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NotesBusiness ManagementTopic 1.2Partnerships
Back to Business Management Topics
1.2.22 min read

Partnerships

IB Business Management • Unit 1

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Contents

  • Features of partnerships
  • Advantages, disadvantages and types of partners
  • Partnerships in exams

🤝 Partnerships

Big Idea: A partnership is a business owned by two or more people who share responsibilities, profits and risks. It's governed by a deed of partnership.

Key features

  • Owned by two or more partners (usually 2–20)
  • Usually governed by a deed of partnership — a legal document setting out roles, profit share, and responsibilities
  • Partners typically have unlimited liability — each partner is personally responsible for ALL partnership debts
  • Profits are shared according to the agreement in the deed of partnership
  • Decision-making is shared among partners
  • No separate legal identity from the partners (in most countries)
Deed of Partnership: A written agreement between partners covering: how profits are shared, roles and responsibilities, what happens if a partner leaves, how disputes are resolved, and how much capital each partner contributes.

Advantages of partnerships

  • More capital available — multiple partners can invest money
  • Shared workload and responsibilities — partners can cover different areas
  • Combined skills and expertise — one partner may be strong in finance while another excels in marketing
  • Shared decision-making — reduces pressure on one person
  • Easy to set up — fewer legal requirements than a company

Disadvantages of partnerships

  • Unlimited liability — partners are personally liable for ALL debts, including debts caused by other partners
  • Profits must be shared — each partner gets a portion, not the full amount
  • Potential disagreements between partners — conflicts over direction, workload or profit share
  • Partners are liable for each other's business decisions — one bad decision affects everyone
  • No legal continuity — partnership may dissolve if a partner leaves or dies

Types of partners

  • Active/general partners — involved in running the business day-to-day and have unlimited liability
  • Silent/sleeping partners — invest money but do NOT take part in daily management. Still have unlimited liability
  • Limited partners — can only lose the amount they invested (limited liability) but are NOT allowed to manage the business
A sleeping partner puts in money but stays quiet. A limited partner has limited liability but limited control. These are different things! 😴
Two friends start a restaurant. One works as head chef (active partner) while the other invested $50,000 but keeps their day job (sleeping partner). Both share profits, but the sleeping partner has no say in daily decisions.

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🎯 What exams commonly ask

  • 'State two features of a partnership' (2 marks)
  • 'Explain one advantage of a partnership over a sole trader' (2 marks)
  • 'Explain the role of a deed of partnership' (2-4 marks)
  • 'Compare partnerships with limited companies' (longer answers)

Model answers

'State two features': (1) A partnership is owned by two or more people who share profits. (2) Partners typically have unlimited liability, meaning they are personally responsible for all business debts.

'Explain one advantage over a sole trader': A partnership has access to more capital because multiple partners can invest their personal funds, which means the business can grow faster or invest in better equipment than a sole trader who relies on one person's savings.

When explaining advantages over a sole trader, always make the COMPARISON explicit. Don't just describe the partnership — say why it's better THAN a sole trader.

Related Business Management Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

1.1.1Nature of businesses
1.1.2Business functions
1.1.3Primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary sectors
1.1.4Process of starting a business
View all Business Management topics

Improve your exam technique

Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for Business Management

IB Exam Questions on Partnerships

Practice with IB-style questions filtered to Topic 1.2.2. Get instant AI feedback on every answer.

Practice Topic 1.2.2 QuestionsBrowse All Business Management Topics

How Partnerships Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Partnerships.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Partnerships.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY — cause and effect within Partnerships.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Partnerships.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide →

Previous
1.2.1Sole traders
Next
Private and public limited companies1.2.3

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