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Study Guide – First Midterm Business 187 – Prof. Wood – Spring 2013 Ver. 1.1 The first midterm will include 20 to 28 true-false, multiple choice, and short answer questions plus an essay that has been handed out in class (and is available on the class web site). This guide covers the major topics we have studied and lists questions you will need to be able to answer. The answers to some of these are not simple, so you need to highlight and review the readings and study the notes you took in class as well as reviewing the study guide and slides from the lectures. However, you should be able to figure out at least 90% of the 20 to 28 questions on the test ‘s first part if you know the answers to the questions here. Where an important point is not in the required reading, I give the needed facts here. Topic You should know … Globalization (The New Global Economy) What is globalization? (be able to give a definition) How has globalization affected production? How has globalization affected markets? What kinds of products have the most globalized markets? For what kinds of products are national differences still very large? What are the two most important drivers of globalization? Name some technological changes that have encouraged globalization How much have global trade and global production (gross national income) grown since World War II? What parts of the world economy have grown fastest in the last 20 years? (Be able to name some countries) What is culture? (Know Hofstede definition – though it’s not perfect) Know that human groups have always tended to take for granted that their own ways of doing things were natural and right. What are values? Norms? (know the difference). What are mores? Folkways? (They are both types of norms, but be able Hill-packet pp. 1-20. Chapter 3: Differences in Culture Benedict-packet pp. 21-26; Hill-packet pp. 7-32 “Institutions”-packet pp. 33-34 Political Economy and International Business Hill-packet pp. 107-132 “political risk”-packet p. 133 to define & give examples.) Know these standard dimensions of social structure of cultures: - group (or “collective”) vs. individually oriented - stratification – classes and castes Know meaning of these Hofstede dimensions of culture individualism, power distance, uncertainty avoidance Institutions: be able to define (“rules of the game”) Political economic systems create key institutions/“rules of the game.” They differ enormously. Be able to think about what are the rules in a place. Can they be relied on? (problems of corruption & of undemocratic changes in nations without mature democracy) Know benefits for business of mature democracy (constitutions limit what government can take etc.; legal systems enforce contracts) Understand definitions of democratic vs. totalitarian, collectivist vs. individualist systems. Know which have more economic freedom. Know market economy, command economy, mixed economy Legal systems-be able to define “property rights,” “contracts,” and “intellectual property;” know why legal work is more complex in global business What does the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act require? What exception does it allow? What organization measures corruption among nations? What are “Gross National Income” and “GNI per capita at PPP?” What are two major political economic changes of the last 30 years? Spread of 1) democracy and 2) market-based systems International Trade Theory The slides and the Lauren Landsberg web intro are most helpful for understanding these questions. See packet pp. 160-162 for economic arguments for intervention in trade. Review Wolf (packet pp. 135-155) when thinking of your essay. Topics in trade See slides for definitions of key terms; packet pp. 160167 for how the world trading system developed. What is political risk? Define “free trade.” Why do economists believe there are gains from trade? Explain Adam Smith’s “absolute advantage theory.” Explain Ricardo’s comparative advantage theory. Why did Ricardo believe there were gains even when one country is better at everything? How can you identify a nation’s comparative advantage (see slides)? How did Smith and Ricardo believe countries and people could best find the activities where they had advantage? They favored free trade and free competition among businesses. See Lauren Landsberg: http://www.econlib.org/library/Topics/Details/comparativeadvantage.html What do successful governments do to make efficient free trade possible? Create infrastructure, education, institutions. List limitations of comparative advantage theory. assumes resources, including people, move freely; doesn’t address income distribution What 2 kinds of culture does Martin Wolf say economies need (packet pp. 146-147)? Commercial culture and guardian culture. Describe the ‘infant industry’ argument. What can cause it to fail? Why do some argue for “strategic trade policy?“ Note: While we study ways of restricting trade, remember that most economists oppose use of most of these tactics. Understand definitions (on slides) of key ways of trade restriction: tariffs, subsidies, quotas, “voluntary export restraints,” administrative policies, local content requirements, “dumping.” Development of world trading system: 1) arguments by political philosophers led to free trade in 19th Century, 2) restrictions in early 20th Century contributed to Great Depression; 3) Bretton Woods conference (1944) produced General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) (and World Bank, IMF). 4) Lack of enforcement mechanisms caused circumventing of GATT; 5) World Trade Organization was created 1995 with regulatory power. What has the World Trade Organization done? Resolved many more disputes; opened trade in telecommunications, services (including financial services agreement - that may not be working well) Regional Integration All required info is on the slides Foreign exchange The key info is in the slides Chapter 10 The International Monetary System Packet pp. 179-194 Free trade area/customs union (free trade inside the area: NAFTA) Economic union (free trade, common tariffs, free mobility of production factors, and harmonized rules: European Union) Be able to define: money, foreign exchange, exchange rate, spot exchange rate, forward rate. Also bid, offer, and spread Understand how rates are set under fixed/pegged and floating rates Understand the concept of currency hedging; know that London is most common site for currency trading. Reasons why values of floating currencies change: inflation, budget and trade deficits, interest rates (higher rates drive currency value up). History of international monetary system: 1) Gold standard to WW I; 2) breakdown followed by a new fixed rate system at 1944 Bretton Woods conference – managed by International Monetary Fund; 3) new collapse and switch to floating rates during Vietnam War Understand both the advantages and the difficulties of fixed rates