Despite many similarities (to the extent that they are sometimes used as synonyms in layman's terms and in other contexts), commerce,
business and
trade are distinct concepts.
Commerce and business Commerce deals with buying, selling, and distribution of goods and services from producers to customers as well as related matters such as marketing, finance, laws, transportation, and insurance. In a general sense, business is the activity of earning money and making one's living through engaging in commerce. The difference between business and commerce is that business can also refer to a
commercial entity, such as a company. So, in a more specific sense, a business is an organization or activity for making a profit by providing goods and services which meet the needs of its customers or consumers. Viewed in this way, commerce is a broader concept and an overall, all-encompassing aspect of business. Commerce provides the underlying large-scale transactional environment comprising all kinds of exchanges within which individual business organizations operate for generating profits.
Commerce and trade Commerce is also distinguishable from
trade. Trade is the transaction (buying and selling) of goods and services that makes a profit for the seller and satisfies the want or need of the buyer. When trade is carried out within a country, it is called home or
domestic trade, which can be
wholesale or
retail. A wholesaler buys from the producer in bulk and sells to the retailer who then sells again to the final consumer in smaller quantities. Trade between a country and the rest of the world is called foreign or
international trade, which consists of
import trade and
export trade, both being wholesale in general. Commerce comprises not only trade, as defined above, but also auxiliary services, or aids to trade, and various procedures designed to facilitate trade. Auxiliary services such as
transportation,
communication,
warehousing,
insurance,
banking services including access to credit and important financial systems, ancillary activities such as funding technological research, and
packaging and making use of services offered by commercial agents such as law firms and property brokerages. In other words, commerce describes the wide, dynamic range of political, economic, technological, logistical, legal, regulatory, social, and cultural aspects of trade in abstract terms, rather than as an assemblage of particular enterprises and actors. Described in this manner, trade is a part of commerce and commerce is an aspect of business. ==History==