The course introduces the fundamental features of an economic organization, with specific reference to private firms. It focuses on the management operations, the capitals employed and how the firm generates values from operations. The financial statements are introduced and discussed, along with the main principles upon which they are preapred. The course is essential for students interested in working as corporate advisors and it is particularly useful for pursuing a broad range of professions dealing with commercial and business law.
The course aims to provide first-year students a basic knowledge of the principles and logics underpinning the operations of businesses. In particular, you will examine the nature and roles of businesses and their administration, as economic entities producing goods and services for the market.
The Business Administration course aims at providing the first-year students with a solid basic knowledge of the principles and logics underpinning the operations of businesses. In particular, the course intends to:
By the end of this course, students will acquire competence in the main issues of business administration, such as:
Learning outcomes
Knowledge and comprehension. students will acquire solid knowledge and factual ability to explain the logics of business operations, including a focus on the nature and activities of businesses, as systematic economic entities that generate wealth and require economic and financial stability to stay viable.
Ability to apply knowledge. Students will be able to apply their acquired knowledge to understand and solve simple and more complex problems concerning business management, organisation and accounting, especially in consideration of the company’s financial and economic stability.
Critical judgment. Students will be able to apply the acquired knowledge using their own judgment and critical reasoning, both theoretically and practically.
Learning capability. Students will develop appropriate learning capabilities that will support their independent learning of other subject in business administration, accounting and management, especially in their future job positions.
None.
The course features classes and tutorials. Classes introduce the main topics of the course. Tutorials aim to offer students the opportunity to apply notions acquired during the classes.
The main contents of the course are the following:
The firm and its environment. A company is a complex entity that operates in order to produce and sell goods or deliver services with the aim to satisfy different needs. In order to understand how a company works, the essential traits of the company, the different firm typologies, and the relationships between the firm and the environment.
The capitals. To run its activities, a firm needs some inputs. The most important capitals a firm uses in its operations will be examined. Those capitals, which are controlled by an entity and will bring future benefits to that entity, are its assets. In order to acquire those assets, an entity needs funds. A company can be funded either by shareholders or by other funders. The characteristics of shareholder equity and of liabilities related to other funding sources will be examined.
The operating cycle. The analysis of the operating cycle allows to understand how a company produces and sells goods or delivers services. The phases of the operating cycle are financing activiries, acquisition of the necessary inputs, the transformation of those inputs, and selling the final product or delivering the service. Those operations produce diffrent economic and monetary effetcs, which will be analyzed.
Income. A company's operations can generate or destroy economic whealth. Income represents the net worth generate by a firm. In order to determine net income, some rules should be applied. In particular, the course will discuss the accrual accounting principle.
Profitability, earnings quality, and solvency. In order to survive, a company should meet some equilibrium conditions, which are related to profitability and solvency. Regarding profitability, a company should be profitable, and its profits should be alble to adequately remmunerate shareholder investment and expectations. However, when analysing profitability, attention should be devoted to the activities that have contributed most to profit generaton. Solvency analysis is concerned with understaing whether and how a company is able to timely meet its obligations.
Marchi, L. (eds.) (2021), Introduzione all'Economia Aziendale, Giappichelli.
Ricevimento: The instructor can be contacted via Teams or email at lorenzo.simoni@unige.it to schedule a meeting
LORENZO SIMONI (President)
GIULIA LEONI
ELISA BONOLLO (President Substitute)
ELISA BONOLLO (President)
LORENZO SIMONI
September 18th, 2023
The final exam is a written exam to assess the student’s theoretical and practical learning. It is the same assessment both for attending and non-attending students. The final exam is a mix of practical and theoretical questions in the form of exercises, open questions and multiple-choice questions.
In the winter and summer exam period, whether the written exam score is highly insufficient, the student can sit at the exam again only by missing the session immediately following the session that was highly insufficient.
During the semester when the course is taught, the final exam can be replaced – if offered by the course coordinator – by in-course assessments. The dates, modes and contents of these in-course assessments will be communicated via AulaWeb during the semester.
More details on the exams will be communicated to the students at the beginning of the semester via AulaWeb and during the first lecture.
The exam aims at verifying that the student is capable to effectively explain the nature of the business and its dynamics, and to apply theoretical concepts to solve problems regarding the preservation of the economic and financial stability of the businesses.