The Economy and Business
The Economic Climate as an External Influence
The economic climate describes the overall condition of the economy at any given time — whether it is growing, shrinking, or stagnant. Businesses cannot control the economy, but they must respond to it. The Edexcel specification identifies six economic factors that directly affect business performance: unemployment, consumer income, inflation, interest rates, government taxation, and exchange rates.
Economic climate: the general state of the economy, including levels of growth, employment, prices, and interest rates. It shapes the environment in which all businesses operate.
A key exam skill is understanding that the same economic change affects different businesses in different ways. A rise in unemployment, for example, may devastate a luxury car dealer (whose customers lose their jobs and cut back on spending) but benefit a budget discount retailer (whose prices become more attractive as consumers tighten their belts). Always apply the factor to the specific type of business in the question.
| Economic factor | A rise means... | Business type most exposed to a rise |
|---|---|---|
| Unemployment | More people out of work; consumer spending falls | Luxury goods, restaurants, travel companies |
| Consumer income | More disposable income; spending rises | All consumer businesses — especially premium/luxury |
| Inflation | Prices rise; purchasing power falls; costs increase | Businesses with fixed-price contracts or thin margins |
| Interest rates | Borrowing becomes more expensive | Businesses with large loans; consumers with mortgages |
| Government taxation | Corporation tax reduces profit; income tax reduces consumer spending | All profit-making businesses; consumer-facing businesses |
| Exchange rates | Pound rises: imports cheaper, exports more expensive for overseas buyers | Exporters; importers — in opposite directions |
Unemployment and Consumer Income
Unemployment measures the proportion of the workforce without a job and actively seeking work. When unemployment rises, more households lose their regular income, causing consumer spending to fall across the economy.
Effect on businesses: lower consumer spending reduces revenue for most businesses. However, the impact varies dramatically by product type.
- A luxury car dealer selling vehicles priced above £50,000 will see demand collapse when unemployment rises — its customers are often professionals or business owners whose income and confidence are hit hard.
- A budget supermarket selling own-brand food and household essentials sees little drop in sales — and may even attract shoppers trading down from premium brands.
Consumer income — the amount households have available to spend after tax — is closely linked to unemployment but is a broader measure. It rises when wages increase, taxes are cut, or the economy grows. It falls in a recession or when prices rise faster than wages (real income falls).
Worked example: a mid-range restaurant chain charges on average £25 per head. When consumer income falls during a period of high inflation and rising unemployment, customers eat out less frequently and choose cheaper options when they do. The chain's revenue per location falls by 15%. It responds by introducing a £15 express lunch menu to retain cost-conscious diners.
Inflation and Interest Rates
Inflation is the rate at which prices in the economy rise over time, reducing the purchasing power of money. When inflation is high, each pound buys less than before.
Effect on businesses:
- Input costs rise: raw materials, energy, and components become more expensive. A bakery that relies on flour, butter, and eggs sees its cost of goods sold climb, squeezing profit margins if it cannot pass the full increase on to customers.
- Wage demands increase: employees ask for pay rises to maintain their standard of living. If wages rise in line with inflation, business costs increase proportionally.
- Consumer spending shifts: high inflation reduces disposable income. Consumers cut back on non-essential purchases, hitting restaurants, clothing retailers, and leisure businesses hardest.
Interest rates are set by the Bank of England and represent the cost of borrowing money. When interest rates rise, loans and mortgages become more expensive.
Effect on businesses:
- A business with a £500,000 variable-rate loan paying 3% annual interest pays £15,000 per year. If rates rise to 6%, the same loan now costs £30,000 per year — an extra £15,000 in outgoings with no corresponding revenue increase.
- Consumers with mortgages have less disposable income when interest rates rise, reducing spending on non-essential goods and services.
- High interest rates also discourage new investment — a business considering borrowing to buy new machinery may delay the purchase if the cost of the loan rises significantly.
Exam tip: when explaining the effect of interest rates, state the mechanism clearly: "rising interest rates increase the cost of borrowing, so a business with variable-rate debt faces higher interest repayments, reducing its profit."
Government Taxation
The government collects taxes that directly affect business costs and consumer spending.
Corporation tax is a tax on business profits. A rise in corporation tax reduces the profit a business retains after paying the government. A business earning £200,000 profit with corporation tax at 20% retains £160,000. If the rate rises to 25%, it retains only £150,000 — £10,000 less available for reinvestment or dividends.
Income tax and National Insurance are taxes paid by employees on their earnings. If these taxes rise, workers' take-home pay falls, reducing consumer spending in the economy. This hurts consumer-facing businesses even though they do not pay income tax directly.
Value Added Tax (VAT) is charged on most goods and services. A rise in VAT effectively raises prices for consumers, reducing demand — especially for discretionary purchases.
Businesses also face business rates (a tax on commercial property), import duties (on goods brought in from overseas), and fuel duty (on business vehicles). Together, these represent a significant cost for many businesses.
Exam tip: distinguish between taxes that affect the business directly (corporation tax, business rates) and taxes that affect consumers and therefore indirectly reduce demand for the business's products (income tax, VAT).
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Exchange Rates — Imports and Exports
The exchange rate is the value of one currency expressed in terms of another — for example, how many US dollars one pound (£1) can buy. Exchange rates fluctuate constantly based on economic conditions, interest rate differentials, and investor sentiment.
If the pound weakens (falls in value against other currencies):
- Imports become more expensive: a business importing raw materials from the USA that previously cost $10 million now costs more pounds to buy the same amount. Input costs rise.
- Exports become cheaper for overseas buyers: a UK business selling goods priced in pounds becomes more competitive internationally, because foreign buyers spend fewer of their own currency units to buy the same product. Export volumes may increase.
If the pound strengthens (rises in value):
- Imports become cheaper: importing raw materials costs fewer pounds.
- Exports become more expensive for overseas buyers: UK goods become more expensive abroad, potentially reducing export sales.
Worked example 1 — a manufacturer that imports raw materials: a UK electronics manufacturer sources components from South Korea. When the pound weakens against the Korean won, those components cost 12% more in pounds. The manufacturer's cost of goods sold rises. It faces a choice: absorb the extra cost (reducing profit margin) or raise prices (risking lost sales to competitors whose costs are lower).
Worked example 2 — a UK car exporter: a UK car manufacturer exports vehicles to Germany priced in euros. When the pound strengthens against the euro, the same car costs German buyers more euros. Sales in Germany fall as German consumers switch to cheaper German-made alternatives. The exporter responds by cutting its sterling list price — accepting a lower margin to stay price-competitive.
Exchange rate: the rate at which one currency can be exchanged for another. A stronger pound makes imports cheaper and exports more expensive for overseas buyers; a weaker pound does the opposite.
Business Responses to Economic Change (1.5.5)
No business can control the economic climate, but businesses can adapt. The specification expects you to recognise the strategic choices available.
Cut costs: when consumer demand falls in a recession, a business can reduce costs by renegotiating supplier contracts, reducing working hours, pausing non-essential marketing spend, or freezing hiring. Cost-cutting protects profit margins when revenue is under pressure.
Change prices: a business facing rising input costs due to inflation may raise prices to maintain margins, though this risks losing price-sensitive customers. Alternatively, it may hold prices and absorb the cost, protecting volume at the expense of margin.
Diversify markets: a business heavily reliant on one market (domestic or overseas) can reduce its exposure to a single economic climate by expanding into new markets. A UK exporter badly affected by a strong pound in the European market might develop its sales in the US market instead.
Delay investment: when interest rates rise, the cost of borrowing increases. Businesses that planned to invest in new equipment or premises may delay these projects until rates fall, preserving cash and avoiding high borrowing costs.
Seek new or alternative suppliers: if exchange rate movements make existing imported materials more expensive, a business may switch to domestic suppliers or suppliers in countries with more favourable exchange rates.
Exam tip: when asked how a business responds to a specific economic change, always link the response to the mechanism of the change: "because rising interest rates increase borrowing costs, the business delays its planned factory expansion — reducing its capital expenditure and preserving cash."
Exam Technique for Economy Questions
1. Always state the direction of change and the mechanism
Not "unemployment affects businesses" but "rising unemployment reduces consumer confidence and spending, leading to lower revenue for businesses selling non-essential goods."
2. Contrast business types
Show that the same factor affects different businesses differently. A rise in interest rates hurts a heavily-indebted manufacturer more than a cash-rich retailer. Pound depreciation helps exporters and hurts importers.
3. On exchange rate questions, be precise about direction
Many students confuse the effect of a rising pound with a falling pound. Remember: a stronger pound = imports cheaper, exports dearer. A weaker pound = imports dearer, exports cheaper.
4. Connect economic factors to business responses (1.5.5)
Edexcel questions frequently ask how a business responds to economic change — not just how it is affected. A complete answer names the change, explains the effect, then identifies a specific business response and evaluates its effectiveness.
5. Common mistakes to avoid
- Saying inflation "always" harms businesses — a business selling premium goods may raise prices ahead of inflation and improve margins if demand is inelastic.
- Confusing interest rates with inflation — they are related but distinct. Interest rates are the cost of borrowing; inflation is the rate of price rises.
- Forgetting that exchange rate changes affect both import costs and export competitiveness — cover both sides in a 6-mark answer.
- Treating government taxation as only corporation tax — income tax and VAT also matter because they reduce consumer spending power.
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