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What is different about operating abroad?. Culture and Politics. %. %. %. %. Operating Margins for 147 of the Fortune Global 500. Source: Gestrin, OECD. What is different about operating abroad?. Geographic distance Different economic conditions and currency
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What is different about operating abroad? Culture and Politics
% % % % Operating Margins for 147 of the Fortune Global 500 Source: Gestrin, OECD
What is different about operating abroad? • Geographic distance • Different economic conditions and currency • Different language, culture, and institutions • Different governments
Geographic distance • Increases transport costs Perishability Services • Increases management costs
Economic conditions and currency • Level of economic development • Income inequality • Currency • Foreign exchange risk if currency is not at Purchasing Power Parity
Big Mac Index of Currencies % Undervalued Relative to US $ % Overvalued Relative to US $ Source: Economist, based on July 2008 prices
1975 77 79 81 83 85 87 89 91 Real trade-weighted dollar exchange rateppp=100 Source: Goldman Sachs
Why persistent deviations from PPP? • PPP assumes arbitrage equalizes exchange rates • Barriers to arbitrage prevent convergence • Trade barriers, transport costs, tax differences • Untraded inputs • Price of untraded inputs slow to converge Hence exchange rates can deviate from PPP for long periods • Most efficient way to hedge against persistent PPP deviations is local production/procurement
Culture and Politics Home Country Host Country Local Firms 2 1 Subsidiary manager Subsidiary employees Customers Headquarters 4 1 2 3 Press Government • Communication of goals and directives/interpretation of behavior • Communication/Negotiation • Communication/negotiation • 4. Marketing mix adaptation
Cost of foreignness: the dumb foreigner syndrome • Management • Politics • Marketing and communication
Business takes place within societal rules • These rules determine how the game is played and who wins and loses • Rules can be explicit (laws) or implicit (customs) • Rules both affect and are affected by business • This is true both at home and abroad, but foreigners are at a disadvantage because they do not know, cannot impact, and often cannot accept
The social group in which rules are enforced can vary • family • Tribe • Region/province • country • Multicountry grouping (EU) • world
The rules of the game determine.. • Employer-employee relationships (management costs) • Firm-firm relationships • Firm-government relationships • Firm-customer relationships
We will now look at… • Cultural differences and their impact on intra and inter-organizational relationships • Cultural and institutional differences and their impact on relationships with non-business actors (political risk) • Cultural and environmental differences and their impact on relationships with consumers (product and service adaptation)
Different Language and Culture • Language • Spoken and silent • Impact on international business • Culture • Dimensions of culture • Impact on international business
Language • Spoken and written language • Silent language
Communication across languages • Perceptual gaps • Encoding/Decoding gaps (translation errors)
Seller in country A Buyer in country B Buyer’s field of experience Seller’s field of experience Sender Encoder Receiver Decoder Message Medium Culture Culture Choice of words Choice of symbols Meaning Choice of words Choice of symbols Understanding
Silent language • Silence • Color • Time • Space • Things
Meanings of color Source: Jacobs/Keown/Worthley/Ghymn (1991), p. 24.
Language impacts… • management • Information loss • “Language bias” • marketing
What is Culture? • Learned • Integrated • Shared
Stereotypes • Useful as a starting point • National cultural traits are normally distributed
Stereotyping Americans French Direct, Honest Rude Indirect Tactful
Artefacts and products Norms and values Basic assumptions - implicit - explicit A Model of Culture
Hofstede’s Cultural Dimensions • Surveyed 116,000 employees from 70 countries • Highlighted four dimensions of culture • Power distance • Uncertainty avoidance • Individualism • Masculinity/femininity
Power distancethe extent to which less powerful members of institutions and organizations accept that power is distributed unequally
IndividualismTendency of people to look after themselves and their immediate family only
Masculinity/FeminityA masculine society is one where the dominant values in society are success, money, and things
Uncertainty AvoidanceExtent to which people feel threatened by ambiguous situations
Masculinity-Femininity and Uncertainty Avoidance (for 50 countries and 3 regions) Weak uncertainty avoidance Feminine Weak uncertainty avoidance Masculine Strong uncertainty avoidance Feminine Strong uncertainty avoidance Masculine
Power Distance and Uncertainty Avoidance (for over 50 countries and 3 regions) Small power distance Strong uncertainty avoidance(vintage market) Large power distanceWeek uncertainty avoidance (family) Small power distance Strong uncertainty avoidance Feminine (well-oiled machine) Large power distance Strong uncertainty avoidance (pyramid of people)
Power Distance and Individualism-Collectivism (for 50 countries and 3 regions) Small power distanceLow individualism Large power distanceLow individualism Large power distance High individualism Small power distance High individualism
High-context culture Japanese Arab Greek Spanish Italian English French American Scandinavian German German-Swiss Low-context cultures
Impacts of culture • Cultural traits • Differences between cultural traits: cultural distance
Many people lack cultural self-awareness • “We are the world” • Middle Kingdom • The World (World Series) • Everybody is like us (or should be)! • Just be sincere and it will show through
Cultures have the advantages of their disadvantages and the disadvantages of their advantages
Cultural frictions are a major, but underestimated, management problem in international business They greatly impair the implementation of global strategies • global marketing coordination • technology transfer • Joint ventures and mergers and acquisitions
Unclear that cultures are converging • Management practices are not universal • Accounting • Motivation techniques • Decision making
Impact of cultural differences on management • Authority and delegation • Communication • Job scope
Managers in Latin American affiliates of MNEs (as percent of total managers)
HRM • Recruitment • Socialization • Performance appraisal • Compensation and rewards
Executive pay*1996, $000s Source: Towers Perrin *Total remuneration for chief executive officer
Firm-to-firm relationships • Legalistic or social • Personal or impersonal
Adaptation problem is harder with values than with customs • Customs are explicit and easier to imitate • Values are implicit and must be inferred • Ignorance of local values create the most problems • Federal Express in Germany • Mitsubishi and Toyota in US
Coping with cultural differences • Try to make sense of it • Sleep over it • Question friends and colleagues • It’s not all about you! • Keep your sense of humor
The U-curve of cross-cultural adjustment Degree of Adjustment Mastery Honeymoon Adjustment Culture Shock SOURCE: Black, J.S. & M. Mendenhall. 1991.”The U-Curve adjustment hypothesis revisited: A review and theoretical framework.” Journal of International Business Studies, Vol. 22 second quarter, pp. 225-247.
Culture and Politics Home Country Host Country Local Firms 2 1 Subsidiary manager Subsidiary employees Customers Headquarters 4 1 2 3 Press Government • Communication of goals and directives/interpretation of behavior • Communication/Negotiation • Communication/negotiation • 4. Marketing mix adaptation
Governments… • Buy and subsidize or penalize • Regulate (competition, employment, pollution) • Set standards (technical, health) • Set tariff and non-tariff barriers