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Paid in capital –
Is
that
section of stockholders' equity that shows: (1) amount of
stock a corporation has issued; (2) the premiums or discounts that
have resulted from selling stock (paid-in capital in excess of par
or stated value); (3) stock received from donations; and (4) the
resale of Treasury stock. Stockholders' equity consists of paid-in
or contributed capital and retained earnings.
Paid in surplus –
That part of paid in capital in excess of par or stated value.
Paid-up share capital -
The value
of issued shares which have been paid for. See Called-up
Share capital.
Paper profit
– Is the unrealised gain from holding an item while
its market value has increased.
Paradox of thrift
- An increased desire to save (an increase in the MPS) will
lead to 'a reduction in the equilibrium level of saving.
P&L
- Profit and loss statement.
Parent company -
1. owner of a subsidiary company. Or 2. a holding company
that is not engaged in a trade or business.
Pareto principle/law
– An
analysis used to differentiate between the vital few
and the trial many. It is based on the concept that
about 80 percent of the problems come from 20 percent of the
items. Pareto analysis can be used to identify cost drivers
or activity drivers that are responsible for the majority of
cost incurred by ranking the cost drivers in order of value.
Parity -
1.
economics,
term
designating a constant spread between prices; for example,
having a constant relationship between domestic and world
sugar prices. Or 2. labour law, salary equality
among workers such as policemen and firemen.
Parity
price
- The
measuring device for price levels in terms of an index
number of 100.
Participation rate
- The percentage of the working age population that is part
of the workforce.
Participative budgeting
– A budgeting system enabling key employees in a department
to provide input into the budgetary process.
Partnership -
Refers to an unincorporated form of business ownership
(unlimited liability)
that has between two to twenty owners.
Each of whom takes part in the management of the firm
and is personally responsible for all of the firm's actions
and debts.
It is different
from a sole trader in that a sole trader has only
one single owner.
Partnership agreement
- The written and legal agreement between business partners.
Par
value -
1. is the maturity value or in other words the face value,
i.e., the amount that the issuer has agreed to pay on
maturity. Or 2. the
official rate of exchange between two different countries' currencies.
Or 3. the value of an individual security that has
been set by the firm issuing it and is not related to
current market value.
Patent -
Is a legal form of intellectual property protection (or licence) that provides an
entity or individual with the exclusive rights to stop
other firms from using, making, or selling a the concept or
specific invention
for the length of time of the patent.
Paternalism
- Intervention in the free choices of individuals by others
(including governments) to protect them
against
their own ignorance or folly.
Payable –
Refers to the amount of monies waiting a payment to be completed, e.g. taxes
payable or accounts payable.
Payables turnover
- Purchases / Average Payables.
Payback
period
– The amount of time it takes to recover the cost of an
investment. In capital budgeting the payback period refers
to the specific time period
needed by the firm in order to recoup the initial plus and
subsequent costs of the capital investment. The payback
period includes all initial investment to the annual
predicted cash
inflows for the recovery time period. The major problem of
this ratio is that it does not take into
account cash flows which the firm receives after the payback period
has been met and thus can
not be considered a measure of the profitability of any
particular investment undertaking.
Pay
cycle
- The criteria by which scheduled payments are selected for
payment creation, e.g., payroll may be on a weekly,
bi-weekly, or monthly pay cycle.
Payment -
The satisfaction of a debt or claim; primarily money paid to
fulfill an obligation.
Payment by results – Payment methods that reward workers for the quantity and quality of
work they produce.
Payment due date -
The date on which a payment is due and payable.
Payment in kind - The settlement of a charge for goods or services or satisfaction of
liabilities with similar or identical mediums of exchange
and value (e.g., money for money, goods for goods, and
services for services). It also connotes a transaction where
one medium of exchange is satisfied with another.
Payout ratio -
The ratio of
cash dividends declared to earnings for the period. It
equals dividends per share divided by earnings per share.
Payroll
costs
– Refers to employer costs incurred for employees' services.
Payroll costs consist of the actual cash paid to the
employees and the withheld amounts.
Payroll
tax –
Are
taxes
levied on employee's salaries or net income of self-employed
individuals.
P.A.Y.E
(Pay
as you earn)
- This is an income tax system where the tax of an employee
is deducted before their wages are paid.
Pareto
optimum -
The situation (economic theory) where it is not possible to
change the combination of output of goods and services
produced by a society without making the net happiness of
society fall.
Pay on
delivery (COD) -
The purchaser must pay for the goods (to the carrier) when
they receive them.
Peak –
The time period where the maximum use/demand occurs. For
example, at peak traffic hours congestion can be severe.
Pending -
1. Not as yet decided. or 2. Being in the state of continuance.
Penetration pricing
– A
method of pricing a standard product. It sets a low initial
price for a product in order to gain quick acceptance in a
broad portion of the market. It calls for a sacrifice of
short-term profits in order to establish a certain amount of
market share.
Penny
stock -
A
low priced,
highly speculative stock.
Pension fund (MPF) -
A fund reserved to pay workers' pensions when they retire
from service. Also known as SUPERANNUATION FUND.
PE ratio -
The quoted price of an ordinary share divided by the most
recent years earnings.
Per
capita Income –
A measure of the mean income averaged for the entire
population of a particular group. It is arrived at dividing
the total income by the total
population of the group.
Per
capita output
- GDP divided by total population.
Perceived demand
- The demand which the managers owners of a business believe
exists for their products in a particular market
Perfect competition
-
A market
structure in which all firms in an industry are price takers
and in which there is freedom of entry into and exit from
the industry.
P erfect
complements
- Two goods with right-angle indifference curves.
Perfect
market
- A
market structure characterized by a very large number of
buyers and sellers of a homogeneous (non-differentiated)
product. Entry and exit from the industry is costless, or
nearly so. Information is freely available to all market
participants, and there is no collusion among firms in the
industry.
P erfect
substitutes - Two goods with straight-line
indifference curves.
Perfectly contestable market - A market where there is free and costless entry and exit.
Perfectly elastic demand
- Demand with an elasticity of infinity; the quantity
demanded becomes zero if the price rises by the smallest
amount and the quantity demanded becomes infinite if the
price falls by the smallest amount.
Perfectly elastic supply
- Elasticity of supply is infinite; the quantity supplied
becomes zero if the price falls by the slightest amount, and
the quantity supplied becomes infinite if the price rises by
the slightest amount.
Perfectly inelastic demand
- Demand with an elasticity of zero; the quantity demanded
does not change as the price rises.
Perfectly inelastic supply
- Elasticity of supply is zero; the quantity supplied does
not change as the price changes.
Performance audit –
Is an
appraisal of how a particular activity is carrying out the
company's policies and procedures. Such review may cover any
activity within a department, division, or local area.
Performance budget - 1. a budget format that relates to both the input of resources
into something and
the output of services of that thing for each unit within an
organisation. Sometimes this may be called a program
budget. Or 2. a medium- to short-range budget used in
governmental accounting.
Performance
indicators –
Refer to those pieces of empirical data that are indicative of how well, or
maybe poorly, an firm is performing against its preset
objectives and goals. Normally, a firm will set specific
targets over a specific period of time, that the firm does believe are
both attainable and realistic and then track its performance over
the time period to see if those targets and/or objectives
are being met.
Performance related pay – Management’s attempts to increase worker productivity by
linking pay with performance.
Performance report - A statement that displays measurements of actual results of some
person or entity's activity over some time period.
Performing asset -
An asset that generates an annual financial positive return.
Examples could include a piece of production machinery or,
in transportation, an truck.
Period cost –
Refers to
an expense that can not be directly attributed to a item
that has been produced e.g. rent. Period costs are
charged against sales revenues for period from which the
revenue was earned.
Period costs may also be called period expense.
Periodicity Concept -
The concept that each individual accounting period has some
level of economic
activity that is directly associated with that period, and
further to this that the specified activities can be
measured, recorded, and then reported upon.
Periodic
audit
- 1. audit for an intermediate period (e.g., one month,
three months). Or 2. audit carried out at specified
intervals within the year.
Periodic inventory -
A Periodic Inventory is one whose balance is updated on a
periodic basis, ie. every week/month/year. See Inventory.
Peripherals –
Refers to the auxiliary equipment used in computer systems.
Permanent account -
An account that is included on the Balance Sheet, e.g.
Accounts Receivable and
Accounts Payable.
Permanent capital
– Share capital which is never repaid by the company.
Permanent employment
- Employment for an indefinite period of time.
Permanent income
- The maximum amount that a household can consume per year
into the indefinite future without reducing its wealth. Also
called lifetime income.
Permanent-income theory
- A hypothesis that relates actual consumption to permanent
income rather than (as in the original Keynesian theory) to
current income.
Perpetual inventory -
A Perpetual Inventory is one whose balance is updated after
each and every transaction. See Inventory .
Perpetual succession -
A legal distinctions between what constitutes a business and
what constitutes a company. A
company has perpetual succession which means that any change in
the company's membership does not have any affect the legal existence of that company
whereas a business which is not a company does not enjoy this perpetual succession
relationship. For example, in a partnership, a change in the membership
(one of the partners dies etc) affects
the legal stance of the partnership.
Perpetuity
– An
annuity that goes on indefinitely.
Persistent earnings
– Refers to
the level of earnings, from one accounting period to
the next accounting period, that continually recure.
Personal accounts -
These are the accounts of a business's customers and
suppliers. They are usually held in the Sales and Purchase
Ledgers.
Personal equity –
Refers to
that percentage of equity that is held to an individuals own
benefit or invested as a part of the range of assets of the
legal entity.
Personal
financial planning –
The
field of financial planning for individuals. It involves
(I) analysing a client's personal finances; and (2)
recommending how to improve the client's financial
condition.
Personal income
- Income earned by, or paid to, individuals before allowance
for personal income taxes on that Income.
Personal
loan -
A loan for
a short term period of time that is given based on the
personal credit worthiness of the individual borrower.
Person specification
- A profile of the type of person needed to do a job.
Persuasive advertising
- Advertising which seeks to influence and persuade
consumers to buy a product
PEST
analysis
- An analysis of the political, economic, social and
technological factors affecting a business.
Petty cash
-
A small amount of money held in reserve (normally used to
purchase items of small value where a cheque or other form
of payment is not suitable).
Petty cash
slip -
A document used to record petty cash payments where an
original receipt was not obtained (sometimes called a petty
cash voucher).
Phantom profit
– Is used to refer to a hypothetical or non existent profit, i.e., no actual cash flow
has been generated.
Appreciation on any given asset, e.g. stock, may be called a phantom
profit. This is the situation until the asset is then
sold, at which time it generates a
cash flow.
Phillips curve
-
Originally, a relationship between the percentage of the
labour force unemployed and the rate of change of money
wages. Now often drawn as a relationship between the
percentage of the labour force employed and the rate of
price inflation or between actual national income and the
rate of price inflation.
Physical
capital
- The
stock of equipment and structures that are used to produce
goods and services.
Physical inventory (stock-take)
- Is
determining the quantity of inventory on hand through an
inventory count (i.e., quantity, weight).
Picketing
- When people on strike gather at the entrance to the, firm
and attempt to persuade workers or delivery vehicles from
entering.
Pictograph or pictogram
- A chart where numerical data is represented by pictorial
symbols.
Piece rates
- A payment system where employees are paid an agreed rate
for every item produced.
Pie chart
- A chart which consists of a circle where the data
components are represented by the segments.
Pigovian
tax
- A tax enacted to correct the effects of a negative
externality.
Placement –
When one bank depositing (sells) Eurodollars with/to another
different bank. This is said to be the bank making a placement.
Planned economy or command economy – An economics system in which the state is responsible for
resource allocation.
Planning
- Planning is the process of deciding, in advance, what is
to be done and how it is to be done.
Planning
permission
- When a government body allows a business to build a
factory or office in a particular location.
Plant asset -
A
non-current physical (real) asset that is used by the firm
in its manufacturing
activities.
Plant economies of scale - Economies of scale that arise because of the large size of the
factory.
Pledge
1. the transfer or commitment of a specific asset or set of
assets being used as collateral to secure payment relating
to a debt obligation. For example, when a
firm/individual pledges securities to a lender for a loan
that is then secured by the owner of those pledged
securities.
Or 2. the deposit and/or the placing of some personal property/assets as
security for a specific debt or other specific obligation with another person
is called
a pledgee. The pledgee then has the power to sell the
specific property or asset if the debt is subsequently not paid
in full. When the debt is paid in full, the
right to the possession of the property or asset return to the
original pledgor. Or, 3. a pledge may be a oral or written
agreement to contribute cash or assets to some activity.
Pledged asset
– Is when the asset has been
used as a form of collateral in order to secure a debt or
other contract.
The lender takes possession of the pledged asset, but ownership
does not change hands unless a default on the loan occurs
e.g. a pawn shop.
Point
elasticity
- A measure of the responsiveness of quantity to price at a
particular point on the demand curve.
Point of
diminishing average productivity - The level of output at which average product reaches a
maximum.
Point
of diminishing marginal productivity - The level of
output at which marginal product reaches a maximum.
Point of
sale (POS) -
The place where the product is being sold, e.g.. a shop.
Point of sale promotion-
A promotion at any point where a consumer buys a product.
Policy
instruments
- The variables that the government can control directly to
achieve its policy objectives.
Policy variables - The variables that the government
seeks to control, such as real national income and the price
level.
Poll tax
- A lump-sum tax per head of the population. Since it is a
fixed amount, it has a marginal rate of zero with
respect to both income and wealth.
Pool
- 1. a group of different individuals/entities that have organised
for a common and purpose or
any other communal grouping of funds. Or 2. in capital
budgeting, when investment projects are to be out of a pool of bonds, common stock,
and
preferred stock at
a weighted-average cost. or 3. in insurance, it refers to
when a group of
different insurers share the risk premium. Or 4. in investments,
a pool may mean a
combination of funds which is for the benefit or support of
some common project. Or 5. when a group of investors use their combined
level of influence in order to
manipulate the price of something.
Population
- Rate of Natural Increase - Birth rate minus death rate
expressed as a percentage, ignoring any migration.
Population doubling time
- The number of years it will take for a population to
double assuming a constant rate of increase.
Population growth rate
-The increase in a country's population in a year expressed
as percentage of the population at the beginning of the
year. It reflects the difference between birth rate and
death rate plus net migration. The average of several years
is more representative than any single year.
Population per physician
- The population of a country divided by the number of
doctors. It takes no account of numbers of nurses or medical
technicians.
Population structure
- The breakdown of the people in a country into groups based
on differences in age, gender. geographical location etc.
Portfolio -
1. the act of combining securities to reduce risk by
diversification. Or 2. is a term used to describe all the
different investments that an individual or entity does own. A diversified portfolio
is one that contains a range of different investments.
Portfolio balance
- The balance of assets, according to their liquidity, that
people choose to hold in their portfolios.
Portfolio
investment
- In balance-of-payments accounting, foreign investment in
bonds or a minority holding of shares that does not involve
legal control. See also direct investment.
Position
-
The
financial condition of an entity.
Positive action – Measures geared towards improving employment opportunities and
training of groups that are under-represented at work.
Positive
statement
-
A
statement about what actually is (was or will be), as
opposed to what ought to be. An expression that can
be verified by observation.
Post -
Is the transfer of the accounting entries from a specific journal
(book of first entry) into the correct ledger book.
This is done in a chronological order
in accordance to when the entry was generated.
Post
closing trial balance -
This is a trial balance prepared after the balance sheet has
been drawn up, and only includes balance sheet accounts.
Post date -
Is when a date from the future is paced on a cheque or other
document. This means the document does not become
valid until that date e.g. a post dated cheque can not be
cashed until on or after the date on the cheque.
Posting
-
The copying
of entries from the journals to the ledgers.
Postulate
- A proposition which is considered as true in order to give
a basis for further logical reasoning.
Potential growth
- The percentage annual increase in the capacity of the
economy to produce.
Potential income (Y)
- The real gross domestic product that the economy could
produce if its productive resources were fully employed at
their normal levels of utilisation. Also called potential
GDP or high employment income.
Potential output
- The output that could be produced in the economy if there
were a full employment of resources (including labour).
Poverty
gap
- The number of dollars per year required to raise the
income of everyone below the poverty level to that level.
Poverty
level
- The official government estimate of the annual family
income that is required to maintain a minimum adequate
standard of living.
Poverty line
- An absolute level of income set by the federal government
for each family size below which a family is deemed to be in
poverty.
Poverty rate
- The percentage of the population whose family income falls
below an absolute level called the poverty line
Poverty trap - Where poor people are discouraged from working
or getting a better job because any extra income they earn
will be largely taken away in taxes and lost benefits.
PPI
- Producer price index.
PR
– Public relations
Practical capacity -
Is the highest activity level at which the factory can
operate with an acceptable degree of efficiency, taking into
consideration unavoidable losses of productive time (i.e.,
vacations, holidays, repairs to equipment); also called
maximum practical capacity.
Predatory pricing - Where a firm sets its prices below average
cost in order to drive competitors out of business.
Precautionary balances
- Money balances held for protection against the uncertainty
of the timing of cash flows.
Precious metals - Are valuable commodities (e.g., gold and silver) representing a
private store of value. Precious metals are liquid, have
international markets, and provide a hedge against
inflation, currency risk, and unfavourable political and
economic developments.
Pre-emptive right –
Refers to
the right of a current share holder to maintain the
proportional ownership they have in the company by buying
any new
share issue on a pro rata basis prior to the shares being
released to the
public.
Preference
shares -
This is a type of share issued by a limited company. It
carries a medium risk but has the advantage over ordinary
shares in that preference shareholders get the first slice
of the dividend 'pie' (but usually at a fixed rate).
Preferential trading arrangements
- A trade agreement whereby trade between the signatories
is freer than trade with the rest of the world.
Preferred creditor – Is a creditor that has priority over another creditor when the
company becomes bankrupt.
Preferred
stock -
Is
non-voting capital stock which normally pays a dividend at a
specific stated
rate and also has a preferential position over common stock
with regard to the payment of
dividends and/or any liquidation of the firms assets.
Premium on capital stock –
Refers to
the excess monies that are received higher then the par value of
the stock issued.
Premium
price
- A price above the average charged by businesses in the
market.
Prepaid
expenses –
Refers to
amounts that are paid in prior to the good or service being
received to a supplier or creditor for goods & services. Prepaid Expenses is
classified as a current asset on the balance sheet of the
firm. This is because the item has already been paid for and
someone owes a good or service for which has already
prepaid.
Pre-payments -
One or more accounts set up to account for money paid in
advance (eg. insurance, where part of the premium applies to
the current financial year, and the remainder to the
following year).
Prerequisite
- An event or action that has to be satisfied before the
next event or action can occur.
Present value (PV)
– The value today of a sum of money in the future. It is the
discounted value of an individual payment or possibly a stream
or flow of payments to be
received at sometime in the future, applying a specific
interest or specific discount rate e.g. inflation rate. Present
value is the representation
of future cash flows expressed in the value of today's
dollar amount.
Pressure groups - Groups of people without direct political power who seek to influence
decision makers in politics. business and society.
Price -
Price is most often given by the amount of money an item or
service would bring if or when it is sold.
Price benchmark - A price that is typically used. Firms, when
raising prices, will usually raise them from one benchmark
to another.
Price
consumption line
- A line connecting the points of tangency between a set of
indifference curves and a set of budget lines where one
absolute price is fixed and the other varies, money income
being held constant.
Price
controls
- Government policies that attempt to hold the price in a
particular market at a disequilibrium value.
Price ceiling –
Usually refers to a government imposed limit on how high a price can be
charged on a product.
Price change accounting -
Accounting for the value of assets, stock, raw materials etc.
by their current market value instead of the more
traditional Historic Cost .
Price control
- Government regulation of the market prices such that a
legal maximum price is specified.
Price discrimination
- The practice of charging a higher price to some customers
than to others for an identical good or service i.e. there
are no differences in cost as in price differentiation.
Price
earning multiple -
The price-earnings ratio (P/E) : the price of a company's
share of common stock at the current market price divided by
the company's earnings per share. If this is multiplied by the
company's net
income is one way to value a business.
Price earnings ratio (PER)
– Relates the earnings per share to its market price and
reflects the return for buying shares.
Price elasticity of demand -
The percentage (or proportionate) change -in quantity demanded divided by
the percentage (or proportionate) change in price.
Price elasticity of supply - The percentage (or proportionate) change in quantity
supplied divided by the percentage (or proportionate) change
in price
Price fixing
- A practice which is often illegal, where companies that
should be competing agree, formally or informally, to restrict
and/or control the price often within a specified price range.
Price
floor
- A government imposed minimum permissible price at which a
product may be sold.
Price index
- A measure of the average level of prices in one period as
a percentage of their level in an earlier period.
Price level
- The average level of prices as measured by a price index.
Price
maker - A firm that administers its prices.
Price mechanism
- The system in a market economy whereby changes in price
in response to changes in demand and supply have the effect
of making demand equal to supply.
Price mix -
The value of an item that is determined by the individual producer.
The price mix can include decisions relating to, the price level,
any discounts and, any credit terms to be
allowed to customers.
Price
skimming
- A pricing strategy where a high price is set for a new
product on the market.
Price stability
- A situation in which the average level of prices is moving
neither up nor down.
Prices and incomes policies
- Government policies which restrict the increase of prices
and incomes in order to attain price stability.
Price taker
- A firm that cannot influence the price of its output.
Price
theory
- The theory of how prices are determined; competitive price
theory concerns the determination of prices in competitive
markets by the interaction of demand and supply.
Price to
earnings ratio (P/E)
– This ratio is used as a performance benchmark to compare
one company against other companies or may also be used to
compare the company's
own historical stock performance.
Price
variance (PV) –
Is the
difference between actual unit price and standard unit price,
multiplied by actual quantity of input used. It reflects a
change between the expected price and actual price of input.
Pricing strategy
- The pricing policy or method of pricing adopted by a
business.
Primary data
- Information which does not already exist and is collected
through the use of field research.
Primary health care
- Health service provision based upon preventing rather than
curing diseases. It includes clean water supply, sanitation,
immunization and nutritional and family planning services.
Primary labour market
- The market for permanent full-time core workers.
Primary market –
1.
Accounting, The first sale of a newly issued security to the
market. Those
new securities are purchased within the primary market. All trading of those securities
subsequently is done via
secondary market. Or 2. Economics - The market for primary
products.
Primary production
- The production of goods that are sold or used as
they are they are found in nature e.g. fish, trees,
diamonds, oil.
Primary
research
- The collection and collation of original data via direct
contact with potential or existing customers. Also called
field research.
Primary
sector
- Industry which extracts the natural resources of the
earth.
Primary school enrolment rate
- The number of children of primary school age, usually 6 to
11 years, who are enrolled at school as a percentage of the
age group. Sometimes this is greater than 100% due to
younger and older pupils enrolling.
Prime book
of entry -
See Original book of entry .
Prime cost -
Refers to the sum of direct material plus direct labour. It
excludes overheads.
Prime rate -
The interest rate that is charged by the bank to its preferred
customers. If the prime rate changes other rates will then
change e.g. mortgage interest rates.
Principal -
1. face amount of a financial instrument on which
interest accrues. Or 2. carrying value of an obligation
(i.e., bonds payable). Or3. amount invested, excluding
return on investment. Or 4. high-level individual (i.e.,
partner) in a CPA firm having major authority and
responsibilities. Or 5. owner, especially one with executive
authority, of a business firm.
Principal-agent problem
-
The
problem of resource allocation that arises because
contracts that will induce agents to act in their
principals' best interests are generally impossible to write
or too costly to monitor.
Principle
of substitution
- The principle that methods of production will change if
relative prices of inputs change, with relatively more of
the cheaper input and relatively less of the more expensive
input being used.
Prior period -
refers to the accounting periods that have occurred before
the current one.
Prisoners' dilemma
- Where two or more firms (people), by attempting
independently to choose the best strategy for whatever the
other(s) a likely to do, end up in a worse position than
they had co-operated in the first place.
Private benefits
– The benefit of an activity to an individual or a business.
Private corporation (company) -
A corporation whose ownership is held with the private sector
i.e. either LTD or PLC.
Private costs
– The cost of an activity to an individual or business.
Private efficiency
- Where a person's marginal benefit from a given activity
equals the marginal cost.
Private equity –
Refers to the equity securities of companies which are unlisted i.e. non-publicly
traded.
Private good
- A good (or service), each unit of which is consumed by
only one individual.
Private limited company (PLC) - A company owned by its shareholders. Shareholders' liability is
limited to the value of their shares. Shares can only be
bought and sold privately.
Private saving
- Saving on the part of individuals, the part of disposable
income that is not spent on consumption.
Private sector
- The portion of an economy in which goods and services are
produced by non governmental units, such as firms and
households.
Privatisation
- The process of selling a public corporation to private
shareholders.
Private sector
- Businesses that are owned by individuals or groups of
individuals.
Probability
- The degree of likelihood that something will happen.
Proceeds -
The total
amount received from an activity, e.g. the proceeds of a
specific sale. In
insurance, it refers to the net amount which is received after
any deductions for
discount or other charges.
Process
- The method used to convert inputs to final goods or
services.
Process costing -
A method used in cost accounting that is applied to a production
process where the product is created by a series of
different operational or chemical stages in the production
processes. Costs are
normally accumulated for the whole production process and
the the average unit cost is calculated for each stage of
the process to get the total unit costs.
Procurement -
The purchasing of specific materials or services.
Pro
cyclical
- Moving in the same direction as the business cycle up in
booms and down in slumps.
Producer price index (PPI)
- A measure of the average price change over time in the selling
price received by the domestic producers within a country
for their production.
Producer surplus - The
difference between the total amount that producers receive
for all units sold of a product and the total variable cost
of producing the product.
Product
- 1. the end result of a specific manufacturing or other
production process. Or 2.
commodities which are offered for sale. Or 3. an artefact or
item that has been made by individual or a process.
Product cost
– The cost of any inventory which is currently on hand.
It is also referred to as inventoriable cost. They are
considered assets of the firm until the products/items are sold. Once the
product/item is sold, it is treated as a expense, i.e. Cost of Good Sold
(COGS). All manufacturing costs are considered to be product costs, e.g.,
direct labour,
direct material and factory overhead.
Product differentiation
- Slight differences in products which may be real or
perceived.
Product
family
- A
group of products or services that have a defined
relationship because of physical and production
similarities.
Product
life cycle
- The period that starts with the initial product
specification and ends with the withdrawal of the product
from the marketplace. A product life cycle is characterised
by certain defined stages, including research, development,
introduction, maturity, decline, and abandonment.
Product mix (product portfolio) –
The particular mix of products that the firm is marketing.
Or 2) involves planning and developing the right type of
product that will satisfy fully the needs of customers. A
product has several dimensions. These dimensions are
collectively called 'product mix'. Product mix for example
may consist of size and weight of the product, volume of
output, product quality, product design, product range,
brand name, package, product testing, warranties and after
sales services and the like.
Product orientation
- An approach to business which places the main focus of
attention upon the production process and the product
itself.
Production
- The conversion of natural, human and capital resources
into goods and services.
Production budget - The
schedule for expected units to be produced. It sets forth
the units expected to be manufactured to satisfy budgeted
sales and inventory requirements.
Production function
- A
functional relation showing the maximum output that can be
produced by each and
every
combination of inputs.
Production possibility frontier (curve)
-
A curve
that shows which alternative combinations of commodities can
just be attained if all available resources are used; it is
thus the boundary between attainable and unattainable output
combinations. Also called the production possibility
boundary.
Productive activity -
Is defined as including any activities that generate economic value
for the firm in the marketplace. May also be defined as a any activity that produces
or creates a
good or service that has value even if the good or service
has not been actually paid for.
Productive efficiency
- A situation where firms producing the maximum output for a given
amount of inputs, or producing a given output at the least
cost.
Productivity
-
Output
produced per unit of some input; frequently used to refer to
labour productivity, measured by total output divided by
the amount of labour used.
Productivity agreement -
Workers and management agree an increase in benefits, in
return for an increase in productivity.
Productivity deal
- When, in return for a wage increase, a union agrees to
changes in working practices that will increase output per
worker.
Productivity ratio –
Shows the ratio of outputs as compared to inputs. The closer to 1:0, the higher the productivity, the closer to 0:0,
the lower the productivity. Productivity can be affected by
different work methods, quality, technology, management
practices etc.
Product
life cycle
- The stages a product will pass through from its
introduction, through its growth until it is mature and then
finally its decline.
Product markets
- Markets in which outputs of goods services are sold. Also
called goods markets.
Product-orientated
- A description applied to a business whose main focus of
activity is on the product itself. See also
market-orientated.
Professional ethics - The moral principles and standards of conduct guiding professionals
such as CPAs in performing their functions.
Profit -
1.
in ordinary usage, the difference between value of outputs
and the value of inputs. Or 2. in economics, the difference
between revenues received from the sale of goods and the
value of inputs, includes the opportunity cost of capital,
so that profits are economic profits. (3) In
macroeconomics, profits exclude interest on borrowed capital
but do not exclude the return on owner's capital. Or
4. Profit (π) = Total Revenue (TR) – Total Cost (TC). (See Gross profit
, Net profit , and Profit and Loss Account .
Profitability
- The
ability of a business entity to generate net income i.e.
revenues in excess of the costs incurred in producing those
revenues.
Profitability index -
The
ratio of the total present value (PV) of future cash inflows
to the initial investment (I).
Profitability ratios
– Ratios
that
measure the performance of a firm, where earnings compared
to its sales, assets or equity.
Profit after tax (PAT)
- The net profit earned by the company after deducting all
expenses like interest, depreciation and tax. PAT can be
fully retained by a company to be used in the business.
Dividends, if declared, are paid to the share holders from
this residue.
Profit and
loss account -
An account made up of revenue and expense accounts which
shows the current profit or loss of a business (i.e.. whether
a business has earned more than it has spent in the current
year).
Profit and loss appropriation account - Shows how the profit after tax is distributed
between shareholders and the business.
Profit
and loss sharing
(PLS)
- This is a method used in Islamic banking to comply with the
Islamic
prohibition of interest. The Islamic solution, commonly
referred to as Profit & Loss Sharing (PLS), implements
the idea of an
equitable sharing of risks and profits between the different parties
involved in the financial transaction. In banking, there are three parties - the entrepreneur or the
individual or firm that actually uses the capital, the bank which serves
the roles of a partial
user of capital funds and as the financial intermediary, and
thirdly
the depositors in the bank who supplied the savings
used as the capital funds. There two different partnership
that are created in this Islamic banking method are: the partnership between the
individual
depositors and their bank, and the partnership between the
the borrower (entrepreneur) and the bank. Under this
method of banking, the bank or other financial institution will not receive a fixed
rate on the outstanding loans, rather, they will get to
share the profits or losses of the business owner to
whom they have provided the funds. Similarly, those people
who deposit their funds in the bank will get to share in the
profit or losses of the bank.
Profit and
loss statement (P&L)
or (income statement) - This statement shows a firms
revenues and expenses for a specific time period. The
e total revenues less total expense
is the firms net income or net profit.
Profit before taxes (PBT)
- A profitability measure that looks the firm's profits
before it pays its company/corporation/profit tax.
Profit centre
- Part of a business where revenues and costs can be clearly
defined.
Profit margin -
The percentage difference between the costs of a product and
the price you sell it for. Eg. if a product costs you $10 to
buy and you sell it for $20, then you have a 100% profit
margin. This is also known as your 'mark-up'.
Profit maximisation
- Producing a level of output which generates the most
profit for a business. Where marginal cost is equal to
marginal revenue.
Profit maximising rule - Profit is maximised where marginal revenue equals marginal
cost.
Profit sharing plan
- A plan by
which corporate executives and employees receive a share of
the company's net income on some equitable basis. Such
basis may relate to salary level and service years.
Profit
variance
– Is the
difference between actual profit and budgeted profit.
Profit
volume (PV) chart (Break even chart) –
A chart
or graph
that determines how profits vary with changes in volume.
Profits are plotted on the vertical axis while units of
output are shown on the horizontal axis.
Pro-forma -
To provide a prescribed form for completing a specified
task.
Pro-forma accounts (pro-forma financial
statements) - A set of accounts prepared before the accounts have been
officially audited. Often done for internal purposes or to
brief shareholders or the press.
Pro-forma
invoice -
An invoice sent that requires payment before any goods or
services have been dispatched.
Program budget
- A budget where the inputs of any resources and outputs of
the final services are identified by different specific programs without
any regard to the
number of different organisational units involved in the performing
and completing of various different aspects of the specific program.
Progressive income tax - An income tax where the portion of income paid in tax is
higher for people on high incomes than for people on low
incomes. The marginal rate of tax is greater than the
average rate of tax.
Progressive tax
- A tax that takes a larger percentage of come the higher
the level of income.
Proportional income tax
- An income tax where the portion of income paid in tax is
the same for people on high incomes as it is for people on
low incomes.
Proportional tax
- A tax that takes a constant percentage of income at all
levels of income and is thus progressive nor regressive.
Project
-
A
broad, complex, multidisciplinary approach to the
production of a good or service.
Project
costing
- A
cost system that collects information on activities and
costs associated with a specific activity, project, or
program.
Projection -
An approximation or prediction of future events. Usually a projection is
based on the known information and then used to estimate a future
period but also taking into consideration events that could affect
or influence the possible outcomes.
Promissory note
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