Business sector

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In economics, the business sector or corporate sector - sometimes popularly called simply "business" - is "the part of the economy made up by companies". [1] [ need quotation to verify ] [2] It is a subset of the domestic economy, [3] excluding the economic activities of general government, private households, and non-profit organizations serving individuals. [4] The business sector is part of the private sector, but it differs in that the private sector includes all non-government activity, including non-profit organizations, while the business sector only includes business that operate for profit.

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In the United States the business sector accounted for about 78 percent of the value of gross domestic product (GDP) as of 2000. [4] Kuwait and Tuvalu each had business sectors accounting for less than 40% of GDP as of 2015. [5]

In systems of state capitalism, much of the business sector forms part of the public sector. [6] In mixed economies, state-owned enterprises may straddle any divide between public and business sectors, allowing analysts to use the concept of a "state-owned enterprise sector". [7]

The Oxford English Dictionary records the phrase "business sector" in the general sense from 1934. [8] Word usage suggests that the concept of a "business sector" came into wider use after 1940. [9] Related terms in previous times included "merchant class" and "merchant caste".

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References

  1. Longman Business English Dictionary. Such a definition might include State-owned enterprises - compare: Freeman, John R. (1989). Democracy and Markets: The Politics of Mixed Economies . Cornell studies in political economy, ISSN 2472-1433. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. p.  117. ISBN   9780801496011 . Retrieved 12 June 2019. In addition, party activists recognize the instrumental value of state-owned enterprise, and in some instances they are directly involved in supervising the operation of the state business sector.
  2. Compare: "business sector" . Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press.(Subscription or participating institution membership required.) - "that part of the economy which is related to (a particular) business".
  3. But compare Keese, Mark; Salou, Gérard; Richardson, Pete (1991). The measurement of output and factors of production for the business sector in OECD countries: the OECD business sector database. OECD Department of Economics and Statistics working papers. Vol. 95–101. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. p. i. Retrieved 2015-06-07. [...] recent work of the OECD Economics and Statistics Department to construct an international Business Sector Data Base (BSDB) for use in a wide variety of analyses of production and supply issues [...].
  4. 1 2 "BLS Information". Glossary. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Division of Information Services. February 28, 2008. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  5. "1: Overview: Opportunities and challenges for Myanmar". OECD Development Pathways Multi-dimensional Review of Myanmar. Vol. 3: From Analysis to Action. Paris: OECD Publishing (published 2016). 23 June 2016. p. 29. ISBN   9789264256545 . Retrieved 2017-12-27. The countries that have general government revenue more than 60% of GDP are Kiribati, Kuwait, Lesotho, Micronesia and Tuvalu. Source: IMF (2015), World Economic Outlook (database), International Monetary Fund.
  6. Dieterle, David A., ed. (27 March 2017). Economics: The Definitive Encyclopedia from Theory to Practice. ABC-CLIO (published 2017). pp. 297–298. ISBN   9780313397080 . Retrieved 19 October 2021. Modern state capitalism involves businesses that are owned or backed by the government with the behavior of a private-sector multi-national company. Today's modern state business develops into a full-fledged business model [...] Regardless of the business sector that the state-powned business is operating, if the government backing the business is not stable, the likelihood of a stable business greatly lessens.
  7. "State-Owned Enterprise Sector Remains Large Despite Increasing Divestiture". Bureaucrats in Business: The Economics and Politics of Government Ownership. World Bank policy research report: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, volume 4. Oxford: World Bank Publications. 1995. p. 25ff. ISBN   9780195211061 . Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  8. "business sector" . Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press.(Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  9. Google Ngram Viewer

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