1 / 18

Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB.

Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB. three. Learning Themes for This Section reading this chapter, you should be able to:. Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB. 1. Understand the major theories of why trade occurs.

sahkyo
Download Presentation

Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB. three Learning Themes for This Section reading this chapter, you should be able to: Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB. 1. Understand the major theories of why trade occurs. 2. Comprehend the differences between traditional and contemporary trade theory. 3. Explain why FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT is important to International Business.

  2. Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB. three Learning Themes for This Section (cont) reading this chapter, you should be able to: Part One: Concepts and Theories in IB. 4. Know the general trends in FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT stock and flow worldwide. 5. Identify the major organizational forms in international business.

  3. International Business in an Age of Globalization three Learning Concepts – Chapter 1 : Chapter One 1. Understand globalization and why it is important. 2. Comprehend why and how globalization can be perceived as a benefit and as a threat. 3. Explain the differences between important international business terms.

  4. International Business in an Age of Globalization three Learning Concepts – Chapter 1 (cont) : Chapter One 4. State the differences between international business and domestic business practices. 5. Appreciate why firms expand internationally.

  5. An Age of Globalization Globalization is everywhere. For consumers, it means more choice, lower prices, and blurred national identities. For business, it means lower costs, better supply, and more markets.

  6. Globalization – Who benefits? • Developing countries benefit from globalization with increased employment, tax revenues, and international relations. • Developed countries benefit from globalization with increased production, imports, exports, and corporate growth.

  7. Globalization and Corporate Monopoly There is an argument that governments will surrender their sovereignty to global corporations. This is not true – globalization does, however, open governments to the reality of trade and pluralistic influence.

  8. Globalization and the Environment Does globalization hurt the natural environment? Probably not. Resources show that globalization actually helps the natural environment through the national development it fosters.

  9. Globalization – The Social Impact • Globalization can cause job transitions in home and host countries. • Globalization causes wages to go up in developing countries and can put downward wage pressure among unskilled workers at home. • Globalization also causes capital to enter and exit economies easier and more frequently, which causes economic uncertainty.

  10. Globalization and International Business Some suggest that globalization causes cultural homogenization. This isn’t true. Globalization causes people to be more aware of their national culture and background, not less. The challenge, is to lever resources to maintain productivity in light of increasing nationalism and cultural awareness.

  11. What is International Business? International business (IB) refers to business activities that involve the transfer of resources, goods, services, knowledge, skills, or information across national boundaries. IB uses raw materials, capital and people to accomplish these goals.

  12. IB – Some Key Terms • International Transactionsare economic transactions that cross borders. • International Trade occurs when companies imports or export across borders. • International Investment occurs when a company invests its resources across national boundaries. • International Firms are those engaged in international business. • A Multinational Enterprise (MNE) invests globally and actively controls those investments.

  13. International U.S. Domestic Business IB is an outgrowth of domestic practice. Most international firms started as domestic ones. Toyota, Honda, Mitsubishi, Renault, Jaguar; all started as domestic business. As these firms grew, they became MNEs.

  14. Why Do Firms Go Global? • Market Motives can gain, protect, or hold a market position. • Economic Motives occur when firms seek higher returns on investments or lower costs. • Strategic Motives help a firm capitalize on distinctive resources or develop capabilities that are rare, imitable, valuable, and not substitutable.

  15. Market Motives - where a firm seeks to gain, protect, or hold market position. Amway gains market position in China. Honda protects market share by building cars in the USA. Examples of Global Motives

  16. Economic Motives - where a firm seeks to increase ROI or decrease costs. Scania moves production to Mexico to lower costs. Michelin improves by building tires in Canada. Examples of Global Motives

  17. Strategic Motives - where firms seek to leverage distinctive competencies. Exxon drills for oil in Asia and the Middle East. Procter and Gamble sell food in China. Examples of Global Motives

  18. Globalization – In summary • Globalization is complex and expensive. It forces business firms to adopt strategies and operations to different cultures and climates. When business can do this, and this is what this class is all about, it can achieve a very good return on investment and useful global operations.

More Related