Chapter 01
Chapter 01
Learning Objectives
Appreciate the dramatic internationalization of markets Understand the various names given to firms that have operations in more than one country
Understand the five kinds of drivers, all based on change, that are leading international firms to globalize
Comprehend why international business differs from domestic business Describe the three environmentsdomestic, foreign, and international--in which an international firm operates
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International business Foreign business Multidomestic company (MDC) Global company (GC) International company (IC)
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International Business
A business whose activities are carried out across national boarders
Foreign Business
The operations of a company outside its home or domestic market
Multidomestic Company
An organization with multicountry affiliates Each formulates its own business strategy on perceived market differences
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Global Company
an organization that attempts to standardize and integrate operations worldwide in most of all functional areas
International Company
A global or multidomestic company
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Globalization
Globalization
Coined by Theodore Levitt as if the entire world (or major regions of it) were a single entity; [such an organization] sells the same things in the same way everywhere
Economic Globalization
International integration of goods, technology, information, labor, and capital Process of making this integration happen
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Table 1.1 Globalization Rankings: The KOF Index of Globalization and the A.T Kearney/Foreign Policy Globalization Index
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Globalization Forces
Political forces
Reduction of barriers to trade and foreign investment by governments Privatization of former communist nations
Technological forces
Advances in computers and communications technology Internet and network computing
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Cost forces
Goal for economies of scale to reduce unit costs
Competitive forces
Increase in intensity due to explosive growth in international business
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Explosive Growth
Foreign Direct Investment and Exporting
FDI - Direct investment in equipment, structures, and organizations in a foreign country level sufficient to obtain significant management control (Table 1.2) Exporting transportation of any domestic good/service to a destination outside a country or region
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Table 1.2 FDI Indicators and Multinational Company Statistics (billions of dollars and percentages)
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Explosive Growth
Number of International Companies
UNCTAD - United Nations agency in charge of all matters relating to FDI and international corporations. 1995 45,000 parent companies with 280,000 foreign affiliates ($7 trillion in sales) 2004 70,000 parent companies with 690,000 foreign affiliates ($19 trillion in sales)
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Table 1.3 Ranking of International Companies and nations according to GNI (Atlas Method) or Total Sales
Note: Belgium (B), China (PRC), France (F), Germany (G), Italy (It), Netherlands (N), Switzerland (S), United Kingdom (U.K.), and United States (U.S.). Source: World Development Indicators database, http://devdata.worldbank.org/data-query/ (July 4, 2006); and Fortune 2005 Global 500, http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/global500/2005 (July 4, 2006).
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Debate
Waged by diametrically opposed groups with extremely different views on consequences of globalization Dramatic reductions in worldwide poverty are contrasted with anecdotal stories of people losing their livelihoods under the growing power of multinationals
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Forces
External Forces (Uncontrollable) Forces over which management has no direct control Internal Forces (Controllable) Forces that management can use to adapt to external forces
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External Forces
Competitive
Kind, number, location
Distributive
For distributing goods and services
Economic
GNP, unit labor cost, personal consumption expenditure
Socioeconomic
Characteristics of human population
Financial
Interest rates, inflation rates, taxation
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Physical
Topography, climate, and natural resources
Political
Forms of government, and international organizations
Sociocultural
Attitudes, beliefs, and opinions
Labor
Skills, attitudes of labor
Technological
Equipment and skills that affect how resources are converted to products
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Factors of Production
Capital, raw materials, and people
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Foreign Environment
All the uncontrollable forces originating outside the home country that surround and influence the firm different values difficult to assess interrelated
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