BA CORE 06 Lesson 1
BA CORE 06 Lesson 1
BA CORE 06 Lesson 1
BA CORE 06
International Business and Trade
Learning Objectives: At the end of the lesson, the student is expected to:
Lesson Presentation
In which, the organization explores trade opportunities outside its domestic national
borders to extend its own particular business activities, for example,
manufacturing, mining, construction, agriculture, banking, insurance, health, education,
transportation, communication and so on.
International business encompasses all commercial activities that take place to promote
the transfer of goods, services, resources, people, ideas, and technologies across
national borders. International trade is the exchange of capital, goods, and services
across international borders or territories.
It involves cross-border transactions of goods and services between two or more
countries. Commodity means a raw product used to make goods. And goods go to the
end-users. For example, flour is a commodity and bread is goods. Transactions of
economic resources include capital, skills, and people for the purpose of the
international production of physical goods and services such as finance, banking,
insurance, and construction. International business is also known as globalization.
To conduct business overseas, multinational companies need to bridge separate
national
markets into one global marketplace. There are two macro-scale factors that underline
the trend of greater globalization. The first consists of eliminating barriers to make
cross-border trade easier (e.g. free flow of goods and services, and capital, referred to
as "free trade"). The second is technological change, particularly developments in
communication, information processing, and transportation technologies.
Purpose:
International trade allows countries to expand their markets and access goods and
services that otherwise may not have been available domestically. As a result of
international trade, the market is more competitive. This ultimately results in more
competitive pricing and brings a cheaper product home to the consumer.
Difference between Domestic and International Business
Business is the act that results from trading between any two given entities for the value
of goods, products, or services. In every business deal, currency is the medium of
leverage that gives a willing buyer the power to acquire a product or service that is
available from a willing supplier.
Geographical limitations can define how a business scales in the local context and in
the international context as well. In the current days where the internet has empowered
the process of globalization, more and more international business activities have taken
place. The local business remains in the context of practicing trade within your country.
Domestic business is the kind of trade that is limited geographically within a country. A
domestic business involves commercial exchanges that are only done within that
country (1). A domestic business which can also be referred to as an internal business
involves a producer and a client, who live within the same nation. This means that the
laws, business practices and customs used in a business transaction shall be of the
designated country.
International business on the other hand is a business whose production and consumer
base is drawn from more than one country (1). An international business does not fall so
much to the dispensation of local law, but within international agreements for business
practice. International business involves transactions between two or more two
countries.