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Financial Calculators

Business Calculators

  • Business Calculators – Main Page
  • Human Resources
    • Cost per Hire – The average cost of each person hired by the organization.
    • Employee Absence Rate – The rate of worker absences to total full-time employment.
    • Employee Turnover – The rate that employees leave an organization throughout the year.
    • Retirement Risk – The percentage of employees in an organization that are eligible for retirement.
    • Tenure – The average years for service for each employee in the organization.
  • Inventory
    • EOQ – The ideal quantity for a company to purchase.
    • GMROI (Gross Margin Return on Investment) – An organization’s ability to turn inventory into cash in relation to the cost of the inventory.
    • Inventory Turnover – Ratio of sales to inventory over a year.
    • Safety Stock – The number of an item that should be kept in inventory to avoid running out of stock.
    • Sell through rate – A measurement of how much inventory is sold in a period of time.
    • Shrinkage – The difference in book value and actual value of inventory in an organization.
  • Sales & Marketing
    • Breakeven – The number of units a business needs to sell to cover its costs.
    • Commission – The amount paid to the person or company selling the item.
    • Contribution Margin – The value of profit that each unit sold contributes.
    • CPC (Cost per click) – A measurement of the cost of advertising on a marketing campaign.
    • CPM (Cost per thousand) – A measurement of the cost of advertising on a marketing campaign.
    • Discount – The price after a certain percentage off.
    • Market Share – Percentage of an industry’s activity that a specific organization is generating.
    • Markup – Percentage difference from the cost to the sale price.
    • Margin – The difference between the seller’s cost of the product and the selling price.
    • ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) – A ratio of gross revenue to advertising spent during a campaign.
    • ROMI (Return on Marketing Investment) – Measures the effectiveness of a sales & marketing campaign.

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Economics

  • Economics Calculators – Main Page
  • Macroeconomics
    • Average Propensity to Save – The percentage of total income that is put into savings.
    • Average Propensity to Consume – The ratio of consumption to total income.
    • Consumption Function – Calculates the relationship between consumption and disposable income.
    • Fisher Equation – Connects the relationship between real interest rates, nominal interest rates, and inflation.
    • GDP (expenditure and income approaches) – A measure of all goods and services produced over a period of time.
    • GDP Deflator – The difference between nominal and real GDP.
    • GDP Growth Rate – The difference in GDP between two years.
    • Income Elasticity of Demand – How much the demand for a good or service will increase if income increases.
    • Inflation Rate – The amount the CPI (consumer price index) is increasing.
    • Labor Force Participation Rate – The percentage of people who are in the labor force (number of employed and unemployed) out of all people in the population.
    • Labor Force – The total number of people who are employed or unemployed.
    • Marginal Propensity to Consume – The amount consumption will increase (or decrease) for every increase (or decrease) in disposable income.
    • Marginal Propensity to Import – The amount imports will increase (or decrease) for every increase (or decrease) in disposable income.
    • Marginal Propensity to Save – The amount savings will increase (or decrease) for every increase (or decrease) in disposable income.
    • Money Multiplier – The maximum amount of commercial bank money that can be created in a fractional-reserve banking system.
    • National Savings – Total of both public savings and private savings in an economy.
    • Net Capital Outflow – Measures the flow of capital in and out of an economy.
    • Net Exports – Total exports in an economy minus total imports.
    • Public Savings – The excess revenue a government brings in over their expenses.
    • Private Savings – The amount an economy saves. Calculated as total income less taxes and consumption.
    • Quantity Theory of Money (Money Supply, Velocity, Average Price Level, and Volume of Transactions) – Balances the price level of goods and services with the amount of money in circulation in an economy.
    • Real Exchange Rate – An indication of what an equivalent good would cost in your economy.
    • Real GDP – A variation of GDP adjusted for price changes such as inflation and deflation.
    • Real Interest Rate – Interest rate adjusted for the inflation rate.
    • Savings Function – Describes the relationship between income and consumption. Paired with consumption function.
    • Spending Multiplier (Save and Consume) – The expectation of how much activity an investment will make.
    • Tax Multiplier (Simple and Complex) – The amount that a decrease in taxes will generate in the economy.
    • Unemployment Rate – The ratio of unemployed people to total people in the workforce.
  • Microeconomics
    • Accounting Profit – Method of calculating profit. Used for taxation purposes.
    • Average Cost – The average cost per unit produced.
    • Average Fixed Cost – The amount of fixed cost per item produced.
    • Average Variable Cost – Cost per unit of costs that are variable.
    • Average Revenue – The revenue received per item sold.
    • Cross Price Elasticity of Demand – How much the price change of one item will affect the demand of another item.
    • Economic Profit – Method of calculating profit. Used to determine current value instead of taxes.
    • Elasticity – How much one thing (such as quantity) changes when another thing (such as price) changes.
    • Marginal Cost – The cost of producing one additional unit. Indicates an incremental cost change.
    • Marginal Product – The ratio of change between an input and an output.
    • Marginal Revenue – Incremental revenue from selling an additional unit.
    • Midpoint Elasticity – An alternate way of calculating elasticity.
    • Price Elasticity of Demand – How the quantity demanded will change when the price changes.
    • Price Elasticity of Supply – How responsive supply of an item is in relation to changes in its price.
    • Profit (from total and average) – The amount of money a firm makes. Calculated as revenue minus expenses.
    • Total Cost – All the costs of the firm. Includes fixed costs and variable costs.
    • Total Revenue – All the money a company receives for all the goods and services it sells.

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