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UNDERSTANDING THE GLOBAL CONTEXT OF BUSINESS CHAPTER 4 Department of Business Administration EMU This slide set is prepared by Ömer Yağız for use with Ebert and Griffin, Business Essentials. Fifth Edition. Prentice Hall, New Jersey, 2003. 1 Topics Summary • The Rise of International Business • International Business Management • Barriers to International Trade 2 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • The volume of world trade is around $8 • trillion these days.. Globalization : process by which the world economy is becoming a single interdependent economic system (küreselleşme) – a great diversity (çeşitlilik) of goods and services available today as a result of international trade 3 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • Imports and exports -- already • discussed in Chapter 1. The Contemporary Global Economy – World Trade Organization (WTO) (Dünya Ticaret Örgütü) • Came into being January 1995 • 140 member countries open their markets to international trade • Goals: – fair trade policies and practices – reduce trade barriers – procedures for resolving disputes 4 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Capital Mobility: the movement of money/capital from country to country – The “global economy” is typified by • a fast growth in the exchange of information • a fast growth of trade in services Sometimes, the term “digital economy” is used – Two conclusions about the global economy: • Information technology will be the centerpiece of the new global economy • The growth in the service sector will help to fuel5 its development THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) – Signed after WWII to reduce trade barriers • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) – U.S., Canada and Mexico – eliminate tariffs and other trade barriers – agreed to eliminate tariffs (gümrük vergisi) and other trade barriers (ticaret engelleri) 6 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – increase mutual trade – will probably expand in the future (most likely Chile will become a member) • European Union (EU) – originally Common Market – now has 27 members – Turkey – God knows!! 7 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • Major World Markets – North America – Europe – Pacific Asia 8 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Business, of course, is not conducted solely in these markets. Think of South America, Eastern Europe, China, and India with large numbers of consumers. 9 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • The World Bank (Dünya Bankası) – an agency of the United Nations – has 184 countries as members (owned by these countries) www.worldbank.org 10 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Categorizing Economies (Textbook) High Income Countries: Per capita income greater than $9,386 Middle Income Countries: Per capita income between $765 and $9,386 Low Income Countries: Per capita income of less than $765 11 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • In the most recent World Bank grouping, the groups are (according to 2002 GNI per capita): – – – – high income, $9,076 or more upper middle income, $2,976 - $9,075 lower middle income, $736 - $2,975 low income, $735 or less 12 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS High-income economies (52) Andorra Germany New Caledonia Aruba Greece New Zealand Australia Greenland Northern Mariana Islands Austria Guam Norway Bahamas, The Hong Kong, China Portugal Bahrain Iceland Qatar Belgium Ireland San Marino Bermuda Israel Singapore Brunei Italy Slovenia Canada Japan Spain Cayman Islands Korea, Rep. Sweden Channel Islands Kuwait Switzerland Cyprus Liechtenstein United Arab Emirates Denmark Luxembourg United Kingdom Faeroe Islands Macao, China United States Finland Monaco Virgin Islands (U.S.) France Netherlands French Polynesia Netherlands Antilles Source: World Bank 13 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Upper-middle-income economies (38) American Samoa Grenada Palau Antigua and Barbuda Hungary Panama Argentina Isle of Man Poland Barbados Latvia Puerto Rico Botswana Lebanon Saudi Arabia Brazil Libya Seychelles Chile Lithuania Slovak Republic Costa Rica Malaysia St. Kitts and Nevis Croatia Malta St. Lucia Czech Republic Mauritius Trinidad and Tobago Dominica Mayotte Uruguay Estonia Mexico Venezuela, RB Gabon Oman Source: World Bank 14 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Lower-middle-income economies (38) Albania Guyana Russian Federation Algeria Honduras Samoa Belarus Iran, Islamic Rep. South Africa Belize Iraq Sri Lanka Bolivia Jamaica St. Vincent and the Grenadines Bosnia and Herzegovina Jordan Suriname Bulgaria Kazakhstan Swaziland Cape Verde Kiribati Syrian Arab Republic China Macedonia, FYR Thailand Colombia Maldives Tonga Cuba Marshall Islands Tunisia Djibouti Micronesia, Fed. Sts. Turkey Dominican Republic Morocco Turkmenistan Ecuador Namibia Vanuatu Egypt, Arab Rep. Paraguay West Bank and Gaza El Salvador Peru Yugoslavia, Fed. Rep. Fiji Philippines Guatemala Romania 15 Source: World Bank Low income economies (38) Source: World Bank Afghanistan Ghana Niger Angola Guinea Nigeria Armenia Guinea-Bissau Pakistan Azerbaijan Haiti Papua New Guinea Bangladesh India Rwanda Benin Indonesia Sao Tome and Principe Bhutan Kenya Senegal Burkina Faso Korea, Dem Rep. Sierra Leone Burundi Kyrgyz Republic Solomon Islands Cambodia Lao PDR Somalia Cameroon Lesotho Sudan Central African Republic Liberia Tajikistan Chad Madagascar Tanzania Comoros Malawi Timor-Leste Congo, Dem. Rep Mali Togo Congo, Rep. Mauritania Uganda Cote d'Ivoire Moldova Ukraine Equatorial Guinea Mongolia Uzbekistan Eritrea Mozambique Vietnam Ethiopia Myanmar Yemen, Rep. Gambia, The Nepal Zambia Georgia Nicaragua Zimbabwe 16 The North American Marketplace (NAFTA) Canada United States Mexico 17 Copyright ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS 1. North America – USA is the largest market. Many American firms dominate world markets. GM, Procter and Gamble, Microsoft, Ford are just a few examples. – Mexico has become a manufacturing center because of cheap labor and low transportation costs. Many U.S. companies have plants in Mexico. – Canada is another country with great 18 economic power in the region. THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • NAFTA - North American Free Trade Agreement – USA, Canada, and Mexico – agreed to eliminate tariffs (gümrük vergisi) and other trade barriers (ticaret engelleri) – increase mutual trade – will probably expand in the future (most likely Chile will become a member) 19 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS 2. Europe Two regions of Europe : Western Europe and Eastern Europe. – Western Europe is dominated by Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy. – European Union has become a powerful bloc, both economically and politically. – Giant companies such as Unilever, Renault, Shell, Michelin, Siemens are all 20 based in Western Europe. THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Eastern Europe, communist till the early 1990’s, is gaining importance as a marketplace. Poland and Hungary are fast becoming free market economies. • Poland and Hungry became members of EU in 2004 • Even in Albania, a former bastion (kale) of Communism, Coca-Cola began producing soft drinks these days. • Both Poland and Hungary are ahead of Turkey in privatizing their state-owned industries!! They 21 are also attracting lots of foreign capital. Europe and the Nations of the European Union • Austria • Luxembourg • Portugal • Sweden • Belgium • Netherlands • Spain • United Kingdom • Denmark • Finland • France • Germany • Greece • Italy • Ireland Copyright ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. 2 - 22 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS 23 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS 3. Pacific Asia – sometimes called the “Pacific rim” – consists of Japan, China, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Australia. – especially powerful in the automobile, electronics, and banking industries. 24 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Japan (Toyota, Honda, Toshiba, Nippon Steel, Matsushita); South Korea (Samsung, Hyundai); Taiwan (many firms in computers and electronics) and Hong Kong (financial and banking center) are the strongest economies of the region. – China is a true giant with a lot of potential..It is the the third largest economy in the world; after the U.S. and Japan. A population of 1.2 billion is a huge market25 by any standard. The Nations of ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) • Brunei • Indonesia • Malaysia • Philippines • Singapore • Thailand • Vietnam population of 400 million 26 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • Forms of Competitive Advantage – No country can produce all the goods and services that its people need. – That is why countries need to export and import. – Import and export decisions depend on whether a country enjoys an absolute or comparative advantage in the production of goods and services 27 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Absolute advantage: the ability to produce goods and services more efficiently (at lower cost) than any other country can (mutlak üstünlük) • • • • • • absolute advantage is quite rare (it is relative) China --- hand-made toys (cheap labor) US and Japan -- computer chips Brazil and Colombia-- coffee Turkey -- meerschaum pipes (lüle taşı pipo) Saudi Arabia -- oil Talent, experience, climate, technology may lead to absolute advantage. 28 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Comparative Advantage: the ability of a country to produce some products or services more efficiently (at lower cost) than other goods or services (karşılaştırmalı üstünlük) • • • • • very few countries produce computer chips U.S. -- computers, farming Japan and Korea -- electronics Switzerland -- watches, chocolate why does not Turkey produce watches? 29 National Competitive Advantage Four conditions • Factor conditions • factors of production • large domestic consumer base (demand) for innovative products • Demand conditions • Related and supporting industries • strong local or regional suppliers and/or industrial customers • Strategies, structures, and rivalries • cost reduction, quality, high productivity, innovation 30 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Michael E. Porter’s “National Competitive Advantage” concept • Ability of a nation’s industries to be innovative and move to a higher level of technology and productivity • According to this theory, a nation can be competitive in the world market by making best use of innovation and technology – Japan --- consumer electronics, chip making – Holland --- flowers (60 % of cut flowers in the world) NOT IN TEXTBOOK ( but a little extra knowledge does not hurt!!) 31 RECOMMENDED READING THE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE OF NATIONS, FREE PRESS, 1998 BY MICHAEL E. PORTER 32 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • Import - Export Balances – Balance between imports and exports of a country is important. – Two measures are used: 1. balance of trade 2. balance of payments – Balance of Trade: Economic value of all products a country imports minus the economic value of all products it exports. 33 (Dış Ticaret Dengesi) THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – If Imports > Exports we have Trade deficit (dış ticaret açığı) – If Imports < Exports we have Trade surplus (dış ticaret fazlası) – Trade deficit is also called “negative trade balance” • Japan and Taiwan have trade surplus, while Turkey and the U.S.(some years) experience a trade deficit. • You may get the latest figures for Turkey from Turkish State Institute of Statistics (DIE) 34 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Balance of Payments = total inflow of money - total outflow of money in a country in a period (Ödemeler Dengesi) DIE – includes balance of trade plus • investments • purchase of businesses • workers’ remittances (işçilerin ülkeye gönderdiği paralar) • transfer payments (foreign aid, pension payments) • debt payments • tourism 35 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS • Balance of trade is affected by the rate • of exchange. Exchange Rate -- rate at which the currency of one nation can be exchanged for the currency of another nation (döviz kuru; parite) – 1 US $ 1.3YTL – 1 EUR 2,05 YTL 36 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Fixed exchange rate - the value of a country’s currency relative to that of another country remains constant (sabit döviz kuru) – Floating exchange rate - the value of a country’s currency relative to that of another country varies with market conditions (değişken döviz kuru) 37 THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Fluctuations in the exchange rates can have important effects on the balance of trade • Levi’s Jeans costs 30 dollars. At 1 dollar = 1.30 YTL, the cost is 39 YTL • If 1 dollar = 1.6 YTL, then the jean costs 48 YTL.. – Exchange Rates and Competition • Companies watch closely the fluctuations in exchange rates, because it affects their sales both inside and outside the country. Generally, exports increase and imports decrease as the 38 currency of a country loses value. THE RISE OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS – Adjustments in Currency Values • strong weapon for enabling domestic companies to compete internationally • Devaluation (devalüasyon): lowering the value of the national currency helps make that nation’s goods & services cheaper in world markets, thus increases exports. The opposite action leads to decreases in exports. HOW ABOUT IMPORTS ? • Foreign Exchange --foreign currency that is traded for domestic currency of equal value 39 “döviz, yabancı para” INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT • • • The success of a business depends largely on how it is managed. Managing a business is more difficult when that business operates in several markets (countries) around the world. Three decisions must be made when a company is faced with “globalization” 1. “to go international” or not 2. level of international involvement 40 3. the most suitable organizational structure INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT 1. Going International The following questions must be answered: – Is there international demand for the firm’s product? – Can the product be modified (changed) to fit a foreign market? – Is the foreign business climate suited to imports? – Does the firm have or can it get the necessary skills (beceriler) and knowledge to 41 do business abroad (in other countries)? Does It Make Sense to Go International? Is there international demand for the firm’s product? YES Can the product be modified to fit a foreign market? NO NO YES Is the foreign business climate suited to imports? YES NO NO Does the firm have or can it get the necessary skills and knowledge to do business abroad? YES Stay Domestic Copyright ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. Go International 42 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT – Some examples: • Honda cars with Qiblah (Kıble) indicator (gösterge) sold in Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries • Prayer carpets with built in compass (pusula) made in Taiwan and sold in Arab countries • McDonald’s, Toys “R” Us, Carrefour, Metro, Marks and Spencer stores in Turkey • Consulting firms such as Andersen, Price and Waterhouse in Turkey 43 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT – Adapting to Consumer Needs Sometimes products must be adapted (uyarlamak) to meet the special demands of foreign buyers and markets. – Some examples: • GM’s “Joy” sold in Mexico to young buyers of cars; the same car sold in the Czech Republic under the brand name “Opel Corsa” to buyers in their thirties because younger buyers “can not even afford to buy bicycles”. Opel Corsa is also sold in Turkey; and many young people do own Corsa’s. 44 • McDonalds in Turkey -- buttermilk (ayran) example INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT 2. Level of International Involvement • • • • Exporter: firm that sells products to foreign countries (ihracatçı; dışsatımcı) Importer: firm that buys products in foreign countries and imports them for resale in its home country (ithalatçı; dışalımcı) International Firm: Firm that conducts a significant portion of its business in foreign countries (uluslararası iş yapan şirket) Multinational Firm: Firm that designs, produces, and markets products in many countries (çokuluslu şirket) 45 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT 3. International Organizational Structures • Independent Agents: foreign individual or organization that agrees to to represent an exporter’s interests (temsilci) • Licensing Arrangement: firm chooses foreign individuals or organizations to manufacture or market their products in another country (lisans anlaşması). Fee (bir defalık ödeme) plus royalty (lisans ücreti) is usualy paid by the licensee. – franchising is a special form of licensing • Branch Offices: Foreign office set up by an international or multinational company (Yabancı 46 Şube) INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT • Strategic Alliances: a company finds a foreign partner to establish and operate a new business in the partner’s country (ortak girişim). Because of its importance in the organizational strategies of companies, the term strategic alliance is frequently used. • Foreign Direct Investment (FDI): An arrangement in which a company buys or establishes tangible assets (varlıklar) in another country. (Doğrudan yatırım) – TOYOTA, HONDA in Turkey; Dell Computer in Europe, VW in Brasil 47 BARRIERS TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE • The success of a company doing business in foreign markets will depend on how it responds to social, economic, and political barriers to international trade. – Social and Cultural Differences: • • • • language physical characteristics (tall, short. slim, fat) age groups (young, old) shopping and eating habits 48 BARRIERS TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE – Economic Differences: • the kind of economic system in the country • the extent of government involvement (devlet müdahalesi) in a given industry – Legal and Political Differences: • Governments can – set conditions for doing business in their country – control flow of capital – use tax legislation (vergi yasaları) to encourage or discourage international activity in a given industry – even confiscate (el koymak) the property of foreign owned companies 49 BARRIERS TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE – There are various barriers to international trade. Chief among them are: • Quotas: restriction on the number or amount of products of a certain type that can be imported into the country (kota). Often determined by treaties (anlaşmalar) • Embargo: government order banning exportation and/or importation of a particular product or all products from a particular country (ambargo). Example: Cuba and Iran are under embargo by the U.S. 50 BARRIERS TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE • Tariff: tax levied on imported products (gümrük vergisi). There are two kinds of tariffs: 1. Revenue tariffs: imposed to raise revenue for governments (gelir amaçlı gümrük vergisi) 2. Protectionist tariffs: imposed to discourage the import of particular products into the country (koruma amaçlı gümrük vergisi) • Subsidy: government payment to help a domestic business compete with foreign firms (teşvik, subvansiyon). Subsidies are common in many countries. 51 BARRIERS TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE – The Protectionism Debate: In many countries, protectionism - the practice of protecting domestic business at the expense of free market competition - has long been an issue of debate. • supporters argue that tariffs and quotas protect domestic firms and jobs and help new industries until they are able to compete internationally • supporters also argue in terms of national security (ulusal güvenlik) 52 BARRIERS TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE • Those who are against protectionism say that it is a source of friction (sürtüşme) between nations • Those against protectionism also charge that it drives up (increases) prices by reducing competition and say that although jobs in some industries would be lost as a result of free trade, jobs in other industries would be created if all nations abandoned protectionist policies. 53 BARRIERS TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE • Local Content Laws : many countries have local content laws to protect their own industry. A local content law requires that products sold in a particular country be at least partly (kısmen) made there. • Business Practice Laws: Laws or regulation governing business practices in a given country. – Wal-Mart stores in Germany cannot open before 7 A.M, must close by 8 P.M. on weeknights, and must remain closed on Sundays. • Dumping : Practice of selling a product in another country for less than the cost of production. It is forbidden in many countries. (Damping) 54