Download Chapter 2 – The Global Economic Environment

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Nouriel Roubini wikipedia , lookup

Ragnar Nurkse's balanced growth theory wikipedia , lookup

Protectionism wikipedia , lookup

Post–World War II economic expansion wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
download instant at www.easysemester.com
Chapter 2: The Global Economic Environment
Learning Objectives
•
Summarize significant historical changes in the global economic environment
•
Identify trends in the world economy that affect global marketing decisions
•
Describe how economic measures of freedom help drive or hinder global business
expansion and growth
•
Describe the stages of market development
•
Explain how global income distribution and population patters affect marketing
decisions
•
Discuss the balance of payments and global trade patterns
Chapter Overview
The economic environment is a major determinant of global market potential and
opportunity. Global marketers should factor into their marketing strategies the profound
changes in the world economy and understand that global competition is now a feature of
almost every national market. Centers of economic activity are shifting dramatically
across the globe and across regions due to demographic changes, economic liberation,
technological developments, and, over the next decade, an estimated one billion new
consumers in emerging markets demanding products and services. Today, with the
exception of North Korea, almost all countries have mixed economic systems with a
major reliance on market allocation.
Lecture Outline
I.
The World Economy – An Overview (p. 38)
II.
The World Economy: Important Trends (p. 39)
a. Economic Activity Will Shift From West to East
download instant at www.easysemester.com
download instant at www.easysemester.com
b. Aging Worldwide Population Will Demand Increasing Levels of
Productivity and Efficiency
c. Changing Industry Structures and Emerging New Models of Corporate
Organization Will be Characteristic of Growing Global Competition
d. The Demand for Natural Resources Will Continue to Grow, Resulting in
Growing Pressure on an Already Strained Global, Natural Environment
e. Scrutiny of Global Firms’ Worldwide Practices Will Increase as the Reach
and Scale of Global Firms Expand; Increasing Regulation Will Shape the
Structure and Conduct of Whole Industries
f. The Economics of Information Will be Transformed as the Ubiquitous
Nature of Information Expands
g. Talent Pools Have Become Global in Nature; Assimilating Talent into the
Leadership Structure of a Global Company Will be a Competitive
Advantage
III.
The Market State: Varying Degrees of Economic Freedom (p. 46)
IV.
Stages of Market Development (p. 49)
a. Low-Income Countries
b. Lower-Middle-Income Countries
c. Upper-Middle-Income Countries
d. High-Income Countries
V.
Income and Purchasing Power Parity Around the Globe (p. 57)
VI.
International Comparison Program (ICP) of the World Bank (p. 61)
VII.
Actual Individual Consumption (p. 62)
VIII.
The Location of Population (p. 63)
IX.
Global Trade and Investment (p. 64)
a. The Balance of Payments
X.
Global Trade Patterns (p. 65)
XI.
Exchange Rates (p. 67)
XII.
Degrees of Economic Cooperation (p. 69)
a. Free Trade Area
b. Customs Union
download instant at www.easysemester.com
download instant at www.easysemester.com
c. Common Market
d. EU (European Union)
e. Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
f. Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
g. MERCOSUR (SCCM)
h. North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
i. Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
XIII.
Summary
Tables and Figures
Table 2-1
Index of Economic Freedom World Rankings (p. 48)
Table 2-2
World Bank List of Country Income Groups (p. 50)
Table 2-3
Countries Classified by Income – 2011 (p. 51)
Table 2-4
Stages of Economic Development (p. 59)
Table 2-5
GNP and PPP Per Capita, Top 10 Countries (p. 60)
Table 2-6
Richest Countries in the World GDP (PPP) (p. 60)
Figure 2-1
Rank Shift in GDP 2010 vs. 2020 (p. 61)
Table 2-7
Actual Individual Consumption per Capita (p. 62)
Table 2-8
Top 10 Highest Populated Countries (p. 63)
Table 2-9
Estimated 2010 Current Account Balances (p. 64)
Figure 2-2
Average PPP Consumption Across 146 Countries (p. 66)
Figure 2-3
Growth in Volume of World Merchandise Trade and GDP (p. 66)
Figure 2-4
GDP and Merchandise Trade by Region (p. 67)
Figure 2-5
Big Mac Index (p. 68)
Table 2-10
Degrees of International Economic Integration (p. 69)
Sidebars
Sidebar 1
20 Major Economies of the G20 (p. 58)
Sidebar 2
Bunfight (p. 68)
download instant at www.easysemester.com
download instant at www.easysemester.com
Suggested Answers to Discussion Questions
1.
What are the stages of national market development, and what percentage of
world income is found in each of the stages? Why is this information important to
global marketers?
The stages of development include low-income countries (<$1025 GNP per capita; 36
countries); lower-middle-income countries ($1036-$4035; 54 countries); uppermiddle- income countries ($4036-$12,475; 54 countries); and high-income countries
(GNP per capita >$12,475; 70 countries). While it is not necessary for students to
memorize the income level and stage of market development for every country, they
should have a general fell for which countries fall into which category. This
information helps a marketer to define their target markets.
2. What are the major trends in the world economy in the first two decades of the
21st century? How do these trends impact global marketing decisions? Cite
several subtrends that relate, in your opinion, to these major trends.
a. Economic Activity Will Shift From West to East
b. Aging Worldwide Population Will Demand Increasing Levels of
Productivity and Efficiency
c. Changing Industry Structures and Emerging New Models of Corporate
Organization Will be Characteristic of Growing Global Competition
d. The Demand for Natural Resources Will Continue to Grow, Resulting in
Growing Pressure on an Already Strained Global, Natural Environment
download instant at www.easysemester.com
download instant at www.easysemester.com
e. Scrutiny of Global Firms’ Worldwide Practices Will Increase as the Reach
and Scale of Global Firms Expand; Increasing Regulation Will Shape the
Structure and Conduct of Whole Industries
f. The Economics of Information Will be Transformed as the Ubiquitous
Nature of Information Expands
g. Talent Pools Have Become Global in Nature; Assimilating Talent into the
Leadership Structure of a Global Company Will be a Competitive
Advantage
A business leader’s ability to assess trends in a rapidly changing competitive
marketplace, and use these to appropriately gauge their impact on profitability of the
firm, is a critical competence. Subtrends could include 1. A growing world-wide middle
class demand for goods and service and 2. Increased demand from this expanding
consumer base will place increasing stress on already constrained resources and create
unsustainable environmental degradation.
3. What is the pattern of income distribution in the world today? How is it different
than even 10 years ago? What are the implications of these patterns of income
distribution across the globe for the strategic marketer?
As indicated in Table 2-2, p. 50, the high-income countries are those with a per capita
of greater than $12,475. The 70 countries that qualify as high-income account for
approximately 32% of countries. Generally speaking, income distribution has become
more equalized across the world’s population base. Today, approximately 50% of the
world’s population can be categorized as living in upper- or lower-middle income
countries (108 upper- and middle-income countries/214 total countries). The number
download instant at www.easysemester.com
download instant at www.easysemester.com
of countries qualifying as high-income has risen dramatically over the past years. The
share of the population in the developing world has been halved from 52% to 25%.
Global extreme poverty is projected to drop to about 15% of global population by
2015. As the overall living standards of the world continue to increase, new and
expanding markets for consumer goods are opening.
4. A manufacturer of online gaming devices is assessing the world market potential
for her products. She asks you if she should consider emerging countries as
potential markets. How would you advise her?
Emerging countries should indeed prove attractive. Although the per capita income in
emerging countries is low, in many instances it is rapidly growing. Consider
Indonesia (per capita income has risen from $250 (in 1985) to $2,050 (in 2009).
Residents are experiencing increases in discretionary (disposable) income. As a
result, domestic consumer markets are expanding. These consumers are no longer just
living day-to-day, but are earning relatively substantial incomes, not all of which is
needed to survive.
5. Are income and standard of living the same thing? What is meant by the term
standard of living; how is it best measured and why?
Income reported in dollars measure the total value of all goods and services produced
in an economy at a given rate of exchange. However, standard of living reflects what
products and services are available to a nation’s people and how much their incomes
will buy. Income figures that have been adjusted to indicate purchasing power parity
are a better way to compare standard of living. Of course, upper-income segments
may enjoy a higher standard of living than other segments. Also, as noted in the text,
download instant at www.easysemester.com
download instant at www.easysemester.com
a low-income country’s standard of living may be higher than income figures suggest
if the government, for little or no cost, provides education, health care, and housing.
6. Describe the importance of international trade alliances and economic
cooperation agreements. In your view, are these beneficial to the global
marketer? If so, why? If not, why not?
Most of the forms of economic integration discussed eliminate tariffs and quotas
among member nations. As free trade agreements and foreign-trade zones develop as
an important indicator of globalization and the economic interdependence between
countries and across regions, global firms increasingly face decisions about where
best to source and establish manufacturing. Companies need to optimize their
understanding and knowledge of how best to utilize if not exploit FTAs and their
regulatory, administrative, legal, and often judicial strategies for regional
competitiveness in the global marketplace.
7. Interview several local business owners to determine their attitude toward world
trade. Why, in your opinion, do they hold these attitudes and on what factual
information or experience are they based?
Answers to this assignment will vary dramatically based on the student and their
access to local business owners. It is important here to encourage the students to
delve deeply into the possible attitudes that may be driving the owners’ opinions and
to seek out the information on which their opinions/attitudes are based.
download instant at www.easysemester.com