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Public and private companies



A company is usually formed for the purpose of conducting business that is separate from its owners, the shareholders. The main difference is between public and private companies.

Private companies cannot sell shares to or raise money from the general public.

Public companies can sell their shares to the general public (which they usually do through a stock exchange). A company continues to exist despite changes in (or deaths among) its owners. A company can hold assets; it can sue, and it can be sued. The profits are distributed to the members as dividends on their shareholding. Losses are borne by the company. The day-to-day management of the company is carried out by a board of directors. Private limited companies are often local family businesses and are common in the building, retailing and clothing industries.

A private company can be formed with a minimum of two people becoming its shareholders. They must appoint a director and a company secretary. If the company goes out of business, the responsibility of each shareholder is limited to the amount that they have contributed; they have limited liability. Such a company has Ltd (Limited) after its name.

Many large businesses in the UK are Public Limited Companies (PLC), which means the public can buy and sell their shares on the stock exchange. Marks &Spencer, British Telecom and the National Westminster Bank are the examples of public limited companies.

In the US, businesses take the same basic forms. American companies have abbreviations Inc and Corp.

Other types of companies are:

1) Associated company, which is a company over which another company has substantial influence; for example it owns between 20 per cent and 50 per cent of its shares.

2) Holding company, a company that owns another company or other companies an which is sometimes referred to as the parent company (most public companies operate through a number of companies controlled by the group’s holding company);

3) Subsidiary company, a company controlled by a holding company, usually because the holding company owns (or indirectly owns through another subsidiary) more than 50 per cent of the subsidiary company’s shares.

 

The Corporation

As business become more competitive, new and more complex corporate combinations appear. Single ownerships and the partnerships have finance weaknesses and that is the reason why the corporation came into existence.

The major simple forms of integration are the following:

A vertical integration characterizes companies that engage in the different steps in manufacturing or marketing a product.

A horizontal combination brings under one control companies engaged in the sale of the same or similar products.

A complementary combination takes place when companies, selling allied but not competitive products, combine.

A conglomerate combination involves firms in widely diverse industries, such as a motor company owing a food manufacturer or book publisher.

Of great economic importance are multinational corporations. Such companies maintain extensive business activities and large-scale production facilities throughout the world, and their revenues sometimes exceed the total revenues of some countries in which they operate.

International business is a dynamic activity which changes, adapts and responds according to the conditions. Apart from conventional trade it takes various forms such as franchising, buy-back transaction, turn-key projects, transactions in patents, licenses, know-how, services, various joint ventures, joint banks, mixed commissions and many other forms.

 

Franchising

Franchising is a form of business in which a product or service may be provided by people or firms who have obtained a license from the originators or owners of that product or service.

A franchise agreement is drawn up in which the rights of the two parties are set down. The parties to the agreements are:

a) the franchisor – usually the person or firm who develops a new product or service under license;

b) the franchisee – the person or firm who buys the license granting the right to provide the product or service.

The franchisor will have tried the product out by piloting it for a reasonable trading period before selling it to potential franchisees. The franchisee is provided with a total package for marketing the product, including the product’s name and logo, any patented processes, accounting procedures, marketing strategy and training services. The franchisee has to raise capital to pay the franchisee fee, find suitable premises, equip them according to the franchisor’s house-style, buy or lease equipment, and market the product to the standard specified by the franchising company, but has to establish and operate his own business. The fees are to be paid to the franchisor throughout the term of the franchise, usually as a royalty, for example a fixed percentage (typically 10 %) of weekly takings.

 

Advantages

Franchising provides the opportunity of developing business without having large capital sums.

For the franchise it:

a) enables people to go into business with limited risk and outlay,

b) insures that the product or service has been thoroughly tested and marketed before the franchise has been approved,

c) provides a well-known brand name and image, and large-scale advertising back-up,

d) requires less capital than other forms of business start-up,

e) provides continuing back-up support and advice during the period of the franchise agreement.

VOCABULARY

Distribution                           распределение

Entrepreneurs                        предприниматели

To gain                                   получать, приобретать, зарабатывать

Individual proprietorship       частная собственность

To be in the sole charge         нести личную ответственность

Failure                                    неудача, провал

Line of business                     сфера бизнеса

Drawbacks                             недостатки

To secure                               зд. достать, раздобыть

To be liable                            быть ответственным

Unlimited liability                 неограниченная ответственность

Of this nature                        такого рода

To raise money                      собирать деньги

Stock exchange                     фондовая биржа

To hold assets                        держать активы, владеть активами

To sue                                    преследовать судом

To bear losses                        нести убытки

Board of directors                 совет директоров

Retailing business                  розничная торговля

Holding company                  холдинг

Subsidiary company              дочерняя компания

Weakness                          слабое место, недостаток

Allied                                     родственный, близкий

Conventional                         общепринятый

Outlay                                    издержки, расходы, затраты

Large-scale                            широкомасштабный

 


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