International Business: by Charles W.L. Hill

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International Business

11e

By Charles W.L. Hill

Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 1

Globalization

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What Is Globalization?
Globalization - the shift toward a more
integrated and interdependent world
economy
The world is moving away from self-
contained national economies toward an
interdependent, integrated global
economic system

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What Is The
Globalization of Markets?
 Historically distinct and separate national
markets are merging
 It no longer makes sense to talk about the
“German market” or the “American market”
 Instead, there is the “global market”
 falling trade barriers make it easier to sell globally
 consumers’ tastes and preferences are converging on
some global norm
 firms promote the trend by offering the same basic
products worldwide

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What Is The
Globalization of Markets?
Firms of all sizes benefit and contribute to
the globalization of markets
 97% of all U.S. exporters have less than 500
employees
 98% of all small and mid-sized German
companies participate in international markets

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What Is The
Globalization of Production?
Firms source goods and services from
locations around the globe to capitalize on
national differences in the cost and quality
of factors of production like land, labor,
energy, and capital
Companies can
 lower their overall cost structure
 improve the quality or functionality of their
product offering

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Why Do We Need
Global Institutions?
Global institutions
 help manage, regulate, and police the global
marketplace
 promote the establishment of multinational
treaties to govern the global business system

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Why Do We Need
Global Institutions?
 Examples include
 the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT)
 the World Trade Organization (WTO)
 the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
 the World Bank
 the United Nations (UN)
 the G20

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What Do Global
Institutions Do?
The World Trade Organization (like its
predecessor GATT)
 polices the world trading system
 makes sure that nation-states adhere to the
rules laid down in trade treaties
 promotes lower barriers to trade and
investment
 159 members in 2013

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What Do Global
Institutions Do?
The International Monetary Fund (1944)
 maintains order in the international monetary
system
 lender of last resort for countries in crisis
 Argentina, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia, South
Korea, Thailand, Turkey, Ireland, and Greece
The World Bank (1944)
 promotes economic development via low
interest loans for infrastructure projects

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What Do Global
Institutions Do?
The United Nations (1945)
 maintains international peace and security
 develops friendly relations among nations
 cooperates in solving international problems
and in promoting respect for human rights
 is a center for harmonizing the actions of
nations
The G20
 forum through which major nations tried to
launch a coordinated policy response to the
2008-2009 global financial crisis

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What Is Driving
Globalization?
 Declining barriers to the free flow of goods,
services, and capital
 average tariffs are now at just 4%
 more favorable environment for FDI
 global stock of FDI was $20.4 trillion in 2011
 facilitates global production
 Technological change
 microprocessors and telecommunications
 Internet: information backbone of the global economy
 transportation technology

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What Does Globalization
Mean For Firms?
Lower barriers to trade and investment
mean firms can
 view the world, rather than a single country,
as their market
 base production in the optimal location for that
activity
But, firms may also find their home
markets under attack by foreign firms

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Declining Trade And
Investment Barriers
Average Tariff Rates on Manufactured Products as Percent of Value

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What Does Globalization
Mean For Firms?
 Technological change means
 lower transportation costs
 help create global markets and allow firms to
disperse production to economical, geographically
separate locations
 low cost information processing and communication
 firms can create and manage globally dispersed
production
 low cost global communications networks
 help create an electronic global marketplace
 global communication networks and global media
 create a worldwide culture and a global consumer
product market

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The Changing Demographics
Of The Global Economy
 Four trends are important:
1. The changing world output and world
trade picture
2. The changing foreign direct investment
picture
3. The changing nature of the
multinational enterprise
4. The changing world order

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How Has World Output And
World Trade Changed?
In 1960, the U.S. accounted for almost
40% of world economic activity, but by
2012, the U.S. accounted for just 23%
 a similar trend occurred in other developed
countries
In contrast, the share of world output
accounted for by developing nations is
rising
 expected to account for more than 60% of
world economic activity by 2020

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How Has World Output And
World Trade Changed?
The Changing Demographics of World Output and Trade

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How Has Foreign Direct
Investment Changed Over Time?
In the 1960s, U.S. firms accounted for
about two-thirds of worldwide FDI flows
 Today, the United States accounts for less
than one-fifth of worldwide FDI flows
 Other developed countries have followed a
similar pattern
In contrast, the share of FDI accounted for
by developing countries has risen
 Developing countries, especially China, have
also become popular destinations for FDI

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How Has Foreign Direct
Investment Changed Over Time?
Percentage Share of Total FDI Stock 1980-2013

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How Has Foreign Direct
Investment Changed Over Time?
FDI Inflows 1980-2013

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What Is A
Multinational Enterprise?
Multinational enterprise (MNE) - any
business that has productive activities in
two or more countries
Since the 1960s
 the number of non-U.S. multinationals has
risen
 the number of mini-multinationals has risen

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The Changing World Order
 Many former Communist nations in Europe and
Asia are now committed to democratic politics
and free market economies
 creates new opportunities for international businesses
 but, there are signs of growing unrest and totalitarian
tendencies in some countries
 China and Latin America are also moving toward
greater free market reforms
 between 1983 and 2010, FDI in China increased from
less than $2 billion to $100 billion annually
 but, China also has many new strong companies that
could threaten Western firms

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Hisense CEO Zhou Houjian led his company to become
one of China’s top-selling electronics manufacturers by
using a strategy of rapid innovation and low-cost
manufacturing.

If you were given the chance to run a leading


electronics company, would you use a similar approach
to grow your brand? Or would you devote more time to
research and development and produce fewer products
at a higher price point?

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How Will The Global Economy
Of The 21st Century Look?
 The world is moving toward a more global
economic system…
 But globalization is not inevitable
 there are signs of a retreat from liberal economic
ideology in Russia
 Globalization brings risks
 the financial crisis that swept through South East Asia
in the late 1990s
 the recent financial crisis that started in the U.S. in
2008-2009, and moved around the world

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Is An Interdependent Global
Economy A Good Thing?
 Supporters believe that increased trade and
cross-border investment mean
 lower prices for goods and services
 greater economic growth
 higher consumer income, and more jobs
 Critics worry that globalization will cause
 job losses
 environmental degradation
 the cultural imperialism of global media and MNEs
 Anti-globalization protesters now regularly show
up at most major meetings of global institutions

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How Does Globalization
Affect Jobs And Income?
Critics argue that falling barriers to trade
are destroying manufacturing jobs in
advanced countries
Supporters contend that the benefits of
this trend outweigh the costs
 countries will specialize in what they do most
efficiently and trade for other goods—and all
countries will benefit

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How Does Globalization Affect Labor
Policies And The Environment?
 Critics argue that firms avoid the cost of
adhering to labor and environmental regulations
by moving production to countries where such
regulations do not exist, or are not enforced
 Supporters claim that tougher environmental
and labor standards are associated with
economic progress
 as countries get richer from free trade, they
implement tougher environmental and labor
regulations

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How Does Globalization
Affect National Sovereignty?
 Is today’s global economy shifting economic power away
from national governments toward supranational
organizations like the WTO, the EU, and the UN?
 Critics argue that unelected bureaucrats have the power
to impose policies on the democratically elected
governments of nation-states
 Supporters claim that the power of these organizations is
limited to what nation-states agree to grant
 the power of the organizations lies in their ability to
get countries to agree to follow certain actions

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How Is Globalization
Affecting The World’s Poor?
 Is the gap between rich nations and poor nations
getting wider?
 Critics believe that if globalization was beneficial
there should not be a divergence between rich
and poor nations
 Supporters claim that the best way for the poor
nations to improve their situation is to
 reduce barriers to trade and investment
 implement economic policies based on free market
economies
 receive debt forgiveness for debts incurred under
totalitarian regimes

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How Does The Global
Marketplace Affect Managers?
 Managing an international business differs from
managing a domestic business because
 countries are different
 the range of problems confronted in an international
business is wider and the problems more complex
than those in a domestic business
 firms have to find ways to work within the limits
imposed by government intervention in the
international trade and investment system
 international transactions involve converting money
into different currencies

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