6.3

Business and the international economy

Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies (0450)  · Unit 6: External influences on business activity  · 10 flashcards

Business and the international economy is topic 6.3 in the Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies (0450) syllabus , positioned in Unit 6 — External influences on business activity , alongside Government economic objectives and policies and Environmental and ethical issues.  In one line: Globalisation is the increasing integration of economies worldwide through increased trade, investment, and migration. A key reason for its growth is reduced trade barriers, making it easier and cheaper to import and export goods.

This topic is examined in Paper 1 (short-answer questions, built around a pre-released case study) and Paper 2 (extended case-study analysis).

The deck below contains 10 flashcards — 8 definitions, 1 key concept and 1 application card — covering the precise wording mark schemes reward.  Use the 8 definition cards to lock down command-word answers (define, state), then move on to the concept and application cards to handle explain, describe and compare questions.

Key definition

Globalisation and give one reason for its growth

Globalisation is the increasing integration of economies worldwide through increased trade, investment, and migration. A key reason for its growth is reduced trade barriers, making it easier and cheaper to import and export goods.

Questions this Business and the international economy deck will help you answer

Definition Flip

Define globalisation and give one reason for its growth.

Answer Flip

Globalisation is the increasing integration of economies worldwide through increased trade, investment, and migration. A key reason for its growth is reduced trade barriers, making it easier and cheaper to import and export goods.

Definition Flip

What is a multinational corporation (MNC)? Give an example.

Answer Flip

An MNC is a company that operates in multiple countries. These companies often have production facilities or retail outlets in several nations.

Example: McDonald's.
Definition Flip

Differentiate between imports and exports.

Answer Flip

Imports are goods and services bought from other countries, while exports are goods and services sold to other countries. A country imports goods it cannot produce efficiently and exports goods it can produce efficiently.

Definition Flip

Explain what a tariff is and how it impacts international trade.

Answer Flip

A tariff is a tax imposed on imported goods. Tariffs increase the price of imported goods, making them less competitive and potentially reducing the volume of international trade.

Definition Flip

Define quotas and discuss their effect as a trade barrier.

Answer Flip

Quotas are limits on the quantity of a good that can be imported into a country. They restrict the supply of foreign goods, raising prices and protecting domestic industries from competition.

Definition Flip

What are trade barriers? Give two examples.

Answer Flip

Trade barriers are government-imposed restrictions on the free international exchange of goods or services. Examples include tariffs (taxes on imports) and quotas (limits on the quantity of imports).

Key Concept Flip

Define exchange rate and explain its significance for businesses involved in international trade.

Answer Flip

An exchange rate is the price of one currency expressed in terms of another. It significantly impacts the cost of imports and the revenue from exports, affecting a business's profitability.

Definition Flip

Explain the difference between currency appreciation and depreciation.

Answer Flip

Currency appreciation is an increase in the value of one currency relative to another. Currency depreciation is a decrease in the value of one currency relative to another.

Definition Flip

What is the foreign exchange market and what is its primary function?

Answer Flip

The foreign exchange (FOREX) market is a global, decentralized marketplace where currencies are traded. Its primary function is to facilitate international trade and investment by enabling the exchange of currencies.

Key Concept Flip

How has e-commerce influenced international trade for small businesses?

Answer Flip

E-commerce has allowed small businesses to reach a global customer base more easily and at a lower cost. The internet provides access to international markets without requiring a physical presence.

Review the material

Read revision notes with definitions, equations, and exam tips.

Read Notes

Test yourself

Practice with MCQ questions to check your understanding.

Take Business Studies Quiz
6.2 Environmental and ethical issues

Key Questions: Business and the international economy

Define globalisation and give one reason for its growth.

Globalisation is the increasing integration of economies worldwide through increased trade, investment, and migration. A key reason for its growth is reduced trade barriers, making it easier and cheaper to import and export goods.

What is a multinational corporation (MNC)? Give an example.

An MNC is a company that operates in multiple countries. These companies often have production facilities or retail outlets in several nations.

Example: McDonald's.
Differentiate between imports and exports.

Imports are goods and services bought from other countries, while exports are goods and services sold to other countries. A country imports goods it cannot produce efficiently and exports goods it can produce efficiently.

Explain what a tariff is and how it impacts international trade.

A tariff is a tax imposed on imported goods. Tariffs increase the price of imported goods, making them less competitive and potentially reducing the volume of international trade.

Define quotas and discuss their effect as a trade barrier.

Quotas are limits on the quantity of a good that can be imported into a country. They restrict the supply of foreign goods, raising prices and protecting domestic industries from competition.

More topics in Unit 6 — External influences on business activity

Business and the international economy sits alongside these Business Studies decks in the same syllabus unit. Each uses the same spaced-repetition system, so progress in one informs the next.

Cambridge syllabus keywords to use in your answers

These are the official Cambridge 0450 terms tagged to this section. Mark schemes credit responses that use the exact term — weave them into your answers verbatim rather than paraphrasing.

globalisation multinational MNC international trade imports exports tariffs quotas trade barriers exchange rate appreciation depreciation foreign exchange e-commerce internet

Key terms covered in this Business and the international economy deck

Every term below is defined in the flashcards above. Use the list as a quick recall test before your exam — if you can't define one of these in your own words, flip back to that card.

Globalisation and give one reason for its growth
Multinational corporation (MNC)? Give an example
Differentiate between imports and exports
Explain what a tariff is and how it impacts international trade
Quotas and discuss their effect as a trade barrier
Trade barriers? Give two examples
Explain the difference between currency appreciation and depreciation
The foreign exchange market and what is its primary function

How to study this Business and the international economy deck

Start in Study Mode, attempt each card before flipping, then rate Hard, Okay or Easy. Cards you rate Hard come back within a day; cards you rate Easy push out to weeks. Your progress is saved in your browser, so come back daily for 5–10 minute reviews until every card reads Mastered.