too much tax on comapny from bloody governments in UK
One external influence a company encounters when determining how and where to conduct business globally is the type of economy a country has. Another influence might be the laws of the region and permits that will be necessary. Tax payments are also considered in a global market.
the large a business grows the more exposed it is and the involved with the external environment
I suggest you read page 104 of your business studies fo A Level book and then answer it instead of trying to cheat at your homework!
The motivation a company might have to offer small business financing is to help another small business start off and hopefully grow into a successful business. They would also benefit from earning interest on any loans issued.
No liquidity
One external influence a company encounters when determining how and where to conduct business globally is the type of economy a country has. Another influence might be the laws of the region and permits that will be necessary. Tax payments are also considered in a global market.
What political constraints might influence decisions on global warming
Internal: Employees External: Customers, and suppliers.
the large a business grows the more exposed it is and the involved with the external environment
I suggest you read page 104 of your business studies fo A Level book and then answer it instead of trying to cheat at your homework!
what is an example of a financal measure that an external user might use
What factors might influence kyleβs decisions to jump
if the risk control measure is consistent with mission objectives and budget constraints
Legal requirements may make a business spend more money in order to comply with the law. Businesses that handle hazardous chemicals must spend extra money to dump the chemicals in an environmentally friendly way.
Entrepreneurs would have more incentive to invest in new business, as some of their expenses would be cheaper.
Our technologist uses constraints to improve query performance. It is interesting to note how important constraints are for query optimization. Many people think of constraints as a data integrity thing, and it's true-they are. But constraints are used by the optimizer as well when determining the optimal plan. The optimizer takes as inputs * The query to optimize * All available database object statistics * System statistics, if available (CPU speed, single-block I/O speed, and so on-metrics about the physical hardware) * Initialization parameters * Constraints And the optimizer uses them all to determine the best approach. Something I've noticed over time is that people tend to skip constraints in a data warehouse/reporting system. The argument is, "The data is good; we did a data cleansing; we don't need data integrity constraints." They might not need constraints for data integrity (and they might be unpleasantly surprised if they did enable them), but they do need integrity constraints in order to achieve the best plans. In a data warehouse, a bad query plan might be one that takes hours or days to execute-not just a couple of extra seconds or minutes. It is a data warehouse, therefore, that truly needs constraints-for performance reasons. Let's look at some examples (these were all executed in Oracle Database Cuties8
David Mabb has written: 'Commodity Form' 'David Mabb A factory as it might be or the hall of flowers' -- subject(s): Appropriation (Art), Exhibitions, Influence 'The decorating business' -- subject(s): Exhibitions, Influence, Interviews