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Referencer for Quick

Revision
Foundation Course Paper-4:
Business Economics &
Business and Commercial
Knowledge
A compendium of subject-wise capsules published in the
monthly journal “The Chartered Accountant Student”

Board of Studies
(Academic)
ICAI
INDEX
Edition of
Paper Page
Subject Students’ Topics
No. No.
Journal
January Nature & Scope of Business
1-2
2022 Economics
January Theory of Demand and
2-4
2022 Supply
Business
4A January Theory of Production and
Economics 4-7
2022 Cost
November
Meaning and Types of
7-11 2020, June
Markets
2021
11 June 2021 Business Cycles

Business and
An Overview of Selected
4B Commercial 12-13 May 2022
Indian Companies
Knowledge
BUSINESS ECONOMICS
CA FOUNDATION - PAPER 4 (PART 1) - BUSINESS ECONOMICS
• Economics deals with problems and questions that affect almost all kinds of individuals in their capacities as consumers
and producers. Therefore, economic literacy is essential for everyone.
• Business Economics may be defined as the use of economic analysis to make business decisions involving the best use of
an organization’s scarce resources.
• Students are advised to read the capsule for understanding of the concepts. The graphs and charts will assist them in
revision of concept discussed in study material in minimum time.

BUSINESS ECONOMICS
NATURE AND SCOPE OF
BUSINESS ECONOMICS The scope 1.Internal issues or
There are two
of Business operational issues (this
categories
Economics is can be solved using
of business
quite wide. It Micro Economics)
issues to which
Nature covers most of 2.External issues
Definition Scope economic
the practical or environmental
• A Science theories can
problems a issues (this can be
• Based on Micro be directly
manager or a solved using Macro
Micro Macro Economics applied,
firm faces. Economics)
Economics Economics • Incroporates elements
of Macro Economics
• An Art
• Pragmatic Microeconomics applied to Internal or Operational Issues
• Normative  Demand Analysis and Forecasting
 Production and Cost Analysis
 Inventory Management
 Market Structure and Pricing Policies
 Resource Allocation
The book named ‘An These two fundamental  Theory of Capital and Investment Decisions
Inquiry into the Nature facts are:  Profit Analysis
and Causes of the Wealth • Human beings have  Risk and Uncertainty Analysis
of Nations’ (1776) unlimited wants
usually abbreviated as • ‘The means to satisfy
‘The Wealth of Nations’, these unlimited wants Macroeconomics applied to External or Environmental Issues
by Adam Smith is are relatively scarce’  The type of economic system
considered as the from the subject  Stage of business cycle
first modern work of matter of Economics  The general trends in national income, employment, prices,
Economics. saving and investment.
 Government’s economic policies like industrial policy,
competition policy, and fiscal policy, foreign trade policy and
Micro Economics In Macro-Economics, While Business globalization policies.
is basically we study the behaviour Economics
 Working of central banks and financial sector and capital
the study of of the large economic is basically
market and their regulation.
the behaviour aggregates, such as, the concerned
of different overall levels of output with Micro  Socio-economic organisations like trade unions, producer and
individuals and and employment, Economics, consumer unions and cooperatives.
organizations total consumption, Macro economic  Social and political environment.
within an total saving and total analysis also has
economic system investment, exports, got an important
imports and foreign role to play Business decisions cannot be taken without considering
investment and also these present and future environmental factors. As the
how these aggregates management of the firm has no control over these factors, it
shift over time should fine-tune its policies to minimise their adverse effects.

Nature of Business Economics BASIC PROBLEMS OF AN ECONOMY


• Business Economics is a Science
• Based on Microeconomics What to produce?
• Incorporates elements of Macro Analysis
• Business Economics is also an Art What provisions
Central
• Use of Theory of Markets and Private Enterprises How to are to be made
Economic
• Pragmatic in Approach produce? for economic
Problem
• Interdisciplinary in Nature growth?
• Normative in Nature
For whom to produce?

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Capitalist Economy

Socialist Economy

Mixed Economy
• Private property • The resources • In a mixed
is the mainstay of are allocated economy, the
capitalism and profit according to the aim is to develop
motive is its driving commands of a a system which
force. Decisions central planning tries to include
of consumers and authority and the best features
businesses determine therefore, market of both the
economic activity. forces have no role controlled
Some examples of a in the allocation of economy and the
capitalist economy resources market economy
may include United while excluding
States and United the demerits of
Kingdom, Hong both
Kong, South Korea
etc

MEANING OF DEMAND Elasticity Of Demand


 Elasticity of demand is defined as the responsiveness of
the quantity demanded of a good to changes in one of the
Demand means desire or wish to buy and consume a commodity variables on which demand depends.
or service backed by adequate ability to pay and willingness to pay.

According to Price Elasticity of Demand


Marshall, the  Price elasticity of demand expresses the responsiveness of
demand curve quantity demanded of a good to a change in its price, given
slopes downwards the consumer’s income, his tastes and prices of all other
due to the goods.
The law of demand states that people will operation of the
buy more at lower prices and less at higher law of diminishing
prices, other things being equal. marginal utility. Point Elasticity
However, according
to Hicks and  The point elasticity of demand is the price elasticity of
Allen it is due to demand at a particular point on the demand curve.
income effect and
substitution effect.
Arc Elasticity
The demand curve The demand curve A demand schedule
 When price and quantity changes are discrete and large, we
usually slopes will shift to the is a table that shows
have to measure elasticity over an arc of the demand curve.
downwards; but right when there various prices and
exceptionally is a rise in income the corresponding
slopes upwards (unless the good q u a n t i t i e s
under certain is an inferior one), demanded. The
Y D
circumstances a rise in the price demand schedules
as in the case of a substitute, a are of two types; P A
of conspicuous fall in the price of individual demand Arc Elasticity
goods, Giffen a complement, a schedule and B
goods, conspicuous rise in population market demand P1
Price

necessities, future and a change in schedule. D


expectations about tastes in favour of
prices, demand for commodity. The
necessaries and opposite changes
speculative goods. will shift the O
Q Q1 X
demand curve to
Quantity Demanded
the left.

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Ep = 0 Ep = 1 Ep = ∞
Y Y D Y
D

P D
Price

Price

Price
D

X X X
O Quantity O Quantity Quantity

Demand curve of zero Demand curve of unitary Demand curve of


elasticity elasticity infinite elasticity

Y Ep > 1 Ep < 1
Y D
D

P P
Price

Price
P1
D P1

X D
O O Q1 X
O Q Q1
Quantity Quantity

Demand curve of elasticity Demand curve of elasticity


greater than one less than one

Income Elasticity Of Demand Utility: The utility of a consumer is a measure of the satisfaction
The income elasticity of demand is a measure of how much the that the consumer expects to obtain from consumption of goods
demand for a good is affected changes in consumers’ incomes. and services when he spends money on a stock of commodity
which has the capacity to satisfy his want.
• Two important theories are (i) Marginal Utility Analysis
Cross - Price Elasticity Of Demand propounded by Alfred Marshall, and (ii) Indifference
The cross-price elasticity of demand between two goods measures Curve Analysis propounded by J R Hicks and R G D
the effect of the change in one good’s price on the quantity Allen.
demanded of the other good. • The law of diminishing marginal utility states that as a
consumer increases the consumption of a commodity,
every successive unit of the commodity gives lesser and
Demand Forecasting: lesser satisfaction to the consumer.
 Forecasting of demand is the art and science of predicting the • The indifference curve theory, which is an ordinal theory,
probable demand for a product or a service at some future shows the household’s preference between alternative
date on the basis of certain past behaviour patterns of some bundles of goods by means of indifference curves.
related events and the prevailing trends in the present. • The important properties of an Indifference curve are
 The commonly available techniques of demand forecasting Indifference curve slopes downwards to the right, it
are survey of buyers’ intentions, collective opinion method, is always convex to the origin, two ICs never intersect
expert opinion method, barometric method, and statistical each other, it will never touch the axes and higher the
methods such as trend projection method, graphical method, indifference curve higher is the level of satisfaction.
least square method, regression analysis, and market studies • The consumer attains equilibrium at the point where the
such as controlled experiments, and controlled laboratory budget line is tangent to the indifference curve and MUx
experiments. / Px =MUy /Py = MUz /Pz

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Y Y S
P 5
R
S 4

N Q 3

Price
IC5
Good Y

IC4 2
T IC3
IC2 1
H S
IC1
O M L X 0 X
10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Good X
Quantity Supplied
(Consumer’s Equilibrium)

(Supply Curve)
Marshall defined the concept of consumer surplus as the “excess
of the price which a consumer would be willing to pay rather Price
than go without a thing over that which he actually does pay”, is Supply
called consumers surplus.”

D
Y E
3
Price & Marginal Utility

R
P
Demand

19 Quantity
D1
MU
O Q X Elasticity of supply means the responsiveness of supply to change
Amount of Commodity in the price of the commodity.

(Consumer Surplus)

• Budget line or price line shows all those combinations of two


Production and Cost
goods which the consumer can buy spending his given money
income on the two goods at their given prices. According to James Bates and J.R. Parkinson “Production is
• The slope of the budget line is determined by the relative prices the organized activity of transforming resources into finished
of the two goods. It is equal to ‘Price Ratio’ of two goods. i.e. PX products in the form of goods and services; and the objective
/PY i.e. It measures the rate at which the consumer can trade of production is to satisfy the demand of such transformed
one good for the other. resources”.
• When two goods are perfect substitutes of each other,
indifference curves for these two goods are straight, parallel
lines with a constant slope along the curve, or the indifference
curve has a constant MRS Labour
• Goods are perfect complements when a consumer is interested
in consuming only in fixed proportions. In such a case, the
indifference curve will consist of two straight lines with a right
angle bent which is convex to the origin, or in other words, it
will be L shaped.
Factors
• The term ‘supply’ refers to the amount of a good or service Land of Capital
that the producers are willing and able to offer to the market at production
various prices during a given period.
• The law of supply can be stated as: Other things remaining
constant, the quantity of a good produced and offered for sale
will increase as the price of the good rises and decrease as the
price falls.
Entrepreneur

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Land includes all those free natural resources whose supply The Law of Variable Proportions:
for the economy as a whole is fixed. The law states that as we increase the quantity of one input which is
combined with other fixed inputs, the marginal physical productivity
of the variable input must eventually decline.
Labour is all human efforts of body or of mind undergone
partly or wholly with a view to secure an income apart from H
the pleasure derived directly from the work.
Inflection Point TP

TP, AP, MP
Capital is that part of wealth of an individual or community
which is used for further production of wealth. Capital, a
stock concept, refers to produced means of production and
it comprises of man- made machines and materials which are F
Stage I Stage II Stage III
used for further production.
S

Entrepreneur is the person who organises business; initiates AP


production, remunerates other factors of production, O N M
introduces innovations and bears the risk and uncertainties of Variable Input MP
business.

Returns to Scale
The production function is a statement of the relationship
between a firm’s scarce resources (i.e., its inputs) and the The Law of returns to scale describes the relationship between
output that results from the use of these resources inputs and output in the long run when all inputs are changed in
the same proportion. Returns to scale may be constant, increasing
and decreasing.
Q = f (L, K). Where Q = Output L= Labour K= Capital • Constant returns to scale occur when the inputs increase by some
proportion and the output also increases by the same proportion.
It is also called linear homogeneous production function.
• Increasing returns to scale occur when the inputs increase
A famous statistical production function is Cobb-Douglas production by some proportion and the output increases more than
function.
proportionately.
Cobb-Douglas production function is stated as: Q = KLa C (1-a) • Decreasing returns to scale occur when the inputs increase
where ‘Q’ is output, ‘L’ the quantity of labour and ‘C’ the quantity of by some proportion and the output increases less than
capital. ‘K’ and ‘a’ are positive constants. proportionately.

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BUSINESS ECONOMICS
 Indirect costs are those which cannot be easily and
definitely identifiable in relation to a plant, product,
process or department. They not visibly traceable to
any specific goods, services, processes, departments or
operations.
 Incremental cost refers to the additional cost incurred by a
firm as a result of a business decision.
 Sunk costs are already incurred once and for all, and
cannot be recovered.
 Historical cost refers to the cost incurred in the past on the
acquisition of a productive asset.
 Replacement cost is the money expenditure that has to be
incurred for replacing an old asset.
 Private costs are costs actually incurred or provided for by
firms and are either explicit or implicit.
 Social cost, on the other hand, refers to the total cost
borne by the society on account of a business activity and
includes private cost and external cost.
Cost Analysis
It refers to the study of behaviour of cost in relation to one
or more production criteria. It concerned with the financial Cost Function
aspects of production. The cost function refers to the mathematical relation between
cost and the various determinants of cost. It expresses
the relationship between cost and output. Economists are
generally interested in two types of cost functions; the short
Accounting & Economic Costs run cost function and the long run cost function.

Outlay & Opportunity Costs Fixed or constant


costs which are not
Short-run
a function of output.
cost function
These are inescapable or
uncontrollable.
Direct & Indirect Costs Cost
Function is
divided into
Types of two-
Costs Incremental & Sunk Costs Long run cost of production
Long-run is the least possible cost of
cost function producing any given level of
output when all individual
Historical & factors are variable.
Replacement Costs

Private & Social Costs Types of Cost


 Total cost of a business is defined as the actual cost that
must be incurred for producing a given quantity of output.
Fixed & Variable Costs  AFC is obtained by dividing the total fixed cost by the
number of units of output produced.
 Average variable cost is found out by dividing the total
variable cost by the number of units of output produced.
Cost concepts  Average total cost is the sum of average fixed cost and
average variable cost.
 Accounting costs are explicit costs and includes all the
 Marginal cost is the addition made to the total cost by the
payments and charges made by the entrepreneur to the
suppliers of various productive factors. production of an additional unit of output.
 Economic costs take into account explicit costs as well as  Long run cost of production is the least possible cost of
implicit costs. A firm has to cover its economic cost if it producing any given level of output when all individual
wants to earn normal profits. factors are variable.
 Outlay costs involve actual expenditure of funds.
 Opportunity cost is concerned with the cost of the next
best alternative opportunity which was foregone in order Short Run Total Cost
to pursue a certain action.
 The short run total cost is composed of two major elements
 Direct costs are those which have direct relationship with
namely, total fixed cost and total variable cost.
a component of operation. They are readily identified and
 Symbolically TC = TFC + TVC
are traceable to a particular product, operation or plant.

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Cheaper raw material and
TFC curve starts capital equipments
from a point on the
Y-axis shows that fixed
costs will be incurred even if Technological
the output is zero. On the other external economies.
hand, the TVC curve rises
COST

upward indicating that as output


increases, total variable cost Development of
increases. The TVC curve starts Kinds of skilled Labour
from the origin because variable External
costs are zero when the output Economies and
is zero. The TC curve has Diseconomies
Growth of ancillary industries
OUTPUT been obtained by adding
vertically the TFC curve
Short run Total Cost Curves and the
TVC curve. Better transportation and
marketing facilities

Relationship between Average Cost and Marginal Cost


 When average cost falls as a result of an increase in output, Economies of Information.
marginal cost is less than average cost.
 When average cost rises as a result of an increase in output,
marginal cost is more than average cost.
 When average cost is minimum, marginal cost is equal to
the average cost. In other words, marginal cost curve cuts
Meaning of
average cost curve at its minimum point (i.e. optimum point). Market

Long run Average Cost Curve(LAC)


The long run average cost curve, often called a planning curve,
is so drawn as to be tangent to each of the short run average Market is the whole
set of arrangements for
cost curves. buying and selling of a
commodity or service.

The LAC curve


is tangent to each of
AVERAGE COST

the short run average


cost curves. Every
point on the long run
average cost curve Perfect Competition
will be a tangency
point with some
short run
AC curve.
OUTPUT Monopolistic Competition
Types of
Markets
Economies of Scale and Diseconomies of Scale
Oligopoly
 When increase in scale is upto optimum level, then it is
economies of scale. On the other hand, increase in scale
beyond the optimum level, results in diseconomies of scale.
 Economies of scale is of two types-
Monopoly
• Internal economies of scale which accrue to a firm
when it engages in large scale production.
• External economies of scale accrue to a firm due to
factors which are external to a firm.

Technical economies
and diseconomies

Managerial economies
and diseconomies
Kinds of
Internal Commercial economies
Economies and and diseconomies
Diseconomies
Financial economies
and diseconomies

Risk bearing economies


and diseconomies

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CA FOUNDATION - PAPER 4: PART 2 - BUSINESS ECONOMICS
• The market structure mostly determines a firm’s power to fix the price of its product. The level of profit maximising
price is generally different in different kinds of markets due to differences in the nature of competition.
• Business Cycles have tremendous influence in business decisions. The stage of the business cycle is crucial while making
managerial decisions regarding expansion or downsizing.
• You are advised to read the capsule for understanding of the concepts. The graphs and charts will assist you in revision
of concept discussed in study material in minimum time.

Perfect Competition

cost/revenue
market (industry) Y firm
A market is said to be perfectly competitive if it has large number of Y
D
buyers and sellers, homogeneous product, free entry and exit, perfect s MC

Price
mobility of factors of production, perfect knowledge about the
market conditions, insignificant transaction costs, no government e
p p T R ar = mr
interference and absence of collusion.

Price Determination under Perfect Competition


D
s
Y O
D X O Q1 output Q2 X
S quantity

E (Equilibrium position of a firm under perfect competition)


p
Price

S D firm
industry
cost & revenue

O Q X

Price
output
(Equilibrium of a Competitive Industry)

(a) Market (b) Individual Seller


Y
d s
Price

output
quantity demanded
& supplied
D/AR/MR
p p
(Long run equilibrium of the firm in a perfectly competitive market)
Price

s d

In the long Run


O
QUANTITY QUANTITY N M X SMC = LMC = SAC = LAC = P = MR
The firm’s demand curve under perfect competition

In the long Run all the Supernormal Profits


Equilibrium of the Firm: or losses get wiped away with entry or exit
of the firms from the Industry and all firms
earn normal profit.

Conditions
for the
Equilibrium
of an
individual
firm:
M cut om
C M be

R
cu R lo

M
=
r v cu w
fr

e m rv

C
M
us e
t

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BUSINESS ECONOMICS
Y

cost/revenue
Monopoly satc
smc
Monopoly is an extreme form of imperfect competition with a single
seller of a product which has no close substitute.
C A
Major features of the monopoly market:
P B
Single seller of Barriers No close-
the product to Entry substitutes

E AR
O Q output X
Market power MR
(Equilibrium of the monopolist: Losses in the short run)

Y
MC
Y

price
MC atC
cost/revenue

A
P P
B
C
E D=AR
E

ar O Q X
Mr output
O Q X
output (Long run equilibrium of a monopolist)

Mr
(Equilibrium of a monopolist (Short run)) Price Discrimination

Y
cost/revenue

MC atC
P r i c e Conditions for price Objectives of Price
discrimination discrimination discrimination
is a method of • The firm should • To earn maximum
pricing adopted have price- setting profit
A by a monopolist power, • To dispose off
P in order to earn • The seller should surplus stock
abnormal profits. be able to divide • To enjoy
B It refers to the his market into economies of
C practices of two or more sub- scale
charging different markets. • To capture
E prices for different • The price- foreign markets
aR units of the same elasticity of the and
commodity product should • To secure equity
MR be different in through pricing.
different sub-
O Q output X markets,
• There must be no
(Firm’s equilibrium under monopoly: Maximisation of profits) market arbitrage.

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Equilibrium under price discrimination Y
D

cost and revenue


MC
Q AC
P
S
R
E D
AR

MR
O M X
output
(Fixation of Total Output and Prices in the two Sub-markets by (Price-output determination under monopolistic competition)
Discriminating Monopolist)
Y
MC AC

revenue and cost


Prof. Pigou classified three degrees of price discrimination
H
G
K
Under the first degree price discrimination, the T
monopolist separates the market into each individual
consumer and charges them the price they are willing E
and able to pay and thereby extract the entire consumer
surplus. Doctors, lawyers, consultants etc AR
MR
Under the second degree price discrimination, different O N X
prices are charged for different quantities of sold. The output
monopolist will take away only a part of the consumers’ (Short Run equilibrium of the Firm: losses)
surplus.

Y
LMC LAC
cost and revenue

Under the third degree price discrimination, price varies


by attributes such as location or by customer segment,
example dumping.
T L
P
E

AR
Monopolistic Competition MR
O Q R X
The essential feature of monopolistic competition is the existence output
of large number of firms, product differentiation, non price
competition, high selling costs and freedom of entry and exit of (Long Run equilibrium of the Firm in Monopolistic Competition)
firms.
Oligopoly
In monopolistic competition, the features of monopoly and perfect
competition are partially present: Prof. Stigler defines oligopoly as that “situation in which a firm
bases its market policy, in part, on the expected behaviour of a
Features of Monopolistic Competition few close rivals”.

• Large number of sellers Types of Oligopoly

• Product differentiation
Pure oligopoly Collusive and
Open and closed
or perfect Competitive
• Freedom of entry and exit oligopoly
oligopoly oligopoly

• Non-price competition
Syndicated
Partial or full
and organized
oligopoly
oligopoly

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BUSINESS ECONOMICS
Characteristics of Oligopoly Market: Phases of business cycle
• Expansion
Strategic Interdependence • Peak
• Contraction
Group behavior • Trough

Importance of advertising and selling costs


Expansion:
The expansion
Price and output decisions in an oligopolistic market phase is characterised
by increase in national Peak: The term
output, employment, peak refers to
When an oligopolistic firm changes its price, its rival firms will aggregate demand, the top or the
retaliate or react and change their prices which in turn would capital and consumer highest point
affect the demand of the former firm. Therefore, an oligopolistic expenditure, sales, of the business
profits, rising stock prices cycle
firm cannot have sure and determinate demand curve, since the
and bank credit.
demand curve keeps shifting as the rivals change their prices in
reaction to the price changes made by it.
Contraction: The
economy cannot Trough: At
Price Leadership continue to grow the depth of
depression, all
endlessly. Once peak
is reached, increase economic activities
A group of firms that explicitly agree (collude) to coordinate their touch the bottom
in demand is halted
activities is called a cartel. and starts decreasing and the phase of
in certain sectors. trough is reached

Kinked Demand Curve


The demand curve facing an oligopolistic, according to the kinked
demand curve hypothesis, has a ‘kink’ at the level of the prevailing
price. It is because the segment of the demand curve above the A noteworthy characteristic of these economic fluctuations is
prevailing price level is highly elastic and the segment of the demand that they are recurrent and occur periodically.
curve below the prevailing price level is inelastic
Y d Y

Real GDP
P
p
price

D O X
Time

CAUSES OF BUSINESS CYCLE


O M output X Internal Causes:

• Fluctuations in Effective Demand


Important market forms: • Fluctuations in Investment
• Variations in government spending
• Duopoly, a subset of oligopoly, is a market situation in which
• Macroeconomic policies
there are only two firms in the market.
• Money Supply
• Psychological factors
• Monopsony is a market characterized by a single buyer of a
product. or service and is mostly applicable to factor markets
External Causes:
in which a single firm is the only buyer of a factor.
• War
• Oligopsony is a market characterized by a small number of • Post War Reconstruction
large buyers and is mostly relevant to factor markets. • Technology shock
• Natural Factors
• Population growth
• Bilateral monopoly is a market structure in which there is
only a single buyer and a single seller i.e. it is a combination Examples of Business Cycle:
of monopoly market and a monopsony market.
 Great Depression of 1930
 Information Technology bubble burst of 2000
 Global Economic Crisis (2008-09)
Business Cycle
 Business cycles are contagious and are international in
character. They begin in one country and mostly spread to other
Business cycle refers to alternate expansion and contraction of
countries through trade relations.
overall business activity as manifested in fluctuations in measures
of aggregate economic activity, such as, gross national product,
employment and income.  The phase of the business cycle is important for a new business
to decide on entry into the market.

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BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL KNOWLEDGE
CA FOUNDATION - PAPER 4B - BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL KNOWLEDGE
ͳJTDBQTVMFPO'PVOEBUJPO1BQFSQBSU**#VTJOFTTBOE$PNNFSDJBM,OPXMFEHFCSPBEMZDPWFSTUIFDPNQBOJFTEJTDVTTFE
in detail in Chapter 3 of the Study Material. To facilitate easy understanding of the significant changes in the year 2021, an
attempt has been made to give an overview of the significant changes in the companies in tabulated form.
It may be kept in mind that the capsule is not the replacement of the Study Material. Reading of Study Material is absolute
essential. This capsule is intended to assist you in the process of quick revision.

A. AN OVERVIEW OF SELECTED INDIAN COMPANIES


S. Company’s Name Incorpo- Headquarters Chairman Present Chief Chief Ranking Ranking
No ration Managing Executive Financial in Forbes in Forbes
year Director Officer Officer World’s World’s
Largest Public Best
Corporations Employer’s
List 2021 List 2021
1 Adani Ports 1998 Ahmedabad, (BVUBNCIBJ Karan Deepak 1489th
and Special (VKBSBU Shantilal (BVUBNCIBJ Maheshwari
Economic India Adani Adani
Zone Ltd.
2 Asian Paints 1942 Mumbai, Amit Syngle Amit Syngle RJ 1536th
Ltd. Maharashtra, Jeyamurugan
India
3 Axis Bank 1993 Mumbai, Amitabh Amitabh Puneet 585th 254th
Ltd. Maharashtra, Chaudhry Chaudhry Sharma
India
4 Bajaj Auto 1945 Pune, Rahul Bajaj Rajiv Bajaj Rajiv Bajaj Dinesh 1620th
Ltd. Maharashtra, Thapar
India
5 Bharti Airtel 1995 New Delhi, India Sunil Bharti (PQBM7JUUBM (PQBM7JUUBM Soumen Ray 725th
Ltd. Mittal

6 Bharat 1952 Mumbai, Arun Kumar Arun Kumar K Padmakar Ramakrishna 792nd
Petroleum Maharashtra, Singh Singh (VQUB7FUTB
Corporation India
Ltd.
7 Cipla Ltd. 1935 Mumbai, Y K Hamied Umang Vohra Umang Vohra Kedar 460th
Maharashtra, Upadhye
India
8 Coal India 1975 Kolkata, Pramod Pramod Sunil Kumar 770th
Ltd. West Bengal, Agrawal Agrawal Mehta
India
9 Dr. Reddy’s 1984 Hyderabad, Kallam Satish Erez Israeli Parag
Lab. Ltd. Telangana, Reddy Agarwal
India
10 Flipkart 2007 Singapore Kalyan Sriram
(legal domicile) Krishnamurthy Venkataraman
Bengaluru,
Karnataka, India
(Operational
Headquarters)
11 ("*- 1984 New Delhi, India Manoj Jain Manoj Jain Manoj Jain A K Tiwari 1377th
(India) Ltd

12 HDFC Bank 1994 Mumbai, Deepak S Sashidhar Srinivasan 116th 77th


Ltd. Maharashtra, Parek Jagdishan Vaidyanathan
India
13 ICICI Bank 1994 Mumbai, (JSJTI Sandeep Sandeep Rakesh Jha 182nd 65th
Ltd. Maharashtra, Chandra Bakhshi Bakhshi
India Chaturvedi
14 Indian Oil 1959 New Delhi, India Shrikant Sandeep 599th
Corporation Madhav ,VNBS(VQUB
Ltd. Vaidya
15 Infosys Ltd. 1981 Bengaluru, Nandan Salil Parekh Salil Parekh Nilanjan Roy 492nd 588th
Karnataka, Nilekani
India
16 ITC Ltd. 1910 Kolkata, Sanjiv Puri Sanjiv Puri Sanjiv Puri Supratim 833rd 453rd
West Bengal, Dutta
India

26 May 2022 The Chartered Accountant Student

12
BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL KNOWLEDGE
S. Company’s Name Incorpo- Headquarters Chairman Present Chief Chief Ranking Ranking
No ration Managing Executive Financial in Forbes in Forbes
year Director Officer Officer World’s World’s
Largest Public Best
Corporations Employer’s
List 2021 List 2021
17 Larsen & 1938 Mumbai, Anil S.N. S.N. Shankar 366th 127th
Toubro Ltd. Maharashtra, Manibhai Subrahmanyan Subrahmanyan Raman
India Naik
18 NTPC Ltd. 1975 New Delhi, India (VSEFFQ (VSEFFQ Anil Kumar 513th
Singh Singh (BVUBN

19 Oil & Natural 1956 Uttarakhand, Dr. Alka Dr. Alka Anurag 665h 404th
(BT India Mittal Mittal Sharma
Corporation
Ltd.
20 1PXFS(SJE 1989 (VSVHSBN  Sreekant Sreekant Mohammed 796th
Corporation Haryana, Kandikuppa Kandikuppa Taj
of India Ltd. India Mukarrum
21 Reliance 1973 Mumbai, Mukesh Mukesh Mukesh Srikanth 55zh 52nd
Industries Maharashtra, Ambani Ambani Ambani Venkatchari
Ltd. India and Alok
Agarwal
22 State Bank 1806 Mumbai, Dinesh C.S. Setty, Charanjit 110th 119th
of India Maharashtra, Kumar Khara Ashwani Bhatia, Surinder
India Swaminathan J., Singh Attra
Ashwini
Kumar Tewari
23 Tata Sons 1868 Bombay House, Natarajan Natarajan Saurabh Tata Motors- Tata
Private Ltd. Mumbai, Chandrasekaran Chandrasekaran Agarwal and 784th (SPVQo
nd
Maharashtra, Eruch Noshir TCS – 322 746th
India Kapadia Tata Steel –
939th
24 Wipro Ltd. 1945 Bengaluru, Rishad Premji Rishad Premji Thierry Jatin Dalal 769th
Karnataka, Delaporte
India

B. AN OVERVIEW OF SELECTED GLOBAL COMPANIES


S. Company’s Name Incorpo- Headquarters Chairman Chief Chief Ranking in Ranking Ranking
No ration Executive Financial Forbes World’s in Forbes in Fortune
year Officer Officer Largest Public World’s Best 500
Corporations Employer’s Companies
List 2021 List 2021 List 2021
1 Amazon 1994 Seattle, Jeff Bezos Andy Jassy Brain T. 10th 4th 2nd
Washington, U.S. Olsavsky
2 American 1850 New York, United Stephen Stephen Jeffery C 95th 245th 312th
Express States of America Squeri Squeri Campbell
3 Apple 1977 California, United Tim Cook Luca Maestri 6th 5th 3rd
States of America
4 (PMENBO 1869 New York, United David M. David M. Stephen 26th 660th 59th
Sachs States of America Solomon Solomon Scherr
5 HP Inc. 1939 California, United Charles Enrique Marie Myers 709th 197th 56th
States of America Victor Bergh Lores
6 IBM 1911 New York, United Arvind Arvind James J. 59th 2nd 42nd
Corporation States of America Krishna Krishna Kovnaugh
7 Intel 1968 California, United Omar Ishrak Patrick Paul (FPSHF%BWJT 36th 69th 40th
Corporation States of America (FMTJOHFS
8 Microsoft 1975 Washington, John W. Satya Nadella Amy Hood 15th 3rd 15th
Corporation Thompson
9 Nestle 1866 Vevey, Switzerland Paul Bulcke Ulf Mark Francois- 39th 501st
Schneider Xavier Roger
10 Walmart 1969 Arkansas, United (SFHPSZ# Dough Bret Biggs 18th 1st
States of America Penner McMillon

The Chartered Accountant Student May 2022 27


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