HelloHelloA business (also known as enterprise or firm) is an organization designed to provide goods, services, or both to consumers.[1] Businesses are predominant in capitalist economies, in which most of them are privately owned and formed to earn profit to increase the wealth of their owners. Businesses may also be not-for-profit or state-owned. A business owned by multiple individuals may be referred to as a company, although that term also has a more precise meaning.
The etymology of “business” relates to the state of being busy either as an individual or society as a whole, doing commercially viable and profitable work. The term “business” has at least three usages, depending on the scope — the singular usage to mean a particular organization; the generalized usage to refer to a particular market sector, “the music business” and compound forms such as agribusiness; and the broadest meaning, which encompasses all activity by the community of suppliers of goods and services. However, the exact definition of business, like much else in the philosophy of business, is a matter of debate and complexity of meaningsA business (also known as enterprise or firm) is an organization designed to provide goods, services, or both to consumers.[1] Businesses are predominant in capitalist economies, in which most of them are privately owned and formed to
l, or primarily, to generate revenue or sell goods to a large or small number of people. The company usually has about 20 employees,[2] about 50 for women, 90 for man and some for some ethnic groups, about 50 for white males, about half of whom are of Asian; for their number and variety, business is divided into two classes, which are usually highly organized or composed of mainly American citizens,[3][4] of young men (usually of working age), and of men of other races or religious, for whom business is mainly a function of political or financial influence.[5] A group is characterized by a small number of highly organized, highly creative, or high-ranking members[6] of the party (a term that has also been associated with an economic elite or power within the corporate system) who can be considered part of a larger organization, such as the Congress of Commerce or the New York Stock Exchange.[7][8] In some American political or economic systems, such as the democratic West, for example, the party’s most prominent member, even the party’s most unpopular candidate, can be elected president of the United States.[9]
The American Economic Association (ABA) is the main organization representing every part of the American economy:[1]
Each organization seeks to ensure well-being and stability for all Americans. By providing practical and safe forms of transportation, transportation, health care to the public and transportation to work—which includes everything from housing to the basics of food assistance, education and job training—individuals can make their living out of these institutions more cheaply and quickly and prosper in such a way as to help save lives and make it possible for the American people to live and work in the future.[10] ABA serves the citizens of every state, and all its subdivisions in the country. To succeed, it is necessary of the general purpose of supporting, not just the affluent and privileged, but of the working man and her family and especially the elderly and the families of the elderly and the families of widows and orphans.
The organization is charged with supporting the broad and diverse interests of the various parts of the United States at a time when America’s social and political system in particular suffers from a huge imbalance of power, that of individuals and families. An association is meant to provide mutual aid and support to the members of the association and to the members of its membership as well as to help them to meet their personal and social needs through economic programs, economic enterprises, and political activities. Its organizational structure may be characterized as consisting of a committee of some one or two members, and in some cases even as a single group, as in organized labor.[1]
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History[1]
The American Industrial Association established its first president in 1858. The first chapter of the association began as a group known as the Business and Economic League for the Improvement of the Quality and Utilization of Manufacture, or BBGAA; the League began as a nonprofit organization at the invitation of the President of the United States. BBGAA was established by the President of the United States in the form of four chapters, named the BBGAA Act (1857), the Act of April 27 (1858), the BBGAA Act of June 22 (1859), and the Act of July 14 (1860). The Act contained similar clauses, but they were removed and replaced with a more or less common clause, the Act of October 15 (1861), which had the effect of imposing an additional tax