banks work in any
beneficiary country was discussed by the Board in
1995, at the time the Bank groups first
operation was presented to the Board, and a full
CAS was discussed in 1996. Since then, the World
Bank Group has emphasized support to Azerbaijans
reform program aimed at the transition to a
market economy macroeconomic stabilization and
the related management of oil inflows dealing
with the problem of refugees and internally
displaced persons rehabilitation of
infrastructure (water, irrigation, highways
education and health measures to attract foreign
investment in the energy sector public sector
reforms, reviving growth and generating
employment in agriculture and, more generally, in
the non-oil economy. - As the underlying thrust of World Bank assistance
is poverty alleviation, the Banks new Country
Assistance Strategy for Fiscal Years of 2003-2005
will be focused on achieving the objectives of
the Poverty reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) known
in Azerbaijan as state Program on Poverty
Reduction and economic Development that has been
prepared in close consultation with development
partners, including the Bank and UNDP. The broad
elements of the new Country Assistance Strategy,
presently under preparation, are likely to
include assistance in the following areas - - Managing the oil boom
- - Development of the non-oil economy and
generation of employment on a sustainable basis. - - Improved quantity and quality of delivery of
key social and economic services critical to
poverty reduction.
54World Bank in Azerbaijan
- Major impact of the World Banks assistance to
the country - - Management of the Oil Fund has been receiving
assistance as a central element of the reform
program supported by Second Structural Adjustment
Credit. The preparation of the Oil Funds budget
is carried out in consultation with the Ministry
of Finance and endorsed by the Supervisory Board
of the Fund, prior to approval by the President.
Oil Fund expenditures take place within a
medium-term expenditure framework and use of oil
Fund resources is audited and published
regularly. - Farms have been privatized and land
redistributed. With Bank - assistance, 99 percent of the land of former
state and collective farms has been privatized
and distributed among 860.000 families. Real
growth in agriculture was over 10 percent per
year in 2000 and 2001. - Critical infrastructure is being rehabilitated.
The deterioration of the - supply of irrigation water to 90.000 hectares of
land has been stopped through works under the
Irrigation Project. The water supply system of
Baku has improved and the gas distribution system
rehabilitated. - The resettlement and rehabilitation of internally
displaced persons - (IDPs) and refugees is being supported. A Joint
Program for the Reconstruction and resettlement
of the Liberated Areas (Terter, Fizuli, Agdam
regions) of Azerbaijan has rebuilt infrastructure
and encouraged resettlement of IDPs and refugees.
The Banks portion of this joint program has
directly benefited 20.000 persons. The Bank is
also supporting a Social Fund which mainly
finances water supply, local roads and civil
works that now reach 35.000 beneficiaries. - The quality of education is being improved. World
Bank assistance, 20 - pilot schools and several other education
institutes have been rehabilitated and
appropriately equipped in 5 regions. The national
curriculum is being revised in the primary
grades and more than 2.000 teachers have received
some form in training. - The environmental management system has been
strengthened. Under - the urgent Environment Investment Project the
State Committees of Ecology, Geology and
Hydrometry, and the Forestry and Fisheries
services, have been merged into a new Ministry of
Environment and Natural resources, strengthening
overall the environmental management system.
55Vocabulary
- Beneficiary country ?????? ?????? ????
- Support (v.) ???????????
- Aim (v.) ??????? ?????
- Stabilization ??????????
- Oil inflows ???? ??