Solution Manual for International Business A Managerial Perspective, 9th Edition
Preview Extract
PART 1
FOUNDATION CONCEPTS
CHAPTER 2
GLOBALIZATION OF MARKETS
AND THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FIRM
Instructorโs Manual by Marta Szabo White and Gary Knight
I. LECTURE STARTER/LAUNCHER
The Value Chain concept is central to this chapter. To ensure that students understand
this concept, you might start the chapter with a basic example. Project the basic value
chain model on the screen and select a simple business. How about shoes, or laptop
computers, or automobiles? Suppose you manufacture one of these products. Next,
proceed step by step through the model from research & development; to procurement
(sourcing raw materials); to manufacturing; to marketing; to distribution; to sales &
service. Follow each activity and commensurate value that is added at each step along
the way. Now consider locating each one of those activities in a different country, if it is
more efficient to do so. If you donโt want to create an example, you can always use the
examples in Exhibit 2.6.
Useful tools for introducing the chapter include the following:
[1] Globalization & Assessing Global Markets for Potential Entry
Published on Oct 25, 2012
Copyright Mark Wolters 2012
This video discusses globalization and variables to evaluate when considering entering
different markets.
11.36 Minutes
[2] Connecting You to Global Markets
International Trade Administration
Published on Feb 11, 2014
The U.S. Commercial Service hosts regional conferences for small and midsized
companies interested in starting or expanding international sales.
9.41 Minutes
[3] Diversity and globalization: James Sun at TEDxBayArea Ignite
Published on Dec 22, 2012
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James Sun is an entrepreneur, public speaker, and international television personality.
Currently, he’s CEO of Pirq where he sets and leads the overall business strategy,
communication, and execution.
16.54 Minutes
[4] Kjell Nordstrom: International Business Thought-Leader, Best Selling Author,
Keynote Speaker
Published on Jul 17, 2013
Dr. Kjell A. Nordstrรถm has 20 years of experience of working as an advisor/consultant to
several large multinationals throughout the world, speaks on globalization and
information technology.
6.00 Minutes
[5] If the World Were 100 People
Uploaded on Aug 23, 2017
Examines the situation of the world as if it were a village of 100 people. Explains how
the world would appear in terms of demographics, income levels, technology,
education, health, and other such factors.
3.4 Minutes
II. LEARNING OBJECTIVES AND THE OPENING VIGNETTE
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, students should be able to:
2.1 Understand market globalization as an organizing framework.
2.2 Learn the driving forces of globalization.
2.3 Understand the impact of technological advances on globalization.
2.4 Learn the dimensions of globalization.
2.5 Understand firm-level consequences of market globalization.
2.6 Understand the societal consequences of globalization.
Key Themes
โ In this chapter, there are six themes:
[1] Market globalization as an organizing framework
[2] The driving forces of globalization
[3] Technological advances and globalization
[4] The dimensions of globalization
[5] Firm-level consequences of market globalization
[6] Societal consequences of globalization
โ Globalization has been around for centuries- the early civilizations in the
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Mediterranean, Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Europe have all contributed to its growth.
โ Globalization of markets is the integration and interdependence of national
economies.
โ Globalization is chronicled through international trade, triggered by world events and
technological discoveries. Globalization has progressed through four phases, since the
early 1800s. The current phase was stimulated by the rise of IT, the Internet, and other
advanced technologies.
โ The organizing framework used to explain globalization consists of drivers (inputs),
dimensions (processes) and consequences โ both societal and firm-level (outputs).
DRIVERS
DIMENSIONS
CONSEQUENCES
SOCIETAL
FIRM
Globalization can be modeled in terms of its drivers, dimensions, societal
consequences, and firm-level consequences
โ Driving ForcesFalling trade and investment barriers; market liberalization and adoption of free market
economics in formerly closed economies; industrialization and economic development
(emerging markets); integration of world financial markets; and technological advances.
โ Globalization makes internationalization an imperative, technology provides the
means.
โ Technological advances and globalization
Technology is one of the Drivers in the organizing framework
โ Key advances- information technology, communications, the Internet, manufacturing,
and transportation. These systems help create an interconnected network of customers,
suppliers, and intermediaries worldwide.
โ IT has enabled international business to be affordable for all types of firms.
โ DimensionsGrowing global interconnectedness of buyers, producers, suppliers, and governments.
Globalization has fostered the emergence of regional economic integration blocs,
growth of global investment and financial flows, the convergence of buyer lifestyles and
needs, and the globalization of production and services.
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โ Global Sourcing means reconfiguration of the value chain so as to capitalize on
the most advantageous locations for sourcing, manufacturing, marketing, and
distributionโon a global scale.
โ Consequences- Firm
Firms are compelled to globally reconfigure key value-adding activities to reduce the
costs of R&D, sourcing, manufacturing, marketing, and other value-adding activities on
a global scale, or to gain closer access to customers..
โ Consequences- Societal
There is much debate about globalizationโs benefits and harm.
โ Globalization was a major factor in the recent global recession and financial crisis.
โ Critics complain that globalization interferes with national sovereignty, the ability of a
state to govern itself without external intervention.
โ Globalization is associated with offshoring, the relocation of value-chain activities to
foreign locations where they can be performed at lower cost by subsidiaries or
independent suppliers.
โ Globalization tends to decrease poverty, but it may also widen the gap between the
rich and the poor.
โ Unrestricted industrialization may harm the natural environment.
โ Globalization is also associated with the loss of cultural values unique to each nation.
โ Trade and investment can help address many of Africaโs development needs.
Teaching Tips
โ Input-Process-Output model: As this chapter is framed with a globalization model
consisting of drivers (inputs), dimensions (processes) and consequences โ both
societal and firm-level (outputs), make it simple for your students and start with an
explanation of a fundamental input-output model from Systems Theory. This model can
be applied to any open system- from biology to business. Once you highlight the
essence of the model, you can break your class into four groups, and assign one of the
following to each group: (1) drivers (inputs- what drives it), (2) dimensions (processeswhat is it) and โ (3) societal consequences (outputs-results) and (4) firm-level
consequences (outputs-results). You may want to help them a bit by sharing some of
the points under Key Themes (above). Allocate 10 minutes for each group to
understand what their component means and how it fits into the overall model. Then, a
designated group member from each group must share their findings with the class.
Commentary on the Opening Vignette:
SPOTIFY AND THE RISE OF BORN GLOBAL FIRMS
๏ท Key message
โ Globalization and recent technological advances have now made venturing abroad
much less expensive for SMEs, which comprise a majority of the firms in a typical
country.
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โ This is illustrated by firms that address a universal demand, such as Spotify and Geo
Search, born global firms, internationalizing almost at inception.
โ Spotifyโs advanced technology coincides with a global shift to a more visual style of
communication. People want to share photos to depict their life experiences.
โ Geo Search (www.geosearch.co.jp), a Japanese company that develops hightechnology equipment to help engineers survey ground surfaces for cavities and build
safe roads, airports, and underground utility lines.
๏ท Uniqueness of the situation described
โ One of the leading apps on the Internet, Spotify is a music and video streaming
service founded in Sweden in 2008.
โ The firmโs emergence coincided with a global shift in the way people listen to music.
โ Spotify entered many international markets quickly, e.g., Finland, France, Norway,
and Spain, as well as the United Kingdom and the United States.
โ Spotify has more than 150 million regular users throughout Europe, the Americas, and
the Asia-Pacific region, more than 60 countries in all.
โ Spotify has offices in 14 countries, established through direct investment.
โ Spotify grew quickly by offering a huge selection of music at no cost.
โ Spotify differentiated itself through personalized content, easy ways to discover new
music, and customer-tailored marketing.
โ Geo Search developed a land-mine detector used to find buried bombs and found a
ready market in countries like Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Libya.
๏ท Classroom discussion
โ Most students will have a personal experience to share regarding Spotify, so
capitalize on this and make it personal.
โ Spotify is one of a growing number of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
active in international business.
โ Born globals target a dozen or more countries within the first few years of their
unveiling. Their agility and flexibility help them better serve both foreign and domestic
customers.
โ Although they often account for more than 50% of national economic activity, most
SMEs have far fewer financial and human resources than large multinational
enterprises (MNEs).
โ This introduction serves to underscore the delicate balance for born globals as they
consider internationalization:
QUESTIONS:
2-1. What are the main characteristics of born global firms?
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(LO 2.1; LO 2.3; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
โ Born globals target a dozen or more countries within the first few years of their
inception. Their agility and flexibility help them better serve both foreign and domestic
customers.
2-2. What driving forces and causes of globalization have allowed born global
firms like Spotify to internationalize at or near their founding?
(LO 2.2; LO 2.3; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
โ Globalization and recent technological advances have now made venturing abroad
much less expensive for SMEs that make up the majority of firms in a typical country.
2-3. What advantages do you think a young company can gain by entering
international markets soon after its founding?
(LO 2.2; LO 2.3; AACSB: Reflective thinking)
โ Spotifyโs advanced technology coincides with a global shift to a more visual style of
communication. People want to share photos to depict their life experiences.
โ Born globalsโ agility and flexibility help them better serve both foreign and domestic
customers.
III. DETAILED CHAPTER OUTLINE
GLOBALIZATION OF MARKETS AND THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FIRM
โ Three mega drivers of globalization:
[1] Worldwide reduction of barriers to trade and investment
[2] Market liberalization and free market adoption
[3] Technological advances
โ Globalization is a broad term referring to the interconnectedness of national
economies and the growing interdependence of buyers, producers, suppliers, and
governments in different countries, i.e. ongoing economic integration and growing
interdependency of national economies.
โ Globalization enables firms to view the world as one large marketplace for goods,
services, capital, labor, and knowledge, allowing companies to outsource valuechain activities to the most favorable locations worldwide.
โ Globalization makes it easier for companies to sell their offerings worldwide.
โ Growing world trade and foreign direct investment (FDI) provide buyers with a wider
choice of products than ever before.
โ Global competition and innovation help to lower consumer prices.
โ Firms with cross-border business create millions of jobs that raise living standards
around the world.
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ADDITIONAL TOPICS OF CONVERSATIONโ Market Globalization and Technological AdvancesAntecedents and Consequences:
โ Growing world trade and foreign direct investment
โ Spread of technology
โ Global sourcing and sales of products/services
โ Broad product/service consumer options
โ Competion and innovation foster product/service price reductions
โ Job creation โ contributing to higher living standards
โ Global convergence of some products- illustrated by universal demand, e.g.
music, entertainment, consumer electronics, food
โ Transformation of national economies
โ Dissemination of economic, political and legal values, e.g. liberalized
economies, free trade and intellectual property rights
WHY GLOBALIZATION IS NOT NEW
Globalization is not new; it has simply accelerated and acquired a more complex
character in recent decades.
โ Early civilizations in the Mediterranean, Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Europe have all
contributed to the growth of cross-border trade.
โ Globalization evolved out of an international, common heritage shared by worldwide
civilizations to reach out and interact with one another.
โ Cross-border trading opened the world to innovations and progress.
โ Exchange with others gave societies the opportunity to expand and grow.
โ Trade through the ages fostered civilization; without it, we would be a world of warring
tribes using combat to get what is needed.
ADDITIONAL TOPICS OF CONVERSATIONโ The word โtradeโ comes from the Anglo-Saxon term trada, which means to walk in the
footsteps of others.
โ Ancient trade routes were the foundation for a high level of cross-cultural exchange of
ideas that lead to the development of religion, science, economic activity, and
government.
โ The phrase โall roads lead to Romeโ is not so much a metaphorical reference to
Romeโs dominance of the world 2,000 years ago, but to the fact that Romeโs territorial
colonies were constructed as commercial resource centers to serve the needs of the
Roman Empire and increase its wealth.
โ In an empire that stretched from England to Israel and from Germany to Africa, the
Romans created more than 300,000 kilometers of roads. Roman roads were the lifeblood of the state that allowed for trade to flourish.
โ In the middle ages, the Knights Templar acted as guardians for pilgrims making the
hazardous journey to pay homage to the birth place of the Christian religion.
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โ In addition to protecting tourists, this warrior order created the first international
banking system with the use of rudimentary travelerโs checks, eliminating the need for
travelers to carry valuables on their person, which could be easily robbed.
โ Genghis Khan in 1100 not only united the Mongols but created an empire beyond the
Chinese border, including Korea and Japan in the East, Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq
and Syria), Russia, Poland and Hungary.
โ Genghis Khan instituted common laws and regulations over his domain, most notably
the preservation of private property to enhance and protect the trading imperative.
โ Arab merchants traded in spices across land routes reaching from northern Arabia
across modern-day Turkey, through Asia Minor and finally reaching China.
โ By concealing the origins of cinnamon, pepper, cloves, and nutmeg such traders were
able to gain a monopoly and control prices. Europeans came to believe that the spices
came from Africa, when in fact, they had merely changed hands there.
โ Under the traditional trading system, spices, linen, silk, diamonds, pearls, and opiumbased medicines reached Europe via indirect routes over land and sea.
โ Representing one of the earliest systems of international distribution, the products
passed through many hands on their long voyage. At every juncture, prices increased
several fold (i.e. value chain).
Phases of Globalization
โ Exhibit 2.1 summarizes the Phases of Globalization. Since the 1800s, the evolution
of market globalization has witnessed five distinct phases, each triggered by global
events and technological discoveries:
The First Phase of Globalization
1830 โ 1900
โ The first phase of globalization began about 1830 and peaked around 1880.
โ Cross-border commerce became widespread in this period due to the growth of
railroads, efficient ocean transport, and the rise of large manufacturing and trading
firms.
โ The inventions of the telegraph and telephone in the 1800s facilitated information
flows between and within nations and greatly aided early efforts to manage companiesโ
supply chains.
The Second Phase of Globalization
1900 -1930
โ The second phase of globalization began around 1900 and was correlated with the
rise of electricity and steel production.
โ This phase reached its height just before the Great Depression, a worldwide
economic downturn that started in 1929.
โ At the turn-of-the-century, Western Europe was the most industrialized region and its
colonization of countries worldwide led to the establishment of some of the earliest
subsidiaries of multinational enterprises (MNEs).
โ European companies such as BASF, Nestlรฉ, Shell, Siemens and British Petroleum
had established foreign manufacturing plants by 1900.
โ The Italian manufacturer Fiat supplied vehicles to nations on both sides of the war.
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The Third Phase of Globalization
1948 – 1970s
โ The third phase of globalization followed World War II.
โ At warโs end in 1945, substantial pent-up demand existed for consumer products, as
well as for resources to rebuild Europe and Japan.
โ Among the leading economies, the U.S. was least harmed by the war and became the
worldโs dominant economy.
โ Substantial government aid helped stimulate economic activity in Europe.
โ Pre-war years had been characterized by high tariffs and strict controls on currency
and capital movements.
โ Post-war, leading industrialized countries, including Australia, Britain and the U.S.
sought to reduce international trade barriers.
โ The result of this effort was the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) โ
the precursor to the World Trade Organization (WTO).
โ GATT, emerging from the Bretton Woods Conference of 23 nations in 1947, served
as a global negotiating forum for liberalizing trade barriers, and marked the beginning of
a series of annual meetings aimed at reducing international trade and investment
barriers.
โ Participating governments recognized that liberalized trade would stimulate
industrialization, modernization, and better living standards.
โ Eventually, many more nations joined the GATT, and their efforts led to the formation
of the WTO.
โ WTO- A multilateral governing body empowered to regulate international trade and
investment.
โ Some 149 nations are now members of the WTO.
โ Additional global cooperation led to the formation of key international organizations
such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the United Nations.
โ Early multinationals from this third phase of globalization originated from the U.S.,
Western Europe, and Japan.
โ Firms like Unilever, Philips, Royal Dutch-Shell, British Petroleum, and Bayer
organized their businesses by establishing autonomous subsidiaries in each of the
foreign countries where they did business.
Numerous companies developed strong brand names, including Nestlรฉ, Kraft, John
Deere, Kellogg, Lockheed, Caterpillar, Coca-Cola, Chrysler, Pepsi-Cola, Singer, and
Leviโs.
โ U.S. multinationals such as IBM, Boeing, Texas Instruments, Xerox, and McDonnell
Douglas spread out across the globe, leveraging technological competitive advantages.
โ Gradually, MNEs began seeking cost advantages by locating factories in developing
countries with low labor costs.
โ 1960s- Growing MNE activities and early efforts at trade liberalization resulted in
substantial increases in international trade and investment.
โ 1960s/1970s- Recovered from World War II, MNEs in Europe and Japan began to
challenge the global dominance of U.S. multinationals.
โ With the easing of trade barriers and currency controls, capital began to flow freely
across national borders, leading to integration of global financial markets.
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The Fourth Phase of Globalization
1980s to about 2006
โ The fourth phase of globalization began in the early 1980s and ended around 2006.
โ This period witnessed enormous growth in cross-border trade and investment activity.
The following innovations triggered this phase:
โCommercialization of the personal computer
โArrival of the Internet and Web browsers
โAdvances in communication and manufacturing technologies
โCollapse of the Soviet Union and ensuing market liberalization in central
and Eastern Europe
โImpressive industrialization and modernization in East Asian economies,
including China
โ Growing global prosperity began to reach emerging markets such as Brazil, India
and Mexico.
โ 1980s – Huge increases in FDI, especially in capital- and technology- intensive
sectors
โ Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) can afford to be globally competitive,
because of technological advances in information, communications, and transportation.
โ These technologies enabled the globalization of the service sector in areas such as
banking, entertainment, tourism, insurance, and retailing.
โ Increasing global integration inspired mergers/acquisitions such as:
โ GM acquisition of Saab in Sweden
โ Ford acquisition of Mazda in Japan
โ Daimler Benz acquisition of Chrysler in the U.S.
โ โDeath of Distanceโ resulted from globalization and technological advances. The
world was shrinking in terms of geographic and cultural distances that had long
separated nations.
The Fifth and Current Phase of Globalization
2006 to the present
โ The fifth and current phase of globalization began in about 2006 and continues.
โ Rise of digital technologies, and other new technologies, which are boosting
manufacturing productivity and the efficiency of international trade in services.
โ Technological breakthroughs in fields such as quantum computing, the Internet of
โ Things, artificial intelligence, robotics, autonomous vehicles, 3D printing,
nanotechnology, and biotechnology are blurring the lines between the physical, digital,
and biological spheres.
โ Digital and other new technologies are boosting the efficiency of international trade,
especially in services. Much retailing is done via Amazon and Alibaba, which sell their
offerings around the world via online platforms.
โ The value of world exports of services rose from about $3 trillion in 2007 to more than
$5 trillion in 2017.
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โ Thanks to technological advances, national borders and traditional country-based
business models are losing much of their relevance.
โ BUT, growth in international trade of goods has slowed during this phase.
โ Just as new technologies support international services trade, they also increase the
productivity of local manufacturing. This tendency reduces firmsโ cost of domestic
operations and increases the attractiveness of homegrown, local manufacturing. FDI as
a share of total investment has declined.
โ Emerging market countries increasingly focus on developing local markets for locally
manufactured products.
MARKET GLOBALIZATION: ORGANIZING FRAMEWORK
โ Exhibit 2.2 presents the driving forces, dimensions and consequences of
globalization.
โ This model distinguishes among:
(1) DRIVING FORCES or causes of globalization;
(2) DIMENSIONS or manifestations of globalization;
(3a) FIRM-LEVEL CONSEQUENCES of globalization; and
(3b) SOCIETAL CONSEQUENCES of globalization.
โ The double arrows illustrate the interactive relationship between market globalization
and its consequences.
โ As market globalization intensifies, individual firms respond to challenges and exploit
new opportunities.
โ Proactive internationalization- seek new markets, find lower-cost inputs, or obtain
other advantages or adverse home market conditions (e.g. regulation or declining
industry sales), push firms to boldly venture abroad
โ Generally, proactive internationalization tends to be more successful than reactive
internationalization.
โ Examples- TWO TELECOM FIRMS
โ America Movil (www.americamovil.com)-leading wireless phone service provider that
has pursued internationalization as a growth strategy.
โ They have over 225 million subscribers in 18 countries.
โ Based in Mexico, America Movil internationalized primarily via FDI.
โ Initial operations were in Brazil and Colombia, then Ecuador, Chile, the Netherlands,
and numerous other foreign markets.
โ Then a joint venture with Citigroup to fund expansion in South America, and an
acquisition of Verizonโs telephone operations in Puerto Rico.
โ America Movil capitalized on globalization trends:
โ Harmonizing communications technologies
โ Converging buyer characteristics
โ Reduced trade and investment barriers
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โ Leapfrogging past old telecom technologies and embracing contemporary
mobile phone technologies
โ Transnational Strategy (Global and Multidomestic combination)
Global
โ Key underlying assumption of the global strategy- worldwide convergence of
buyer lifestyles, incomes, and demand.
โ Cell phones are essentially identical worldwide
โ Advertising emphasizes a global brand that is recognized everywhere.
โ Management coordinates operations on a global scale and applies common
business processes in procurement and quality control.
Multidomestic
โ Adapted to local languages.
โ Modified to local regulations.
โ Adapted to local telephone standards.
โ Globalization of markets drives product standardization, global branding, and selling
to customers worldwide
โ Vodafone has internationalized mainly via FDI (Australia, Hong Kong, Scandinavia,
Africa, Asia, Europe, India and the Americas), and implements a proactive global
strategy by selling standardized products and services and employing standardized
marketing programs around the world.
โ Vodafone has annual sales of over $50 billion (2018), with 300 million mobile
customers worldwide in 25 countries.
โ As emerging markets develop economically, they leapfrog past older technologies,
e.g. landline systems and employ modern cell phone technologies. Vodafone
capitalized upon the intersection of technology, globalization and emerging market
trends, when it acquired Turkeyโs second-biggest mobile phone operator, Telsim in
2008.
โ 2011- Acquired a controlling interest in a major cell phone firm in India, a move that
leveraged the countryโs rapid economic growth and need to upgrade its phone systems.
โ Revenues have been flat or declining for several years through 2018.
โ Universal demand is the pivotal underpinning for a global strategy as standardization
and economies of scale are hallmarks for achieving the global efficiencies that this
strategy is known for and can translate to price competition.
๏ต MyLab Management: Watch It! 1
Born Global
Apply what you have learned in this chapter.
Go to MyLab Management, www.pearson.com/mylab/management, click your course,
and choose multimedia library.
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DRIVING FORCES OF GLOBALIZATION
โ Five drivers of market globalization:
1. Worldwide reduction of barriers to trade and investment.
โ National governments have sought to reduce trade and investment barriers, which
has accelerated global economic integration.
โ The World Trade Organization (WTO) has facilitated this.
โ The WTO is a multilateral governing body empowered to regulate international trade
and investment and has been engaged in an ongoing liberalization of member statesโ
economies since the late 1940s.
โ Joining the WTO in 2001, even China has committed to make its market more
accessible to foreign companies.
โ Market openings are closely associated with the emergence of regional economic
integration blocs, a key dimension of market globalization.
2. Market liberalization and adoption of free markets.
โ The Berlin Wall, built in 1961, separated the communist East Berlin from the
democratic West Berlin.
โ The tearing down of the Berlin Wall in 1989, the collapse of the Soviet Unionโs
economy that same year, and Chinaโs free-market reforms signaled the end of the 50year Cold War between communist regimes and democracy.
โ It was the transition from command economies to market-driven economies that
facilitated their membership into the global economy.
โ The Asian economies, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, and South Korea embraced
market-based reforms.
โ These events opened roughly one-third of the world to freer international trade and
investment.
โ China, India, and Eastern Europe have become some of the most cost-effective
locations for producing goods and services.
โ Privatization of previously state-owned industries promotes economic efficiency and
attracts foreign capital into their national economies.
3. Industrialization, economic development, and modernization.
โ Industrialization transitions emerging markets- Asia, Latin America, and Eastern
Europe- from being low value-adding commodity producers, dependent on low-cost
labor, to sophisticated competitive producers and exporters of premium products
(higher-value products) such as electronics, computers, and aircraft.
โ Examplesโ Brazil is a leading producer of Embraer commercial aircraft
โ Czech Republic excels in manufacturing automobiles
โ India is a leading supplier of computer software
โ Gross National Income (GNI) โ perhaps the most important measure of economic
development, i.e. standards of living & discretionary income
โ Exhibit 2.3 maps the Gross National Income worldwide in $US per capita. There is a
direct correlation between low-income countries and low levels of globalization, e.g.
Africa, Asia, Latin America.
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โ The adoption of modern technologies, improvement of living standards, and adoption
of current legal and banking practices increase the attractiveness of emerging markets
as investment targets and facilitate the spread of ideas, products, and services across
the globe.
โ Exhibit 2.4 highlights the relationship between trade and gross domestic product
(GDP). It suggests that countries that engage substantially in international trade also
tend to experience strong economic development.
4. Integration of world financial markets.
โ Integration of world financial markets enables internationally active firms to raise
capital, borrow funds, and engage in foreign currency transactions.
โ Cross-border transactions are made easier partly as a result of the ease with which
funds can be transferred between buyers and sellers, i.e. through a network of
international commercial banks.
โ The SWIFT network connects more than 11,000 financial institutions in some 200
countries.
โ The globalization of finance enables firms to pay suppliers and collect payments from
customers worldwide.
5. Advances in technology.
โ Technological advances in communications, information, manufacturing, and
transportation have served as a remarkable facilitator of cross-border trade and
investment.
TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES AND GLOBALIZATION
Technology is one of the Drivers in the organizing framework
โ Globalization and technology are the twin mega-trends impacting the international
landscape.
โ Globalization makes internationalization imperative, technology provides the means.
โ The most important advances in technology have occurred in information,
communications, manufacturing, and transportation- enabling firms to interact more
efficiently with value-chain partners- thus build competitive advantages.
Information Technology
โ Information technology (IT) is the science and process of creating and using
information resources.
โ The effect of Information Technology (IT) on business has been nothing short of
revolutionary.
โ The cost of computer processing fell by 30% per year during the past three decades
and continues to fall.
โ Data, information, and experience can be readily shared via worldwide company
intranets.
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โ Smaller firms can also leverage IT to design and produce customized products that
can be targeted to narrow, cross-national niches.
โ The impact of IT on our daily lives has been profound- cell phones, Google, Yahoo,
etc.
โ IT supports strategic decisions, e.g. the selection of qualified foreign business
partners based on key information and intelligence.
โ Technology enables firms to interact with foreign partners and value-chain members
in a more timely and cost-effective way, thus enabling competitive advantage.
โ The remarkable performance of the U.S. economy in the 1990s was largely due to
aggressive integration of IT into firmsโ value-chain activities.
โ With technological advances, small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) can afford
to be global players.
โ More technological advances in other areas โ artificial intelligence, big data, Internet
of things, energy creation and storage โ promise to provide additional progress through
the 2020s.
โ Emerging markets (technological leapfrogging) and consumers (reduced prices
and greater selection) are the beneficiaries, e.g. African countries are immediately
adopting cell phone technology, bypassing the landline technology.
Communications
โ Exhibit 2.5 depicts the declining cost of global communication and growing Internet
penetration rate as a percentage of regional population. It reveals the dramatic rise in
the volume of international traffic in Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) calls. VoIP is the
mother technology of Skype, FaceTime, and numerous other platforms that facilitate
very low-cost international voice and video communications.
โ The most profound technological advances have occurred in communications,
especially telecommunications, satellites, optical fiber, wireless technology, and the
Internet.
โ The Internet, and Internet-dependent systems such as intranets, extranets, social
media, and e-mail, connect billions of people and companies worldwide. Today, the
widest range of products and servicesโfrom auto parts to bank loansโis marketed
online.
โ The dot-com boom of the 1990s led to massive investment in fiber-optic
telecommunications cable.
โ Transmitting voices, data, and images is essentially costless, making Seoul,
Stockholm, and San Jose next-door neighbors.
โ South Korea, where Internet access is nearly 100%, is leading the way- Koreans use
their phones to pay bills, do banking, and watch news programs.
โ The Internet opens up the global marketplace to SMEs and other firms that normally
lack the resources to engage in international business.
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โ The Internet is stimulating economic development and a massive, global migration of
jobs, particularly in the services sector.
โ Services as diverse as designing an engine, monitoring a security camera, selling
insurance, and doing secretarial work are easier to export than car parts or refrigerators.
โ China- www.taobao.com Thousands of rural farmers use Internet sites to market their
produce to urban consumers
Digitalization
โ Digitalization refers to enabling or transforming business functions, operations, and
activities by leveraging digital technologies and digitized data.
โ Digital networks provide a global platform through which people and organizations
interact, collaborate, obtain information, and develop strategies.
โ E-commerce now encompasses a vast range of platforms and applications that
facilitate international buying and selling of goods and services online. For example,
sharing-economy firms such as Uber and Airbnb use specialized software and the
โ Internet to facilitate the joint creation of value and services between asset users and
asset owners. Digitalization is transforming interactions among customers, employees,
business partners and investors by connecting locations, products, services, and data.
โ Large-scale data analysis helps uncover breakthrough business insights and develop
products, services, and experiences tailored to specific customer needs. For example,
automakers continuously collect data on how customers use their cars and then utilize
the data to improve product quality and the driving experience.
โ Leveraging emergent technologies such as virtual reality and artificial intelligence
helps to create innovative products and services that provide competitive advantages.
โ Robots, artificial intelligence, and IT-based automation improve operational efficiency
and deliver more engaging customer experiences. For example, MNEs are introducing
sensors into manufacturing operations to improve production efficiency, predict
maintenance problems, and perform repairs from remote locations.
โ Digitalization has numerous consequences. The marginal cost of transmitting data
and information worldwide is now essentially zero.
โ Digitalization has reduced both the importance of geographic boundaries and the
costs of international interactions and transactions.
โ Companies extensively use digital tools to support innovation and improve
productivity and the effectiveness of value chains worldwide.
โ Competition is becoming more sophisticated and global. For example, Alibaba and
Amazon are connecting global suppliers and imposing competitive pressures on
traditional retailers worldwide
โ The Internet of Things refers to machine-to-machine connectivity online.
โ Worldwide, mobile telephony and app development have grown enormously, creating
millions of jobs, increasing productivity, and producing big GDP gains.
โ The number of smartphone users reached 3 billion in 2017, double the figure in 2013.
People everywhere are now online
Ethical Connections
โ In six years, Nigeria increased its telecom infrastructure from just 500,000 phone lines
to more than 30 million cellular subscribers.
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โ The result has been a dramatic rise in productivity and commerce, which helps
improve living standards.
โ Mobile phones have become the transformative technology for developing
economies (technological leapfrogging) with exponential growth of cellular subscribers
resulting in:
โ Greater efficiencies
โ Improved living standards- access to education and healthcare services
โ Better communication between suppliers and customers
โ Dramatic rise in productivity and commerce
โ Example- MNE telecom investment in Africa allows firms to fulfill social
responsibilities and improve the lives of millions of poor people.
โ Cell phone penetration largely accounts for Africaโs economic growth in recent years.
โ Social Media Platforms- Transcend Borders and Geographic Distances
โ Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter facilitate the free flow of information,
deepening the pace and impact of globalization.
โ Reach via direct sales, advertising and public relations.
โ Examplesโ 2011 โArab Springโ in the Middle East was facilitated in large part by social
media.
โ Puma used Twitter and other platforms to market sportswear to customers in
Europe and Latin America, ahead of the 2014 World Cup games.
โ McDonaldโs used the social media site Renren.com to market burgers and
sundaes to customers in China.
โ Social Media Restrictions- Authoritarian Countries
โ Some national governments restrict access to social media, fearing that it can
accelerate social movements.
Manufacturing
โ Revolutionary developments now permit low-scale and low-cost manufacturing, with
the support of computer-aided-design (CAD) of products, robotics, and production lines
managed and monitored by microprocessor-based controls.
โ International business benefits:
โ Products are adapted to local markets more efficiently
โ Small national markets can be profitably targeted
โ Competitive parity with foreign competitors that enjoy cost advantages.
Transportation
โ The decision to export or manufacture abroad rests with the transportation costs of
raw materials, components, and finished products.
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โ Technological advances have led to the development of fuel-efficient jumbo jets, giant
ocean-going freighters, and low-cost shipping, leveraging new transportation technology
which has reduced shipping times and costs.
โ Sustainability- Growing transportation poses an increasing threat to the natural
environment, in terms of the usage of energy and other resources.
โ 2000-2017- the number of containers transported internationally increased by 210%.
Some 700 million 20- foot equivalent units are shipped annually.
โ Maersk (Shipbuilder) introduced container ships that can carry upwards of 9,000 40foot shipping containers.
โ These โTriple Eโ vessels provide economies of scale, energy efficiency and are
environmentally friendly.
โ These transport goods mainly between Europe and Asia because they are too wide to
pass through the Panama Canal, and only massive ports can handle them.
โ The plummeting cost of transportation, as a proportion of the value of products
shipped internationally, has dramatically declined, spurring rapid growth in cross-border
trade.
DIMENSIONS OF MARKET GLOBALIZATION
โ In the context of international business, market globalization may be viewed
simultaneously as:
(a) Consequences of the Drivers of Market Globalization;
(b) Drivers and consequences of Firm-level Internationalization;
(c) Drivers and consequences of Societal Internationalization.
โ Globalization of markets is a multifaceted phenomenon, with six major dimensions:
1. Integration and interdependence of national economies.
โ The multicounty aggregate activities of reconfiguring and integrating value-chain
activities gives rise to economic integration.
โ Value chain: The sequence of value-adding activities performed by a firm in the
process of creating a product: R&D, procurement, manufacturing, marketing,
distribution, sales and service.
โ Governments contribute to this integration by:
(1) Gradually lowering trade and investment barriers;
(2) Harmonizing their monetary and fiscal policies within regional economic
integration blocs (also known as trade blocs), e.g. EU;
(3) Creating supranational institutions that transcend national borders and involve
cooperation among several countries that seek further reductions in trade and
investment barriers, e.g. the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, World Trade
Organization, etc.
2. Rise of regional economic integration blocs.
โ Emergence of regional economic integration blocs since the 1950s
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โ Trade bloc: consist of groups of countries within which trade and investment flows
are facilitated through reduced trade and investment barriers.
โ Examples- the North American Free Trade Agreement area (NAFTA), the Asia
Pacific Economic Cooperation zone (APEC), and Mercosur in Latin America.
โ In more advanced stages (common market), barriers to the cross-border flow of
capital and labor, are also removed- e.g. European Union (www.europa.eu).
โ Currently, the only example of an economic and monetary union is the European
Union with its common currency of the euro.
โ In addition to adopting free trade among its members, it is harmonizing fiscal and
monetary policies and adopting common business regulations
3. Growth of global investment and financial flows.
โ Foreign direct investment (FDI) has grown dramatically due to global sourcing.
โ Firms and governments undertake global currency trading to finance cross-border
trade and investment.
โ The globalization of capital, i.e. the free movement of capital (denominated in dollars,
euros, yen, and other world currencies) around the world extends economic activities
across the globe and fosters interconnectedness among world economies.
โ Commercial and investment banking has become a global industry.
โ The bond market has gained worldwide scope, with foreign bonds representing a
major source of debt financing for governments and firms.
โ Negative effect of integration:
Examplesโ 2008- When the U.S. experienced a banking crisis, the contagion quickly
spread to Europe, Japan, and emerging markets, triggering a global recession.
โ 1997- When Thailand and Malaysia experienced a monetary crisis, it quickly
spread to South Korea, Indonesia, the Philippines and elsewhere, causing prolonged
recession in most East Asian economies.
4. Convergence of consumer lifestyles and preferences.
โ Lifestyles and preferences are converging, i.e. increasingly standardized, resulting in
global market segments.
โ Global media and the Internet contribute to the convergence of buyer preferences, in
part by emphasizing/commercializing a particular lifestyle.
โ Universal demand:
โ Examplesโ Goods, clothing, automobiles, and electronics.
โ iPods, Leviโs jeans, & Hollywood movies (Transformers and The Hunger
Games).
โ Professional buyers source raw materials, parts, and components that are
increasingly standardized.
โ Double-edged sword- While converging tastes facilitate the marketing of
standardized products/services to global consumers, they also signal the loss of
traditional lifestyles, values in individual countries and national sovereignty.
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5. Globalization of production.
โ Intense global competition has made economies of scale a critical key success factor.
Global players are forced to evaluate global sourcing and standardization, capitalizing
on national differences in the cost and quality of factor inputs.
โ Offshoring- This explains why auto and textile firms have relocated to low labor-cost
locations such as China, Mexico, and Poland.
6. Globalization of services
โ The services sector is undergoing internationalization and global sourcing.
โ Firms in banking, hospitality, retailing, and other service industries are rapidly
expanding abroad.
โ Examplesโ The real estate giant RE/MAX has established more than 6,500 offices in over
100 countries.
โ The French firm Accor operates hundreds of hotels worldwide.
โ Firms increasingly outsource business processes and other services-based value
chain activities to vendors located abroad.
โ In a new trend, people are increasingly going abroad to take advantage of low-cost
medical procedures.
โ Medical tourism โ consumers travel abroad for medical procedures such as
hysterectomies, cataract, knee and cosmetic surgeries.
โ The distribution of foreign direct investment has changed markedly, from an emphasis
on manufacturing to services.
FIRM-LEVEL CONSEQUENCES OF MARKET GLOBALIZATION:
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FIRMโS VALUE CHAIN
โ The most significant implication of market globalization is on the firmโs value chain.
โ Globalization compels firms to internationalize their value chain and adopt a global
rather than a local focus- sourcing decisions are key to achieve cost advantages
and time efficiencies.
โ Value chain: The sequence of value-adding activities performed by a firm in the
process of creating a product: R&D, procurement, manufacturing, marketing,
distribution, sales and service.
โ The value chain concept is useful in international business because it helps clarify
what activities are performed where in the world.
โ Value chains vary in complexity and across industries and products.
โ Upstream activities= Research and development, procurement, and manufacturing.
โ Downstream activities= Marketing, distribution, and sales and service.
โ Exporting firms perform most โupstreamโ value-chain activities (R&D and production)
in the home market and most โdownstreamโ activities (marketing and after-sales
service) abroad.
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โ Each value-adding activity is subject to internationalization – it can be performed in a
foreign market instead of at home, sometimes in collaboration with local business
partners.
โ Exhibit 2.6 portrays a value chain for a typical international firm, underscoring the
flexibility that firms have in reconfiguring their value-adding activities.
โ Outsourcing- The value-adding activity is delegated to an external supplier, as
opposed to being internalized within the company.
โ Global outsourcing- the external supplier is located abroad.
โ Offshoring- Relocates a major value chain activity- e.g. relocating a factory or other
subsidiary abroad
โ Reasons for locating value-chain activities in particular countries:
โ Reduce the costs of R&D and production
โ Gain closer access to customers.
โ Examples of Globalization Realities โ
โ BMW launched a new factory in South Carolina, thus could manufacture cars
cost-effectively while more readily accessing the U.S. market. BMW created thousands
of high-paying, better-quality jobs for U.S. workers
โ Jackson Mills, an aging textile plant, closed its doors, shed thousands of
workers and sourced textiles more cost-effectively, with comparable quality, from Asian
suppliers.
โ Globalization drove these firms to relocate key value-adding activities to the
most advantageous locations around the world.
โ Exhibit 2.7- Underscores the significance of a global marketplace in that firms face
intense rivalry from foreign and domestic competitors.
โ 1989- General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler together held nearly 75% of the
market share in light vehicle sales in the U.S.
โ 2017- This percentage had fallen to 44% as the market shares of Toyota,
Hyundai, and others rose dramatically.
๏ต MyLab Management: Watch It! 2
Rudiโs Bakery: Management in the Global Environment
Apply what you have learned in this chapter.
Go to MyLab Management, www.pearson.com/mylab/management, click your course,
and choose multimedia library.
You Can Do It: Recent Grad in IB: Terrance Rogers
Terranceโs majors: Finance and International Business
Objectives: Exploration, international perspective, self-awareness, career growth, and
learning about foreign markets
Internships during college: Deutsche Bank
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Jobs held since graduating:
โBusiness Analyst at Deutsche Bank, New York
โManagement Associate at Deutsche Bank, New York
โExecutive Management Rotation at Deutsche Bank, New York
โExecutive Management Associate at Deutsche Bank, London and New York
His collegeโs International Business Certificate program coupled with a study abroad
program to Paris and Brussels, ignited Terranceโs passion for finance, learning about
different cultures and working abroad. After graduation, Terrance launched his career
as a business analyst with Deutsche Bank in New York, which gave him experience in
regulatory change, process improvement, and crisis management.
Terrance was promoted to management associate, working directly with the Chief
Operations Officer of the Americas for his division. After four years, Terrance took a
position with numerous international responsibilities.
Today, Terrance is an Executive Management Associate, leading business strategy,
finance analysis, and communications for the United Kingdom Executive Team, working
directly with the Head of Marketing and Communications to craft and execute
communication strategy for the Chief Executive Officer.
Terranceโs Advice for an International Career
Major clients donโt just reside in the U.S. anymore, so if you want to have a long
impactful career, you must find a way to gain some international exposure. Your boss
will rely on you to be able to work with business associates from different cultures. Your
clients will expect you to understand issues with a global perspective.
Success Factors
(a) Work on projects that expose you to people in different regions across the globe;
(b) Share your interest in working abroad early and bring it up in your annual review;
and (c) Impress the people who can make it happen.
Challenges
โโChallenges like language barriers and cultural differences are things that should be
faced as soon as you can in your career.
โDonโt be afraid to make a mistake. Itโs much better to learn from cultural missteps now,
so that you can be a better business leader tomorrow.โ
โGlobalization is a major dimension of business today.
SOCIETAL CONSEQUENCES OF GLOBALIZATION
โ Positive consequences of market globalization:
โ Advances in living standards;
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โ Cross-border trade and investment opened the world to innovations and
progress while increasing performance standards, known as global benchmarking or
world class.
โ Negative consequences of market globalization:
โThe transition to an increasingly single, global marketplace poses challenges to
individuals, organizations and governments.
โ Poverty is especially notable in Africa, Brazil, China and India where lowerincome countries have not been able to integrate with the global economy as rapidly as
others.
โ Globalization has created countless new jobs and opportunities around the
world, but it has also cost many people their jobs.
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF GLOBALIZATION
Contagion: Rapid Spread of Monetary or Financial Crises
โ 2008- The world economy experienced a severe financial crisis and global recessionthe worst in decades.
Antecedents
โ Precipitated by unsustainably high prices in housing and commodities markets
worldwide.
โ As real estate markets tumbled, home values crashed, leaving owners with mortgage
debts greater than the value of their homes.
โ Homeowners were unable to repay their debts, a situation that worsened as people
lost jobs or experienced pay cuts.
โ High commodity prices resulted partly from rising demand, especially in emerging
markets such as China and India.
โ Thousands of mortgages had been securitized, that is, bundled and sold as
investments on stock markets worldwide.
โ U.S. – Spending/Borrowing Mindset
โ 2000โs- U.S. Federal Reserve Bank charged very low interest rates to banksEasy bank loans
โ Easy money – Widespread borrowing by consumers to purchase homes and
durable goods, which led to an unsustainable overheating of the U.S. economy
โ Inadequate regulation of mortgage markets (e.g. subprime mortgages) and the
banking sector in the U.S.
โ A strong legal and regulatory framework is critical to national economic wellbeing
โ China – Savings Mindset
โ High savings rate, huge pool of money
โ Chinese loaned funds to the U.S., in effect, buying U.S. Treasury bonds (nearly
$800 billion in 2009)
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โ The savings glut in China, other emerging markets, and the oil-producing
countries translated into lower interest rates in the U.S. and elsewhere, which
further facilitated borrowing.
Concepts
โ Recession occurs when a national economy undergoes a prolonged period of
negative growth.
โ Contagion- The tendency of a financial or monetary crisis in one country to spread
rapidly to other countries, due to the ongoing integration of national economies.
Consequences
โ The financial crisis struck at the core issues of globalization and raised questions
concerning its merits.
โ As the value of the mortgage securities plunged or became uncertain, the stock
markets crashed.
โ Consumer confidence dwindled, triggering substantial declines in spending on cars,
consumer electronics, home appliances, luxury goods, gasoline, bank loans, and new
homes.
โ Spending decreased, impacting global commerce. Trade slowed or flattened in
consumer durables, energy, financial services, new construction, and related industries.
โ 2009-10- Global growth declined sharply to levels not seen since World War II.
โ Catalyst- Although the crisis began in the U.S., national economies and banking
systems had been integrated through technology, so the contagion spread quickly
around the globe.
โ Canada and Mexico slipped into recession partly due to their heavy reliance on trade
and investment with the U.S.
โ Japan, New Zealand, Turkey, the U.S., and most countries in Europe experienced
significant recessions.
โ Of the largest world economies, only Chinaโs continued to grow at a rate of over 6%
per year.
โ Advanced economies were significantly impacted, emerging markets and developing
economies were more resilient than in previous global downturns, although growth in
these countries has slowed considerably.
โ Global Interconnectedness- Living standards were severely affected and millions of
people worldwide fell into deeper poverty. This occurred largely because developing
economies depend on exports to, and direct investments from, the advanced
economies that have all been hurt by the crisis.
โ In order to stimulate economic activity, governments worldwide pumped hundreds of
billions of dollars into their national economies. A key implication of recent events is
that, when financial markets are unchecked or unregulated, crises spread quickly and
take on global scale.
โ The recent โEuropean debt crisisโ arose from various factors, especially the
globalization of finance, real-estate bubbles, easy money, relaxed credit conditions, and
excessive spending by national governments.
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โ 2010- European Union provided rescue packages for Greece, Ireland and Portugal,
which found themselves unable to re-finance their own debts.
โ Changes- Greater government intervention and the co-ownership of many privatesector enterprises.
โ 2012- Major economic recovery helped drive worldwide economic growth.
โ Exhibit 2.8 illustrates how GDP growth in advanced, developing, and emerging
economies varies over time. In all three types of economies, GDP declined
substantially, due to the global recession and the financial crisis.
โ Historical Learning Point- even following deep recessions, the global economy has
always rebounded to net GDP growth.
Loss of National Sovereignty
โ Sovereignty is the ability of a nation to govern its own affairs.
โ One countryโs laws cannot be applied or enforced in another country.
โ Globalization can threaten national sovereignty.
โ MNE activities can interfere with the sovereign ability of governments to control
their own economy, social structure, and political system.
โ Some corporations are bigger than the economies of many nations, e.g.
Walmartโs total revenue is larger than the GDP of most nations, including Israel,
Greece, and Poland.
โ Large multinationals can exert considerable influence on governments through
lobbying or campaign contributions, e.g. a devaluation of the home currency would
allow them greater price competitiveness in export markets.
โ Still, even the largest firms are constrained by market forces.
โ The resources that buyers and suppliers control are the result of free choice.
โ In reality, market forces dominate companies.
โ Some argue that gradual integration of the global economy and increased global
competition combined with privatization of industries in various nations are making
companies less powerful, e.g. Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors once dominated the
U.S. auto market. Today many more firms compete in the U.S., including Honda,
Hyundai, Nissan, and BMW, with Toyota leading the U.S. market.
โ Home-country market shares of domestic U.S. automakers have tumbled.
โ To minimize globalizationโs harm and reap its benefits, governments should strive for
an open and liberalized economic regimes:
(1) Freedom to enter and compete in markets;
(2) Protection of private and intellectual property;
(3) Law enforcement;
(4) Support voluntary exchange through markets vs. political processes.
Transparency of business and regulatory agencies is critical.
โ Governments sometimes scrutinize corporate activity, e.g. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 in the U.S.
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โ This legislation was a response to a series of major corporate and accounting
scandals including those involving Enron, Tyco International, and WorldCom.
โ A decline in public trust of accounting and reporting practices led to this legislation
which introduced new/enhanced standards for all U.S. public company boards,
management, and public accounting firms.
Offshoring
โ Offshoring is the relocation of manufacturing and other value-chain activities to costeffective destinations abroad.
โ Examplesโ Ford, General Motors, and Volkswagen all have transferred thousands of
jobs from their factories in Germany to countries in Eastern Europe.
โ Partially due to mandated shorter working hours (often just 35 hours per
week) and generous benefits made Germany less competitive, while
Eastern Europe offers abundant low-wage workers
โ In reaction, the German government loosened Germanyโs labor laws to
conform to global realities, disrupting the lives of tens of thousands of
German citizens.
โ Ford and General Motors have also laid off thousands of workers in the
U.S., resulting from competitive pressures from European, Japanese, and
South Korean carmakers.
โ Ernst & Young relocated much of its support work to the Philippines.
โ Massachusetts General Hospital has its CT scans and X-rays interpreted by
radiologists in India.
โ Many IT support services for customers in Germany are based in the Czech
Republic and Romania.
Offshoring Waves
โ Offshoring has resulted in job losses in many mature economies with relatively high
wages.
โ 1960s-1970s- The first wave of offshoring began with the shift of U.S. and European
manufacturing of cars, shoes, electronics, textiles, and toys to cheap-labor locations
such as Mexico and Southeast Asia.
โ 1990s- The next wave ensued with the exodus of service sector jobs in credit card
processing, software code writing, accounting, health care, and banking services.
โ Multinationals have been the focus of criticisms, labeled as โrunawayโ or โfootlooseโ
corporations – quick to relocate production to countries that offer better comparative
advantages.
โ Examplesโ Polaris, the U.S. manufacturer of snowmobiles and all-terrain vehicles, moved
its Osceola, Wisconsin, factory to Mexico. Closure of the plant, which once provided
515 jobs, devastated the small Wisconsin community, population 2,085. Management
shifted manufacturing to Mexico in order to reduce production costs.
โ Electrolux, a Swedish manufacturer of home appliances, moved its Greenville,
Michigan, refrigerator plant to Mexico. Electrolux had provided 2,700 jobs in this
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western Michigan community of 8,000. Despite repeated appeals by the local
community, the labor union, and the State of Michigan, offering incentives to the
company to stay, Electrolux went with its decision to shift manufacturing to Mexico.
โ MNEs do create millions of jobs abroad, which help raise living standards.
โ Example- U.S. MNEs now employ about one million workers in each of
Canada, China, Mexico, and the United Kingdom. Such positions help raise living
standards in developing economies and emerging markets.
โ Advantages of offshoring:
(1) Economies of scale by centralizing production locations;
(2) Low-cost labor advantages in certain countries; and
(3) Knowledge-sharing from contracting with experienced suppliers.
โ Those facing intense competition, shrinking profit margins, and unfavorable industry
trends, may achieve corporate survival through offshoring.
โ Countries with low cost inputs and more favorable business environments clearly
benefit from offshoring, e.g. China, India, Mexico, Brazil, and Poland.
Reshoring
โ Reshoring โ the return of manufacturing and services back to the home country. โ
Examplesโ Apple returned some computer manufacturing to the U.S.
โ General Electric returned washer and dryer production to the U.S.
โ Reshoring rationale
โ Rise of wages and other costs in emerging markets
โ Desire get closer to key customers in the advanced economies
Effect on the Poor
โ Criticisms of MNEs:
โ Paying low wages
โ Exploiting workers
โ Employing child labor
โ Child labor is particularly troubling because it denies children educational
opportunities that would contribute to their future development.
โ International Labor Organization (www.ilo.org) reports that over 200 million children
aged 5โ14 work worldwide.
โ Example- Nike has been criticized for paying low wages to shoe factory workers in
Asia, some of whom work in sweatshop conditions. Critics complained that while
founder Phil Knight is a billionaire and Nike shoes sell for $100 or more, some of Nikeโs
suppliers pay their workers only a few dollars per day.
โ Labor exploitation and sweatshop conditions are genuine concerns in many
developing economies.
โ Unfortunately, consideration must be given to the other choices available to people in
those countries.
โ A low-paying job may be better than finding no work at all.
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Negative Unintended Consequences
โ Reduced living standards.
โ Legislation that reduces child labor in the formal economic sector may have little
effect on jobs in the informal economic sector (underground economy).
โ Eliminating child labor does not automatically make children go to school instead of to
work and can worsen their living standards.
โ The concept of Ethical Relativism is important here, i.e. ethics can only be judged
within its own context. Examining the job portfolio in Country X, if commensurately skillbased jobs pay similar wages, then relative to that country, the wages are reasonable.
Relative to U.S. standards, they may not be. Also, although child labor is deplorable, the
U.S. exploited children in much the same way until the Child Labor laws were passed.
โ In poor countries, globalization creates jobs and tends to raise wages, yet may also
result in job losses as automation is implemented for labor-intensive jobs, e.g. in India
the hand-woven textiles industry will soon replace the millions of people employed
through the increased use of automation.
โ Critics insist that such workers be given a โdecent wageโ, yet legislation to increase
minimum wage levels can also reduce the number of available jobs.
โ Countries that attract investment due to low-cost labor eventually lose their
attractiveness as wages rise.
Positive Long-Term Consequences
โ For most developing countries, globalization supports improved working conditions,
higher wage growth, a growing economy and improved standards of living.
โ Exampleโ Vietnam-The growth of the footwear industry in Vietnam translated into a fivefold increase in wages.
โ Countries that liberalize international trade and investment enjoy faster per-capita
economic growth.
โ Developing economies that seek to integrate with the rest of the world tend to have
faster per-capita GDP growth
๏ต MyLab Management: Watch It! 3
Save the Children Social Networking
Apply what you have learned in this chapter.
Go to MyLab Management, www.pearson.com/mylab/management, click your course,
and choose multimedia library.
โ Exhibit 2.9 depicts the Growth of World GDP, 2009-2017.
โ Most nations experienced positive growth.
โ China and India have been the fastest growing economies, registering annual GDP
growth rates of 9.0% and 7.0%, respectively. (However, Chinaโs growth slowed to about
6.5% in 2017-2019.
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โ Most African countries continue to suffer low or negative GDP growth and alarming
poverty, which worsened during the global recession.
โ Exhibit 2.10 illustrates how global poverty is declining over time. Specifically, it shows
the rise of daily income levels through 2017, by region.
โ Depicted are the number of people living on $2.00 (poverty) or $1.25 (extreme
poverty) per day, as defined by the World Bank.
โ Overall, the number of people living in poverty in East and South Asia, and
Sub-Saharan Africa has declined consistently for the past few decades,
โ Much of the improvements are due to international trade and investment
activities
โ Only Sub-Saharan Africa has shown little improvement in income status during
this time.
โ The unintended consequences of globalization place greater responsibility on
governments to ensure that the fruits of economic progress are shared fairly, and all
citizens have access to improved welfare, living standards, and higher-value-adding,
higher-paying jobs.
โ Developing countries can engage in a number of proactive measures in order to
reduce poverty:
๏ท Improve conditions for investment and saving;
๏ท Liberalize markets and promote trade and investment;
๏ท Build strong institutions and ensure good governance; and
๏ท Invest in education and training to promote productivity upward mobility.
โ In turn advanced economies can play a role in reducing global poverty by:
๏ท Making their markets more accessible to low-income countries;
๏ท Providing debt relief to heavily indebted nations; and
๏ท Facilitating the flow of technology, private capital, and direct investment into poor
countries.
Effect on Sustainability and the Natural Environment
โ Globalization harms the environment by promoting manufacturing and economic
activity that result in pollution, habitat destruction, and deterioration of the ozone
layer.
โ Example- China is attracting much inward FDI and stimulating the growth of
numerous industries, which results in new factories, infrastructure, and modern housing
can spoil previously pristine environments; also, growing industrial demand for
electricity led to construction of the Three Gorges Dam, which flooded agricultural
lands, displaced one-million inhabitants and permanently altered the natural landscape
in Eastern China.
โ
Over time, governments pass legislation that promote improved environmental
conditions; as globalization stimulates rising living standards; increasingly people focus
on improving their environments
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โ Example- Japan endured polluted rivers and smoggy cities in the early decades of its
economic development following World War II. As Japanโs economy grew, the
Japanese passed tough environmental standards to restore their natural environments.
โ Evolving company values have led to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) or
Corporate Citizenship.
โ Examples- of firms that embrace practices that protect the environment, often at the
expense of profits
โ Ford and GM (U.S. automakers) in Mexico
โ Benetton in Italy (clothing)
โ Alcan in Canada (aluminum)
โ Kirin in Japan (beverages)
โ The Conservation Coffee Alliance, a consortium of companies, has committed
approximately $2 million to environmentally friendly coffee cultivation in Central
America, Peru, and Colombia.
Effect on National Culture
โ Globalization pressures national culture.
โ Market liberalization opens the door to foreign firms, global brands, unfamiliar
products, and different values.
โ In the business sector, firms employ global technologies and production methods,
leading to more universal operating methods and outputs.
โ Propelled by advertising and Hollywood, consumers increasingly wear similar clothing
and drive similar cars, watch the same movies, listen to the same recording stars,
increasingly modeled to Western countries, especially the U.S.
โ Thus, peopleโs norms, values, and behaviors tend to homogenize over time.
Transnational advertising lead to the emergence of societal values
โ Critics call these trends the โMcDonalds-izationโ or the โCoca-Colonizationโ of the
world, referring to a type of cultural colonization.
โ Governments try to block โcultural imperialismโ and prevent the erosion of local
traditions.
โ Hollywood, McDonaldโs, and Disneyland are seen as Trojan horses that permanently
alter food preferences, lifestyles, and other aspects of traditional life- inevitable with
globalization.
โ Homogenization is accelerated by technology- through exposure, appetites grow for
Western products and services, which signal higher living standards.
โ Example- Despite low per-capita income, many Chinese buy consumer electronics
such as cell phones and TV sets.
โ Global media have a pervasive effect on the local culture, gradually shifting it toward a
universal norm.
โ Flow of cultural influence goes both ways.
โ Examplesโ India- Cafe Spice (http://cafespice.com) is an Indian food company whose
founder hails from Mumbai, which is transforming American tastes by selling curry
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dishes and other Indian favorites in cafeterias and supermarkets. Cafe Spice is making
Indian cuisine mainstream in the U.S.
โ China- As the influence of the Chinese economy grows over time, Western
countries will likely adopt cultural norms from China as well. Chinese restaurants and
some Chinese traditions are already a way of life in much of the world outside China.
โ Japan- Advanced Fresh Concepts is a Japanese food company that is
transforming American fast food by selling sushi and other Japanese favorites in
supermarkets throughout the U.S.
โ Cultural imperialism is offset by the countertrend of local nationalism.
โ Heterogeneity remains strong in religious differences, indigenous languages and
national identity.
โ Protecting National Identity
โ Examples- Belgium, Canada, and France, laws were passed to protect
national language and culture.
Globalization and Africa
โ Africa is home to the poorest countries. The majority of its one billion people live on
less than $2 a day. It is the area least integrated into the world economy and accounts
for less than 3% of world trade
โ Although it has abundant natural resources, Africa remains underdeveloped due to
inadequate commercial infrastructure, lack of access to foreign capital, high illiteracy,
government corruption, wars, and the spread of AIDS.
โ After decades of stagnation, several sub-Saharan African countries have experienced
rapid economic growth thanks to increasing international trade in commodities.
โ Examples- Africa is a major supplier of petroleum to Europe and the U.S.;
Angola is among the top oil suppliers to China.
โ Ripple effect – certain sectors in Africa have boomed along with the economic
development – foreign banks, retailers, and MNEs have set up operations in the
continent.
โ In formerly war-torn Rwanda, countless business opportunities have emerged in
mining, tourism, telecommunications, and real estate.
โ China and India are beating out U.S. firms and quickly increasing their business in
Africa.
โ International trade and investment are helping to address many of Africaโs most
pressing development needs.
โ Samsung- set a $10 billion sales goal in Africa; committed to training 10,000 African
engineers and technicians to develop the capabilities needed for success.
โ Many years before Africa achieves a critical mass of infrastructure and business
culture sufficient to raise within-continent average incomes.
IV. CLOSING CASE
A DEBATE ON THE GOOD AND HARM OF GLOBALIZATION
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โ Summary [Identifying key issues]
โ The interchange among the following three participants underscores the various pro
and con issues embedded in the issues of globalization, and the diverse perspectives of
globalization held by different interest groups.
Players:
โ Activist- an anti-international business advocate
โ Business Executive – with extensive international dealings
โ Trade Official – represents the federal government
ACTIVIST
โ Globalization:
โ Ignores human rights and employs substandard working conditions- low wages
and exploited workers.
โ Results in domestic job losses.
โ Detrimentally affects the natural environment – with increased international
trade, the more irreparable the harm, e.g. pollution, ecological imbalances and
deterioration of the ozone. (Countries with weak environmental standards, will have
factories with minimal environmental standards)
โ Interferes with the sovereignty of national governments.
โ Impedes with government policies, e.g. when a firm like General Motors is a
nationโs biggest company, as it is in Canada; it is more difficult for governments to
manage policies regarding taxes, monetary policy, social issues, and exchange rates.
โ Imposes Western cultural standards on the rest of the world, e.g. McDonaldโs is
everywhere. They see the U.S. as a dominating power that uses globalization to its own
advantage, harming the economic, cultural, and environmental interests of the rest of
the world.
โ Limits the benefits of technologies to those who can afford to access it.
โ Widens the gap between rich and poor, i.e. weakening poor countries.
โ Hampers infant industries in developing economies.
โ Poverty resulting from contagion caused by the recent global financial and
economic crisis
โ Governments have not done enough to regulate the excesses of capitalism. This was
evident in the global financial and economic crises, from which the world is still
recovering.
BUSINESS EXECUTIVE
โ Participants in the global economy:
โ Provide better-paying jobs, have more profits, pay higher taxes, and stimulate
purchases from local suppliers.
โ Create new jobs, enhance local living standards, and challenge firms to stay
competitive in a challenging global marketplace.
โ Exporters pay higher wages and provide better benefits than non-exporting
firms.
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โ Need access to foreign markets in order to recoup their return on investment,
especially firms heavily invested in R&D, e.g. those in the pharmaceutical industry.
โ Increase living standards worldwide through international trade
โ Argue that a good economy and a clean environment are not mutually
exclusive. The more affluent people are, the more they will care about their environment
and pass laws to protect it.
โ Firms increasingly recognize the importance of being good global citizensMotorola has profited from its business in China, but it has also contributed to the
development of educational systems in that country.
โ Japanese MNEs invest in the communities where they do business.
โ Bill Gates is going to do more than any government to get people computers
and get them hooked up on the Internet. He has created the largest fund to combat
diseases of the poor, e.g. Malaria. He and Warren Buffett are tackling many of these
diseases such as AIDS.
โ GlaxoSmithKline is working with the World Health Organization to find a cure
for Elephantiasis.
โ In the long run, uninterrupted international commerce is good for everyone
TRADE OFFICIAL
โ Free trade is strongly valued by the current administration, as are freedom and
democracy:
โ The administration strongly supported NAFTA, and this already had a positive
impact on the U.S. economy, increasing exports to Mexico, creating jobs for Americans,
and leading to improved investment opportunities.
โ Canada recently completed a free-trade agreement with Chile.
โ Economic ties lead to cultural ties and more peaceful relations.
โ When negotiating trade agreements, advocates should commensurately
consider environmental factors.
โ Proponents of worldwide freedom and democracy must also endorse free
trade.
โ Globalization is complex and the pros and cons are intertwined.
โ Since the 1980s, globalization has grown, and global poverty has declined.
โ It is true that income disparities have increased over the last 50 years while
international trade has integrated the world economy.
โ The world has experienced an overall rising tide in terms of standard of living.
โ It is better to live in a world in which 20% of the people are affluent and 80%
are poor, than a world in which nearly 100% of the people are poor, as was the case
throughout most of human history.
โ Countries benefit from trade, but governments are responsible for protecting
citizens from the negative or unintended consequences that may result from trade.
โ SUGGESTED SOLUTIONS TO CASE QUESTIONS
2-4. Do you think globalization and MNE activity are creating problems for the
world? What kinds of problems can you identify? What are the unintended
consequences of international business?
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(LO 2.1; LO 2.6; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
As the Activist Argues that Globalization is Cultural Imperialism with severe
consequences on nations, cultures, people and the environment.
โ Globalization:
โ Ignores human rights and employs substandard working conditions- low wages
and exploited workers.
โ Results in domestic job losses.
โ Detrimentally affects the natural environment, with increased international trade, the
more irreparable the harm, e.g. pollution, global warming, ecological imbalances, and
habitat destruction.
โ Interferes with the sovereignty of national governments.
โ Impedes with government policies, e.g. when a firm like General Motors is a
nationโs biggest company, as it is in Canada; it is more difficult for governments to
manage policies regarding taxes, monetary policy, social issues, and exchange rates.
โ Imposes Western cultural standards on the rest of the world, e.g. McDonaldโs is
everywhere. This effect is especially profound in the Middle East, where Islamic activists
oppose MNEs due to the imposition of alien values in secular terms. They see the U.S.
as a dominating power that uses globalization to its own advantage, harming the
economic, cultural, and environmental interests of the rest of the world.
โ Limits the benefits of technologies to those who can afford to access it.
โ Widens the gap between rich and poor, i.e. weakening poor countries.
โ Hampers infant industries in developing economies.
2-5. Summarize the arguments in favor of globalization made by the business
executive. What is the role of technology in supporting company performance in
a globalizing business environment?
(LO 2.3; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
Economic “globalization” refers to the increasing integration of economies around the
world. It also refers to the movement of goods and services (international trade), people
(labor), capital and knowledge (technology) across international borders.
Pro- globalization arguments:
โ Participants in the global economy:
โ Provide better-paying jobs, have more profits, pay higher taxes, and stimulate
purchases from local suppliers.
โ Create new jobs, enhance local living standards, and challenge firms to stay
competitive in a challenging global marketplace.
โ Pay higher wages and provide better benefits than non-exporting firms.
โ Need access to foreign markets in order to recoup their return on investment,
especially firms heavily invested in R&D, e.g. those in the pharmaceutical industry.
โ Increase living standards worldwide through international trade.
โ Argue that a good economy and a clean environment are not mutually
exclusive. The more affluent people are, the more they will care about their environment
and pass laws to protect it.
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โ Recognize the importance of being good global citizens- Motorola has profited
from its business in China, but it has also contributed to the development of educational
systems in that country. Bill Gates is going to do more than any government to get
people computers and get them hooked up on the Internet. He has created the largest
fund to combat malaria. He and Warren Buffett are tackling Aids. SmithKline
Beecham is working with the World Health Organization to find a cure for Elephantiasis.
โ Technology enables globalization: Technological advances in communications,
information, manufacturing, and transportation have served as a remarkable facilitator
of cross-border trade and investment.
โ The twin trends of globalization and technology transform national economies and
promote outsourcing/offshoring.
โ Information technology allows for more efficient adaptation to international markets as
well as producing smaller lot sizes to target niche markets.
โ Among the industries most dependent on technological innovation are biotechnology,
information technology, new materials, pharmaceuticals, robotics, medical equipment
and devices, lasers and fiber optics, and various electronics-based industries.
โ IT alters industry structure, changes the rules of competition, and creates new ways to
outperform rivals, thus forming the basis for competitive advantage.
โ Smaller firms can leverage IT to design and produce customized products that can be
targeted to narrow, cross-national niches.
โ The impact of IT on our daily lives has been profound- cell phones, Google, Yahoo,
etc.
โ IT supports strategic decisions such as the selection of qualified foreign business
partners based on sound information and intelligence.
2-6. What are the roles of state and federal governments in dealing with
globalization? What is governmentโs role in protecting citizens from the potential
negative effects of foreign MNEs conducting business in your country? What
kinds of government actions would you recommend?
(LO 2.1; LO 2.2; AACSB: Reflective thinking)
โ To minimize globalizationโs harm and reap its benefits, governments should strive for
an open and liberalized economic regime:
โ Freedom to enter and compete in markets
โ Protection of persons and intellectual property
โ Rule of law
โ Voluntary exchange imposed by markets rather than through the
political process
โ Regulation of credit, labor and business
โ Transparency of the economic actors including businesses and
regulatory agencies is fundamentally critical, e.g. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002
โ Advanced economies can play a role in reducing poverty by:
๏ท Making their markets more accessible to low-income countries;
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๏ท Facilitating the flows of direct investment, other private capital, and technology into
low income countries; and
๏ท Providing debt relief to heavily indebted poor countries.
โ The unintended consequences of globalization place greater responsibility on
governments to ensure that the fruits of economic progress are shared equally, and all
citizens have access to improved welfare, living standards, and higher-value-adding,
higher-paying jobs.
2-7. What is the role of education in: (i) addressing the problems raised in the
roundtable; (ii) creating societies in which people can deal effectively with public
policy issues; and (iii) creating citizens who can compete effectively in the global
marketplace?
(LO 2.5; LO 2.6; AACSB: Reflective thinking)
โ Education has a responsibility to cultivate individuals who will become productive
members of societies where diverse views such as those expressed by the Activist, the
Business Executive and the Trade Official represented in this case are understood and
respected.
โ The role of education is to be objective, to present all relevant perspectives and to
endow individuals with a skill set that will enable them to analyze, synthesize and draw
conclusions based on facts. This means that a diverse and broad educational
foundation is paramount for strong, global leaders. Part of this education is an
understanding of global firm imperatives:
1. Configure the value chain globally.
2. Collaborate with foreign partners.
3. Coordinate operations on a global scale.
4. Target global markets.
5. Standardize products, services, and brands
6. Build global capabilities and a global organization.
2-8. Do you believe globalization is receding or advancing? Defend your answer.
Globalization has several dimensions: international trade and global commerce, capital
and investment flows, migration and movement of people, and the dissemination of
knowledge. Environmental challenges such as global warming, cross-border pollution of
air and water, are associated with globalization. International trade and global
commerce expanded substantially and rapidly over the past several decades. In the
last few years, however, it can be shown that trade and global commerce have been
receding. However, capital and investment flows remain strong. The migration of people
continues.
V. END OF CHAPTER QUESTIONS
โ TEST YOUR COMPREHENSION
2-9. Define globalization. What are the underlying dimensions of this megatrend?
(LO 2.1; LO 2.2; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
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โ Globalization is a broad term referring to the interconnectedness of national
economies and the growing interdependence of buyers, producers, suppliers, and
governments in different countries.
โ Globalization allows firms to view the world as one large marketplace for goods,
services, capital, labor, and knowledge.
โ Two mega trends are underscored that have altered the international business
landscape: the globalization of markets or economies and technological advances.
2-10. Is globalization a recent phenomenon? Describe the phases of globalization.
(LO 2.1; LO 2.2; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
โ Globalization is not a recent phenomenon. The origins date to the Roman Empire and
earlier.
โ The word โtradeโ comes from the Anglo-Saxon term trada, which means to walk in the
footsteps of others.
โ Ancient trade routes were the foundation for a high level of cross-cultural exchange of
ideas that lead to the development of religion, science, economic activity, and
government.
โ The phrase โall roads lead to Romeโ is not so much a metaphorical reference to
Romeโs dominance of the world 2,000 years ago, but to the fact that Romeโs territorial
colonies were constructed as commercial resource centers to serve the needs of the
Roman empire and increase its wealth.
โ In an empire that stretched from England to Israel and from Germany to Africa, the
Romans created more than 300,000 kilometers of roads. Roman roads were the lifeblood of the state that allowed for trade to flourish.
Phases of Globalization
โ Exhibit 2.1 summarizes the Phases of Globalization. Since the 1800s, the evolution
of market globalization has witnessed four distinct phases, each triggered by global
events and technological discoveries:
The First Phase of Globalization
1830 โ 1880s
โ The first phase of globalization began about 1830 and peaked around 1880.
โ Cross-border commerce became widespread in this period due to the growth of
railroads, efficient ocean transport, and the rise of large manufacturing and trading
firms.
โ The inventions of the telegraph and telephone in the 1800s facilitated information
flows between and within nations and greatly aided early efforts to manage companiesโ
supply chains.
The Second Phase of Globalization
1900 -1930
โ The second phase of globalization began around 1900 and was correlated with the
rise of electricity and steel production.
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โ This phase reached its height just before the Great Depression, a worldwide
economic downturn that started in 1929.
โ At the turn-of-the-century, Western Europe was the most industrialized region and its
colonization of countries worldwide led to the establishment of some of the earliest
subsidiaries of multinational enterprises (MNEs).
โ European companies such as BASF, Nestlรฉ, Shell, Siemens and British Petroleum
had established foreign manufacturing plants by 1900.
โ The Italian manufacturer Fiat supplied vehicles to nations on both sides of the war.
The Third Phase of Globalization
1948 – 1970s
โ The third phase of globalization followed World War II.
โ At warโs end in 1945, substantial pent-up demand existed for consumer products, as
well as for resources to rebuild Europe and Japan.
โ Among the leading economies, the U.S. was least harmed by the war and became the
worldโs dominant economy.
โ Substantial government aid helped stimulate economic activity in Europe.
โ Pre-war years had been characterized by high tariffs and strict controls on currency
and capital movements.
โ Post-war, leading industrialized countries, including Australia, Britain and the U.S.
sought to reduce international trade barriers.
โ The result of this effort was the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) โ the
precursor to the World Trade Organization (WTO).
โ GATT, emerging from the Bretton Woods Conference of 23 nations in 1947, served
as a global negotiating forum for liberalizing trade barriers, and marked the beginning of
a series of annual meetings aimed at reducing international trade and investment
barriers.
โ Participating governments recognized that liberalized trade would stimulate
industrialization, modernization, and better living standards.
โ Eventually, many more nations joined the GATT, and their efforts led to the formation
of the WTO.
โ WTO- A multilateral governing body empowered to regulate international trade and
investment.
โ Some 149 nations are now members of the WTO.
โ Additional global cooperation led to the formation of key international organizations
such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the United Nations.
โ Early multinationals from this third phase of globalization originated from the U.S.,
Western Europe, and Japan.
โ Firms like Unilever, Philips, Royal Dutch-Shell, British Petroleum, and Bayer
organized their businesses by establishing autonomous subsidiaries in each of the
foreign countries where they did business.
Numerous companies developed strong brand names, including Nestlรฉ, Kraft, John
Deere, Kellogg, Lockheed, Caterpillar, Coca-Cola, Chrysler, Pepsi-Cola, Singer, and
Leviโs.
โ U.S. multinationals such as IBM, Boeing, Texas Instruments, Xerox, and McDonnell
Douglas spread out across the globe, leveraging technological competitive advantages.
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โ Gradually, MNEs began seeking cost advantages by locating factories in developing
countries with low labor costs.
โ 1960s- Growing MNE activities and early efforts at trade liberalization resulted in
substantial increases in international trade and investment.
โ 1960s/1970s- Recovered from World War II, MNEs in Europe and Japan began to
challenge the global dominance of U.S. multinationals.
โ With the easing of trade barriers and currency controls, capital began to flow freely
across national borders, leading to integration of global financial markets.
The Fourth Phase of Globalization 1980s โ About 2006
โ The fourth and current phase of globalization began in the early 1980s.
โ This period witnessed enormous growth in cross-border trade and investment activity.
The following innovations caused this phase:
โCommercialization of the personal computer
โArrival of the Internet and Web browsers
โAdvances in communication and manufacturing technologies
โCollapse of the Soviet Union and ensuing market liberalization in central
and Eastern Europe
โSubstantial industrialization and modernization efforts of East Asian
economies including China
โ Growing global prosperity began to reach emerging markets such as Brazil, India
and Mexico.
โ 1980s – Huge increases in FDI, especially in capital- and technology- intensive
sectors
โ Internationalization made feasible for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) geographically distant yet electronically interconnected- due to technological advances
in information, communications, and transportation.
โ These technologies also facilitated the globalization of the service sector in areas
such as banking, entertainment, tourism, insurance, and retailing.
โ Growing integration inspired mergers/acquisitions such as GM acquiring Saab in
Sweden, Ford taking over Mazda in Japan, and Daimler Benz acquiring Chrysler in the
U.S.
โ Globalization and technological advances resulted in the โdeath of distanceโ. That is,
a shrinking world in terms of geographic and cultural distances that long separated
nations.
The Fifth and Current Phase of Globalization
2006 to the present
โ The fifth and current phase of globalization began in about 2006 and continues.
โ Rise of digital technologies, and other new technologies, which are boosting
manufacturing productivity and the efficiency of international trade in services.
โ Technological breakthroughs in fields such as quantum computing, the Internet of
โ Things, artificial intelligence, robotics, autonomous vehicles, 3D printing,
nanotechnology, and biotechnology are blurring the lines between the physical, digital,
and biological spheres.
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โ Digital and other new technologies are boosting the efficiency of international trade,
especially in services. Much retailing is done via Amazon and Alibaba, which sell their
offerings around the world via online platforms.
โ The value of world exports of services rose from about $3 trillion in 2007 to more than
$5 trillion in 2017.
โ Thanks to technological advances, national borders and traditional country-based
business models are losing much of their relevance.
โ BUT, growth in international trade of goods has slowed during this phase.
โ Just as new technologies support international services trade, they also increase the
productivity of local manufacturing. This tendency reduces firmsโ cost of domestic
operations and increases the attractiveness of homegrown, local manufacturing. FDI as
a share of total investment has declined.
โ Emerging market countries increasingly focus on developing local markets for locally
manufactured products.
2-11. Summarize the six dimensions of globalization. Which of these do you think
is the most visible manifestation of globalization?
(LO 2.4; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
There is no one right answer for the second part of this question, as long as you justify
your selection. Here are the six dimensions:
A. Integration and interdependence of national economies.
โ The multicounty aggregate activities of reconfiguring and integrating value-chain
activities gives rise to economic integration
โ Governments contribute to this integration by:
(1) Gradually lowering trade and investment barriers;
(2) Harmonizing their monetary and fiscal policies within regional economic
integration blocs (also known as trade blocs), e.g. EU
(3) Establishing supranational institutions that transcend national borders and
involve cooperation among several countries that seek further reductions in trade and
investment barriers, e.g. the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, World Trade
Organization, etc.
B. Rise of regional economic integration blocs.
โ Since the 1950s, the emergence of regional economic integration blocs
โ Trade bloc: consist of groups of countries within which trade and investment flows
are facilitated through reduced trade and investment barriers.
โ Examples- the North American Free Trade Agreement area (NAFTA), the Asia
Pacific Economic Cooperation zone (APEC), and Mercosur in Latin America.
โ In more advanced stages, barriers are also removed to the cross-border flow of
capital and labor.
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โ Economic and Monetary Union: A single market with a common currency. This is
characteristic of more advanced stages of economic integration, where barriers to the
cross-border flow of factors of production (mostly labor and capital) are removed.
โ Example- Currently, the only example of an economic and monetary union is the
European Union with its common currency of the euro.
โ In addition to adopting free trade among its members, it is harmonizing fiscal and
monetary policies and adopting common business regulations
C. Growth of global investment and financial flows.
โ Foreign direct investment (FDI) has grown dramatically due to global sourcing.
โ Firms and governments undertake global currency trading to finance cross-border
trade and investment.
โ The globalization of capital, i.e. the free movement of capital (denominated in dollars,
euros, yen, and other world currencies) around the world is extending economic
activities across the globe and fostering interconnectedness among world economies.
โ Commercial and investment banking has become a global industry.
โ The bond market has gained worldwide scope, with foreign bonds representing a
major source of debt financing for governments and firms.
โ Negative effect of integration, Examplesโ 2008- When the U.S. experienced a banking crisis, the contagion quickly
spread to Europe, Japan, and emerging markets, triggering a global recession.
โ 1997- When Thailand and Malaysia experienced a monetary crisis, it quickly
spread to South Korea, Indonesia, the Philippines and elsewhere, causing prolonged
recession in most East Asian economies.
D. Convergence of consumer lifestyles and preferences.
โ Lifestyles and preferences are converging, i.e. increasingly standardized, resulting in
global market segments.
โ Transnational media contribute to the convergence of buyer preferences, in part by
emphasizing/commercializing a particular lifestyle observed in the U.S., Europe, or
elsewhere.
โ Double-edged sword- While converging tastes facilitate the marketing of
standardized products/services to global consumers, they also signal the loss of
traditional lifestyles, values in individual countries and national sovereignty.
E. Globalization of production.
โ Intense global competition has made economies of scale a critical key success factor.
Global players are forced to evaluate global sourcing to take advantage of national
differences in the cost and quality of factor inputs.
โ This explains why offshoring to low labor-cost locations such as China, Mexico, and
Eastern Europe is so popular.
F. Globalization of services
โ The services sector is also undergoing global sourcing.
โ Firms in banking, hospitality, retailing, and other service industries are rapidly
expanding abroad.
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โ Examplesโ The real estate giant RE/MAX has established more than 5,000 offices in over
50 countries.
โ The French firm Accor operates hundreds of hotels worldwide.
โ Firms increasingly outsource business processes and other services-based value
chain activities to vendors located abroad.
โ In a relatively new trend, people are increasingly going abroad to take advantage of
low-cost services.
โ Exampleโ Medical tourism โ consumers travel abroad for medical procedures such as
hysterectomies, cataract, knee and cosmetic surgeries.
โ The distribution of foreign direct investment has changed markedly, from an emphasis
on manufacturing to services.
2-12. Describe the five driving forces of globalization.
(LO 2.2; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
A. Worldwide reduction of barriers to trade and investment.
โ National governments have sought to reduce trade and investment barriers, which
has accelerated global economic integration.
โ The World Trade Organization (WTO) has facilitated this.
โ The WTO is a multilateral governing body empowered to regulate international trade
and investment and has been engaged in an ongoing liberalization of member statesโ
economies since the late 1940s.
โ Joining the WTO in 2001, even China has committed to make its market more
accessible to foreign companies.
โ Market opening is closely associated with the emergence of regional economic
integration blocs, a key dimension of market globalization.
B. Market liberalization and adoption of free markets.
โ The Berlin Wall, built in 1961, separated the communist East Berlin from the
democratic West Berlin.
โ The tearing down of the Berlin Wall in 1989, the collapse of the Soviet Unionโs
economy that same year, and Chinaโs free-market reforms signaled the end of the 50year Cold War between communist regimes and democracy.
โ It was the transition from command economies to market-driven economies that
facilitated their membership into the global economy.
โ The East Asian economies, stretching from South Korea to Malaysia and Indonesia,
had already embarked upon ambitious market-based reforms in the 1980s.
โ India joined this market liberalization trend in 1991.
โ These events opened roughly one-third of the world to freer international trade and
investment.
โ China, India, and Eastern Europe have become some of the most cost-effective
locations for producing goods and services.
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โ With privatization of previously state-owned industries, these countries have
encouraged economic efficiency and attracted foreign capital into their national
economies.
C. Industrialization, economic development, and modernization
โ Industrialization transitions emerging markets- Asia, Latin America, and Eastern
Europe- from being low value-adding commodity producers, dependent on low-cost
labor, to sophisticated competitive producers and exporters of premium products
(higher-value products) such as electronics, computers, and aircraft.
โ Examplesโ Brazil is now a leading producer of private aircraft
โ Czech Republic excels in the manufacture of automobiles
โ India has become a leading supplier of computer software
โ Gross National Income (GNI) โ one of the most important measures of economic
development, i.e. standards of living & discretionary income
โ Exhibit 2.4 maps Gross National Income for various countries in $US There is a
direct correlation between low-income countries and low levels of market globalization,
e.g. Africa, India, Nicaragua.
โ The adoption of modern technologies, improvement of living standards, and adoption
of modern legal and banking practices are increasing the attractiveness of emerging
markets as investment targets and facilitating the spread of ideas, products, and
services across the globe.
D. Integration of world financial markets.
โ Integration of world financial markets enables internationally active firms to raise
capital, borrow funds, and engage in foreign currency transactions.
โ Cross-border transactions are made easier partly as a result of the ease with which
funds can be transferred between buyers and sellers through a network of international
commercial banks.
โ The globalization of finance enables firms to pay suppliers and collect payments from
customers worldwide.
E. Advances in technology.
โ Technological advances in communications, information, manufacturing, and
transportation have served as a remarkable facilitator of cross-border trade and
investment.
2-13. What is the role of the World Trade Organization?
(LO 2.1; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
โ The World Trade Organization (WTO) is a multilateral governing body empowered to
regulate international trade and investment.
โ The 149 members states in the WTO have been engaged in an ongoing liberalization
of their economies since the late 1940s.
โ Joining the WTO in 2001, even China has committed to make its market more
accessible to foreign companies.
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2-14. In what areas have technological advances had their greatest effect on
facilitating world trade and investment?
(LO 2.3; AACSB: Application of knowledge)
Technology has revolutionized business:
โ Transformed national economies and promoted outsourcing/offshoring.
โ Information technology allows for more efficient adaptation to international markets as
well as producing smaller lot sizes to target niche markets.
โ Emerging markets (technological leapfrogging) and consumers (reduced prices and
greater selection) are the beneficiaries.
โ Technological advances have spurred the development of new products and services
that appeal to a global audience, e.g. Walkman, PlayStation 3, and PDAs.
โ China and India are the new beachheads of technological advances.
โ Spurred innovation- Societies and organizations innovate in various ways, including
new product designs, new production processes, new approaches to marketing, and
new ways of organizing or training.
โ Among the industries most dependent on technological innovation are biotechnology,
information technology, new materials, pharmaceuticals, robotics, medical equipment
and devices, lasers and fiber optics, and various electronics-based industries.
โ The cost of computer processing fell by 30% per year during the past two decades
and continues to fall.
โ The remarkable performance of the U.S. economy in the 1990s was due in large part
to aggressive integration of IT into firmsโ value-chain activities, which accounted for 45%
of total business investments at the time.
โ IT alters industry structure, changes the rules of competition, and creates new ways to
outperform rivals, thus forming the basis for competitive advantage.
โ Smaller firms can leverage IT to design and produce customized products that can be
targeted to narrow, cross-national niches.
โ The impact of IT on our daily lives has been profound- cell phones, Google, Yahoo,
etc.
2-15. What are the pros and cons of globalization?
(LO 2.5; LO 2.6; AACSB: Reflective thinking)
โ Positive consequences of market globalization: Cross-border trade and investment
opened the world to innovations and progress while increasing performance standards,
currently known as global benchmarking or world class.
โ Negative consequences of market globalization: The transition to an increasingly
single, global marketplace poses challenges to individuals, organizations and
governments.
โ Poverty is especially notable in Africa, Brazil, China and India where lower-income
countries have not been able to integrate with the global economy as rapidly as others.
โ Globalization has created countless new jobs and opportunities around the world, but
it has also cost many people their jobs.
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โ Examples- Ford, General Motors, and Volkswagen all have transferred thousands of
jobs from their factories in Germany to countries in Eastern Europe.
โ In recognition of this, the German government relaxed Germanyโs labor laws to
conform to global realities, but not before the lives of tens of thousands of German
citizens were disrupted.
โ GM and Ford have also laid off thousands of workers in the U.S., partly the result of
competitive pressures posed by Japanese, Korean, and European carmakers.
โ These trends reflect shifting realities in the global economy.
2-16. What effect does globalization have on national sovereignty, employment,
the poor, the natural environment, and national culture?
(LO 2.6; AACSB: Reflective thinking)
โ Globalization can threaten national sovereignty in various ways. MNE activities can
interfere with a governmentโs ability to control its own economy, social structure, and
political system. Some corporations are bigger than the economies of small nations,
such as Walmart. Large MNEs can apply much pressure on governments through
lobbying or campaign contributions and can frequently influence the legislative process.
โ Globalization has created a crowded and intensely competitive global marketplace,
which requires many companies to restructure and innovate in ways that may result in
job loss. Globalization has created countless new jobs and opportunities worldwide, but
it also has cost many people their jobs. Many firms have engaged in โoffshoringโ, the
relocation of manufacturing and other value-chain activities to cost-effective locations
abroad. This results in job loss at home. Simultaneously, MNEs create millions of jobs
abroad, which help raise living standards.
โ Globalization has affected the poor in areas related to income distribution and worker
exploitation by MNEs. As nationsโ economies develop and per-capita incomes rise,
globalization can worsen income inequality because many good-paying jobs in the
manufacturing sector are lost as companies shift production to low-wage countries. In
the advanced economies, growing international trade coincided with falling wages in
many industries as firms transferred manufacturing jobs to lower-cost countries, such as
China and Mexico. In addition, automation and technology, to a large extent, have
resulted in lower incomes for many people.
โ Globalization promotes manufacturing and economic activity that result in increased
pollution, habitat destruction, and deterioration of the ozone layer. The construction of
factories, infrastructure, and modern housing can spoil previously pristine environments.
However, as globalization stimulates rising living standards, concerned citizens focus on
improving their environment. Over time, governments pass legislation that promotes
improved environmental conditions.
โ Globalization exerts strong pressures on national culture because market
liberalization exposes local consumers to global brands, unfamiliar products, and
different values. People worldwide are exposed to movies, television, the Internet, and
other information sources that promote lifestyles of people in the United States and
other advanced economies.
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2-17. What are the implications of globalization for company internationalization?
(LO 2.5; AACSB: Reflective thinking)
โ Globalization allows companies to outsource value-chain activities to the most
favorable locations worldwide. Firms source raw materials, parts, components, and
service inputs from suppliers around the globe. This is internationalization in terms of
the firmโs supply chain.
โ More broadly, globalization compels firms to organize their sourcing, manufacturing,
marketing, and other value-adding activities on a global scale to achieve cost
advantages and time efficiencies. Each value-adding activity in the firmโs value chain is
subject to internationalization; that is, it can be performed in locations outside the home
country.
โ Globalization has opened many new opportunities for firms to sell their products and
services around the world. The presence of such opportunities encourages firms to
internationalize and start selling abroad.
โ APPLY YOUR UNDERSTANDING
2-18. Imagine you are studying for your international business class at a local
coffee shop. The manager spies your textbook and remarks: โI donโt get all that
foreign business stuff. I donโt pay much attention to it. Iโm a local guy running a
small business. Thank goodness I donโt have to worry about any of that.โ The
managerโs comments make you think. The managerโs comments make you
realize there is much more to business than just local concerns. What is the likely
value chain of a coffee shop? For example, how did the varieties of coffee beans
get there? What is the likely effect of globalization on coffee shops? Do
technological advances play any role in the shopโs value chain? Does
globalization imply any negative consequences for the worldwide coffee
industry? Justify your answer.
(LO 2.4; AACSB: Analytical Thinking)
SKUBRATS is a vertically-integrated coffee shop, owning both the upstream and
downstream activities.
โ Upstream activities = Research and development, procurement, and manufacturing.
โ Downstream activities = Marketing, distribution, and sales and service.
SKUBRATS Value Chain: Globalization and Technological Effects
Stages in Value Chain
Research & Development
Descriptions
Research on coffee bean varieties: quality,
taste,
consistency,
availability,
cost,
partnership possibilities, and plantations
where pesticide regulations are strictly
enforced. Research on sourcing the value
chain from global locations that offer the most
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efficient and
production.
highest
quality
factors
of
Procurement (Sourcing)
Skubrats, our coffee shop, will seek low-cost
and high quality inputs along with favorable
relationships with foreign suppliers by shifting
the procurement and harvesting of coffee
beans to other countries. Thus, Skubrats
sources the purchase, growth and harvesting
of its coffee beans to Colombia, Brazil, Mexico
Indonesia, and any other countries with
comparative advantages in the coffee
industry.
Manufacturing
Skubrats set up coffee roasting/production
facilities abroad through direct investment. For
example, manufacturing facilities were set up
at costs that were a fraction of what they
would have been in the U.S. Also, labor is
more economically efficient in such Southand Central American countries.
Marketing
Skubrats serves domestic and foreign
customers in their own markets. Employing a
global strategy, Skubrats benefits from global
economies of scale- in both manufacturing
and marketing. Earning and employment of
the
Transfair
Social-Justice
label
to
underscore Skubratsโ strong commitment to
community health/education, fair prices, fair
wages, chemical avoidance, sustainable
development, local ecosystems and natural
resources conservation.
Distribution
Skubrats owns their distributors. In the foreign
markets, they have established partnerships
with independent distributors; in their domestic
market, they own their distribution center and
delivery trucks. The reason for this is control
over quality and cost.
Sales & Service
Each Skubrats Coffee Shop is companyowned to ensure consistency of product and
service. Commensurate with their global
strategy, pricing is consistent worldwide. A
premium price is demanded, in line with
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Skubrats top-quality coffee beans and
resulting coffee. For their target market of
conscientious coffee drinkers, their Transfair
Social-Justice label is key. Customer feedback
is always welcome either directly or indirectly
via feedback cards.
What is the likely effect of market globalization on coffee shops?
โ Globalization affects coffee shops in much the same way as other firms might be
impacted, i.e. sourcing of the value chain and a global strategy to capitalize upon global
efficiencies.
โ Globalization of markets compels companies to pursue cross-border business.
Do technological advances play any role in the shopโs value chain?
(a) In the 1970s, a high-yield coffee tree was developed that flourishes in full
sunlight but requires chemical protection from diseases. The issue is the ecological
degradation of normally rich habitats for a diversity of species, including beneficial
micro-organisms, in order to provide full sun, pesticides and fertilizers for the technified
coffee farms. Where typically 140 bird species thrived, only five or six species remain in
full-sun fields. Coffee industrialization has dramatically changed the balance of nature.
(b) The insecticide Miral 500 CS was recalled in the mid-1990s by Ciba-Geigy
following the death of a Colombian coffee plantation worker. Earlier in 1993 and 1994,
in Colombia, the insecticide endosulfan resulted in over 100 poisonings and four deaths.
Human health is threatened when pesticide regulations are nonexistent or not enforced.
(c) Awareness through technology, e.g. Consumers International joined the
producers of Black Gold, a feature-length documentary about the plight of Ethiopian
coffee. Without 24/7 media coverage, the world would not even know that there are
issues in the coffee industry to be aware of.
(d) The International Coffee Organization (ICO) The International Coffee Organization
(ICO), based in London, England [email protected] (a) 77 member countries, and is the
main intergovernmental organization for coffee, bringing together producing and
consuming countries- maintains a Positively Coffee website (Internet) to disseminate
the benefits of drinking coffee. Such promotions contribute to the fact that we remain a
caffeinated people: Almost 50% of Americans are coffee drinkers, consuming 20% of
the total world coffee.
Does globalization imply any negative consequences for the worldwide coffee
industry?
(a)
Ecological degradation due to technified coffee farms.
(b)
Human death/disease from insecticides
(c)
Green Labels for Conscientious Coffee Drinkers
(1) Organic Crop Improvement Association, Farm Verified Organic, Naturland, or
the Demeter Association
(2) Fair Trade or Social Justice coffee- Transfair Social-Justice label
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(a)These focus on community health and education, fair prices, fair wages,
chemical avoidance, commitment to sustainable development, respect for local
ecosystems and natural resources conservation.
(b) Grower members are guaranteed a premium price
(c) Newer labels- Eco-OK certifying sustainability (shade protection, wildlife
conservation & water pollution prevention) by the Rainforest Alliance and Conservation
International.
(d) Interestingly, Starbucks initiated this movement in 1995 under pressure from
the U.S. Guatemala Labor Education Project concerning the low wages and brutal
working conditions on their Guatemalan farms. While Starbucks inaugurated a labor
code stipulating improved quality for coffee growers, some consider Starbucks to be in
non-compliance with their own initiative.
2-19. Globalization provides numerous advantages to businesses and consumers
around the world. At the same time, some critics believe that globalization is
harming various aspects of life and commerce. In what ways is globalization
good for firms and consumers? In what ways is globalization harmful to firms and
consumers?
(LO 2.5; LO 2.6; AACSB: Analytical Thinking)
Globalization- PROS
โ Positive consequences of market globalization: Cross-border trade and investment
opened the world to innovations and progress while increasing performance standards,
currently known as global benchmarking or world class.
โ Globalization is the heightened ability of a firm to internationalize its value chain
(reconfigure key value-adding activities), leading to greater international integration and
cost efficiencies.
โ Advantages of offshoring:
(1) Achieve economies of scale by centralizing production fewer locations
around the world;
(2) Move production and sourcing to countries with low-cost labor; and
(3) Access specialist knowledge by contracting with outside suppliers in
particular industries.
โ Those facing intense competition, shrinking profit margins, and unfavorable industry
trends, may achieve corporate survival through offshoring.
โ Countries which liberalize international trade and investment enjoy faster per capita
economic growth.
โ Emerging markets (technological leapfrogging) and consumers (reduced prices and
greater selection) are the beneficiaries.
โ Knowledge work can be developed worldwide and will locate where maximum factor
advantages accrue to the firm.
โ Free trade and global sourcing benefit consumers worldwide to receive maximum
quality at minimum price.
โ Both producer and consumer nations can increase their wealth and quality of life
โ Provide better-paying jobs, have more profits, pay higher taxes, and stimulate local
economy.
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โ Create new jobs, enhance local living standards, and challenge firms to stay
competitive in a challenging global marketplace.
โ Pay higher wages and provide better benefits than domestic-only firms.
โ Since the 1980s, the proportion of world population living in poverty has declined, with
much of this improvement attributable to increases in world trade, entrepreneurship, and
globalization.
โ Need access to foreign markets in order to recoup their return on investment,
especially firms heavily invested in R&D, e.g. those in the pharmaceutical industry.
โ Increase living standards and decrease illiteracy rates worldwide
โ A good economy and a clean environment are not mutually exclusive. The more
affluent people are, the more they will care about their environment and pass laws to
protect it.
โ Underscores the importance of being good global citizens- Motorola has profited from
its business in China, but it has also contributed to the development of educational
systems in that country. Bill Gates is going to do more than any government to get
people computers and get them hooked up on the Internet. He has created the largest
fund to combat Malaria. He and Warren Buffett are tackling Aids. SmithKline
Beecham is working with the World Health Organization to find a cure for Elephantiasis.
โ Over time, governments pass legislation that promotes improved environmental
conditions.
โ Example- Japan endured polluted rivers and smoggy cities in the early decades of its
economic development following World War II. As Japanโs economy grew, the
Japanese passed tough environmental standards, aimed at restoring natural
environments.
Globalization- CONS
โ Negative consequences of market globalization: The transition to an increasingly
single, global marketplace poses challenges to individuals, organizations, and
governments.
โ Commensurate with the increase in the standard of living and influx of workers,
comes congestion, pollution, high rents, a raucous nightlife, and Western values.
โ Globalization has created countless new jobs and opportunities around the world, but
it has also cost many people their jobs.
โ Examples- Ford, General Motors, and Volkswagen all have transferred thousands of
jobs from their factories in Germany to countries in Eastern Europe.
โ In recognition of this, the German government relaxed Germanyโs labor laws to
conform to global realities, but not before the lives of tens of thousands of German
citizens were disrupted.
โ GM and Ford have also laid off thousands of workers in the U.S., partly the result of
competitive pressures posed by Japanese, Korean, and European carmakers.
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF GLOBALIZATION
Contagion: Rapid Spread of Monetary or Financial Crises
โ 2008- The world economy experienced a severe financial crisis and global recessionthe worst in decades.
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โ In international economics, contagion refers to the tendency for a financial or
monetary crisis in one country to spread rapidly to other countries, due to the ongoing
integration of national economies.
โ Catalyst- Although the crisis began in the U.S., national economies and banking
systems had been integrated through technology, so the contagion spread quickly
around the globe.
โ The financial crisis struck at the core issues of globalization and raised questions
about its merits.
โ Exhibit 2.9 illustrates how GDP growth in advanced, developing, and emerging
economies varies over time. It declined substantially in the period 2009-2011, due to the
global recession and the financial crisis.
โ Historical Learning Point- even following deep recessions, the global economy has
always returned to net GDP growth.
โ Consumer confidence dwindled, triggering substantial declines in spending on cars,
consumer electronics, home appliances, luxury goods, gasoline, bank loans, and new
homes.
โ Spending decreased, impacting global commerce. Trade slowed or flattened in
consumer durables, energy, financial services, new construction, and related industries.
โ 2009-10- Global growth declined sharply to levels not seen since World War II.
โ Canada and Mexico slipped into recession partly due to their heavy reliance on trade
and investment with the United States.
โ Hong Kong, Japan, Iceland, New Zealand, Singapore, Turkey, the U.S., and most
countries in the European Union all experienced significant recessions.
โ Of the largest world economies, only Chinaโs continued to grow at a fast rate, over
6% per year.
โ Advanced economies were significantly affected, emerging markets and developing
economies were more resilient than in previous global downturns, although growth in
these countries has slowed considerably.
โ Global Interconnectedness- Living standards have been severely affected and
millions of people worldwide have fallen into severe poverty. This occurred largely
because developing economies depend on exports to, and direct investments from, the
advanced economies that have all been hurt by the crisis.
Loss of National Sovereignty
โ Sovereignty is the ability of a nation to govern its own affairs.
โ One countryโs laws cannot be applied or enforced in another country.
โ Globalization can threaten national sovereignty.
โ MNE activities can interfere with the sovereign ability of governments to control their
own economies, social structures, and political systems.
โ Some corporations are bigger than the economies of many nations, e.g. Walmartโs
total revenue is larger than the GDP of most nations, including Israel, Greece, and
Poland.
โ Large market nationals can exert considerable influence on governments through
lobbying or campaign contributions, e.g. for the devaluation of the home currency which
would give them greater price competitiveness in export markets.
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โ Some argue that gradual integration of the global economy and increased global
competition combined with privatization of industries in various nations are making
companies less powerful, for example Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors once
completely dominated the U.S. auto market. Today many more firms compete in the
U.S., including Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, Kia, Nissan, and BMW.
Employment- Offshoring and the Flight of Jobs
โ Offshoring is the relocation of manufacturing and other value-chain activities to costeffective destinations abroad.
โ Examples- Ernst & Young has much of its support work done by accountants in the
Philippines. Massachusetts General Hospital has its CT scans and X-rays interpreted
by radiologists in India. Many IT support services for customers in Germany are based
in the Czech Republic and Romania.
โ Offshoring has resulted in job losses in many mature economies with relatively high
wages.
โ Countries with low cost inputs and more favorable business environments clearly
benefit from offshoring, e.g. China, India, Mexico, Brazil, and Poland.
Effect on the Poor
โ In poor countries, globalization creates jobs and tends to raise wages, yet may also
result in job losses as automation is implemented for labor-intensive jobs, e.g. in India
the hand-woven textiles industry will soon replace the millions of people employed with
an increasing use of machinery.
โ Multinational firms are often criticized for paying low wages, exploiting workers, and
employing child labor.
โ Child labor is particularly troubling because it denies children educational
opportunities that would contribute to their future development.
โ Example- Nike has been criticized for paying low wages to shoe factory workers in
Asia, some of whom work in sweatshop conditions.
โ Labor exploitation and sweatshop conditions are genuine concerns in many
developing economies.
โ Critics insist that such workers be given a โdecent wageโ, yet legislation to increase
minimum wage levels can also reduce the number of available jobs.
โ While the output per capita has substantially risen over the past several decades, the
distribution of income among countries has become more unequal than at the
beginning of the century.
โ Poverty is especially notable in Africa, and populous nations such as India, Brazil and
China.
โ The unintended consequences of globalization place greater responsibility on
governments to ensure that the fruits of economic progress are shared fairly, and all
citizens have access to improved welfare, living standards, and higher-value-adding,
higher-paying jobs.
Effect on the Natural Environment
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โ Some argue that globalization harms the environment by promoting increased
manufacturing and other business activities that result in pollution, habitat
destruction, and deterioration of the ozone.
โ Example- China is attracting much inward FDI and stimulating the growth of
numerous industries, which results in new factories whose activities spoil previously
pristine environments; also, growing industrial demand for electricity led to construction
of the Three Gorges Dam, which flooded agricultural lands, displaced one-million
inhabitants and permanently altered the natural landscape in Eastern China.
โ Globalization-induced industrialization produces considerable environmental harm;
however, this harm diminishes over time.
Effect on National Culture
โ Globalization opens the door to foreign companies, global brands, unfamiliar
products, and new values.
โ In the business sector, firms employ similar technologies and production methods
worldwide, leading to more uniform operating methods and outputs.
โ Critics call these trends the โMcDonalds-izationโ or the โCoca-Colonizationโ of the
world, referring to a type of cultural colonization.
โ Governments try to block โcultural imperialismโ and prevent the erosion of local
traditions.
โ In France, Canada, and Belgium, laws were passed to protect national language and
culture.
โ Global media have a pervasive effect on local culture, gradually shifting it toward a
universal norm.
โ Cultural imperialism is offset by the opposite trend of nationalism.
2-20. Ethical Dilemma:
Northern Energy, Inc. (Northern) is a large oil company with production and
marketing operations worldwide. You are a recently hired manager at Northernโs
subsidiary in Nigeria, which provides jobs to hundreds of Nigerians and supports
many local merchants and suppliers. Suppose Northernโs drilling and refining
practices have severely damaged the natural environment in Nigeria, polluting the
air, land, and water. As a result, Northern has faced violent protests and much
negative publicity in Nigeria. Develop suggestions on how Northern should
address these issues. Keep in mind that top management is reluctant to invest
significant new resources in Nigeria, given the firmโs weakening business
performance there.
(LO 2.3; LO 2.4; LO 2.5; LO 2.6; AACSB: Analytical Thinking)
โ The dilemma in this situation is that Northern’s business practices are harming the
natural environment in Nigeria. The air, land, and water have all been polluted. This has
resulted in violent protests against Northern by the Nigerians.
โ The facts are as follows: Top management is reluctant to send additional resources to
their Nigerian operations. Northern Energy is responsible for the pollution. The local
stakeholders are not happy with Northern Energy.
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โ There are two courses of action: First, is to pull out all operations in Nigeria and then
work with the local government to clean up the mess Northern created. This would
mean incurring the losses associated with closing down the factories and laying off the
workers. However, the air, land and water pollution would be mitigated as Northern
would cease its Nigerian operations.
โ The second option is to formulate and implement sustainability goals commensurate
with good corporate citizenship. Such a socially responsible restructuring of Northernโs
business practices would mitigate the pollution, cast Northern in a more favorable light,
and most likely raise the cost of doing business. A cost-benefit analysis might be a
prudent next step in the due diligence process.
โ The first option is the easier of the two. It pulls Northern out of the area and halts the
pollution. However, this decision does not really fall under any of the ethical
approaches. Northern would exit Nigeria, not attending to the already created pollution.
โ The second option is the best solution from the Nigerian perspective, but the most
challenging for Northern. Not only would Northern be completely changing its corporate
profile, to one representing corporate social responsibility, but the opportunity also
exists for turning a weak business situation into a strong one in terms of profitability. It is
not only utilitarian, as Northern would be helping themselves and the Nigerians, but it
would also benefit the common good of the community.
โ Instituting both economic and social goals would translate into improving both the
environment and Northernโs performance. Some would argue that Northern has taken
advantage of the Nigerians and encroached upon their rights to a clean environment.
The opportunity presents itself to turn this around. Northern should initiate the search for
newer, cleaner, and more socially responsible business practices with regard to the
Nigeria situation. Perhaps clean energy or alternative energy sources might be explored
by Northern. Partnerships with other firms who have already initiated the exploration for
cleaner energy might be a good strategy.
โ For example, ask students to look up Sasol Limited (http://www.sasol.com) and their
proprietary technology implemented in South Africa and other sub-Saharan nations.
โ GlobalEDGEโข INTERNET EXERCISES http://globaledge.msu.edu
2-21. The KOF Swiss Economic Institute prepares the annual KOF Index of
Globalization, which ranks the most globalized countries (enter โKOF Index of
Globalizationโ at globalEDGEโข or other search engine). The index uses three
different dimensions to measure globalization: economic globalization, political
globalization, and social globalization. Visit the index and explain what each
dimension represents, and why each is important for a nation to achieve a
substantial presence in the global economy.
(LO 2.3; LO 2.4; LO 2.5; LO 2.6; AACSB: Analytical Thinking)
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๏ท
๏ท
The KOF Index of Globalization uses three dimensions to measure globalization:
economic globalization, political globalization, and social globalization.
Each of the three dimensions is determined using sub-indices.
๏ท
Economic globalization is determined by the following sub-indices:
o Actual Flows
๏ง Foreign Direct Investment, stocks
๏ง Income Payments to Foreign Nationals
๏ง Portfolio Investment
๏ง Trade
o Restrictions
๏ง Mean Tariff Rate
๏ง Taxes on International Trade
๏ง Hidden Import Barriers
๏ง Capital Account Restrictions
๏ท
Political globalization is determined by the following sub-indices:
o Membership in International Organizations
o International Treaties
o Embassies in Country
o Participation in U.N. Security Council Missions
๏ท
Social globalization is determined by the following sub-indices:
o Data on Personal Contact
๏ง International Tourism
๏ง Telephone Traffic
๏ง International Letters
๏ง Foreign Population
๏ง Transfers
o Data on Information Flows
๏ง Television
๏ง Internet Users
๏ง Trade in Newspapers
o Data on Cultural Proximity
๏ง Number of Ikea Retail Stores
๏ง Number of McDonaldโs Restaurants
๏ง Trade in Books
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
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Economic
GLOBALIZATION
Social
Political
Technological
Although the index uses three dimensions for globalization- economic, political and
social- a fourth dimension should also be considered, that of technological, which
integrates the world through technology, primarily, the Internet.
Technological Integration
Information and communication technology (ICT) continues to spread the globe as more
and more countries enlarge their ICT infrastructures. Internet connections are a
powerful accelerator of globalization. As countries see the value of access to
information and the burgeoning of knowledge-driven economic activities, they are
achieving greater ICT integration as Internet use and access throughout the world
continue to expand rapidly. The total number of Internet users worldwide near hovers
near one billion. The trend to Internet usage continues to grow. The primary driving
force behind Internet use and access is the growth occurring in developing economies.
The rapid expansion in ICT adoption and consumer demand for Internet access is
fueled by declining costs of connectivity and personal computers, which is augmented
by high population growth and a growing proportion of savvy young people.
Each of the four components is important for a nation to achieve a substantial
presence in the global economy. The components are interconnected, integrated,
and impacted by the other three.
๏ท Countries, particularly emerging and developing ones, cannot afford to bypass
the economic gains by refusing to participate in world economic integration or
setting up trade and investment barriers to lessen the positive impact of
globalization.
๏ท
๏ท
Emerging markets continue to politically organize or reorganize as regional
partners to enhance economic growth.
More countries are becoming members of international organizations such as the
WTO and financial and personnel contributions to peacekeeping organizations
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
56 | Page
such as the United Nations continue to rise as new countries see the value of
globally assisting others in times of need.
๏ท
Globalization allows firms and consumers to view the world as one large
marketplace – it is important for nations to achieve a presence in the global
economy in order to compete in that marketplace and to overcome conditions of
poverty.
2-22. Service-sector jobs are increasingly outsourced to lower-cost locations
abroad. The globalEDGEโข web site has various resources that detail the nature
and location of jobs that have been transferred abroad. Some experts believe the
resulting foreign investment and increased demand in lower-cost countries will
cause wages to rise in those countries, eliminating cost advantages from
offshoring and narrowing the income gap between developed economies and
low-cost countries. In other words, offshoring will help to reduce global poverty.
Others believe that manufacturing jobs will be consistently moved to low-cost
countries, making China and India the worldโs center of innovation and
production. What do you think? Find three articles on outsourcing at
globalEDGEโข by doing a search using the keywords โglobal outsourcingโ or
โoffshoring,โ and write a report on the most likely consequences of these trends
for your country, its workers, and consumers.
(LO 2.3; LO 2.4; LO 2.5; LO 2.6; AACSB: Analytical Thinking)
Consequences of offshore outsourcing for country, workers and consumers
Offshore outsourcing effects at the country level. At the macroeconomic level, there are
benefits and costs to offshore outsourcing. My country is doing much offshoring
because of the higher costs associated with its manufacturing and service sectors. Even
though its transportation, information, telecommunication, and energy infrastructures
are excellent and political instability, bureaucracy and corruption are low; global costs
disadvantages for businesses renders it somewhat unattractive for offshore outsourcing
inflows. Information technology, website design, software development, backroom
operation, call-center, product design (development), research and development
services are being โfarmed outโ at a rapid pace. My countryโs economy can benefit from
global outsourcing. For example, the study reveals that home-country companies saved
close to US$11 billion by outsourcing to India, and India, in turn, bought approximately
US$3 billion in high-technology imports from us during the same period. Thus, if firms in
my country can reduce their cost structure, the entire economy here gains.
Offshore outsourcing effects at the workersโ level.
Companies that are or planning to participate in global outsourcing are reducing
employment opportunities for local workers in the blue-collar and white-collar areas.
However, as companies insatiable search for lower cost, high productivity, greater
efficiency and customer service continues, high-skilled, white-collar employment (e.g.,
computer programming, software development, website design, product design,
information technology) have joined the race. As information technology (IT) employees,
in particular, witness their jobs moving offshore in a bad economy, opposition to
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
57 | Page
globalization could resurface stronger than ever. Thus, many observers feel that
outsourcing claims jobs, suppresses wages, and hurts local innovation. If innovation
tends to follow jobs, key drivers of local economic prosperity could vanish. By contrast,
executives believe the global outsourcing makes their firms more competitive. By
shifting product design work and other related work offshore, for example, production
can often remain in this country. Offshoring might be seen as a contributor to corporate
growth, as a facilitator of better skilled use of home-country staffs, and as a creator of
jobs in the long run. Some economists feel that the โreabsorption effectโ (i.e., displaced
workers are reabsorbed into other areas of the economy) as a result of global
competition is good for the local economy ultimately. Higher per worker productivity can
lead to greater corporate profits and higher average salaries.
Offshore outsourcing effects at the consumersโ level.
As firms in my country increase their global competitiveness via lower costs, greater
efficiency, productivity, quality, better service and revenues, conceivably, local
consumers will experience lower prices for products and services that benefited from
offshore outsourcing. For example, Nike and Levi Strauss have outsourced their
production value-chain activities to offshore companies for their sport shoes and apparel
for many years. Conceivably, this has allowed them to keep the cost of these goods
lower than otherwise would be possible.
2-23. A key characteristic of globalization is the increasingly integrated world
economy. MNEs and many nations have a vested interest in maintaining the
globalization trend. If the trend were somehow reversed, participants in
international business, such as exporters, would likely suffer big economic
losses. In many ways, globalizationโs role in the world economy is critical. But
just how big is the global economy? What is the extent of international trade
relative to the size of the global economy? What is the proportion of international
trade in the GDPs of each of the following countries: Australia, Canada, Sweden,
United Kingdom, and the United States? Consult globalEDGEโข to address these
questions.
(LO 2.4; AACSB: Analytical Thinking)
Globalization refers to the gradual integration and growing interdependence of national
economies. Globalization allows firms to view the world as an integrated marketplace
that includes buyers, producers, suppliers, and governments in different countries.
Globalization is manifested by the production and marketing of branded products and
services worldwide. Declining trade barriers and the ease with which international
business transactions take place due to the Internet and other technologies are
contributing to a gradual integration of most national economies into a unified global
marketplace.
The globalization of markets is evident in several related trends. First is the
unprecedented growth of international trade. In 1960, cross-border trade was modestโ
about $100 billion per year. Today, it accounts for a substantial proportion of the world
economy, amounting to some $18 trillion annuallyโthat is, $18,000,000,000,000!
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
58 | Page
Second, trade between nations is accompanied by substantial flows of capital,
technology, and knowledge. Third is the development of highly sophisticated global
financial systems and mechanisms that facilitate the cross-border flow of products,
money, technology, and knowledge. Fourth, globalization has brought about a greater
degree of collaboration among nations through multilateral regulatory agencies such as
the World Trade Organization (WTO; www.wto.org) and the International Monetary
Fund (IMF; www.imf.org).
Export growth has outpaced the growth of domestic production during the last few
decades, illustrating the fast pace of globalization. Much of the difference in the growth
of exports versus GDP is due to advanced (or developed) economies such as Britain
and the United States now sourcing many of the products they consume from low-cost
manufacturing locations such as China and Mexico. For example, although the United
States once produced most of the products it consumed, today it depends much more
on imports. Rapid integration of world economies is fueled by such factors as advances
in information and transportation technologies, decline of trade barriers, liberalization of
markets, and the remarkable growth of emerging market economies.
โ During the recent global recession, China surpassed the U.S. as the worldโs leading
exporter in total dollar terms, trade accounts for about 45% of its GDP (U.S. is 23% of
its GDP).
โ For other economies, merchandise trade is a much larger component of economic
activity: e.g. Belgium (125%), Netherlands (118%), and South Korea (81%).
Entrepรดt economies (intermediate depot; exports = imports): Singapore, Hong Kong
and Malaysia export more than 100% of their respective GDPs.
Such countries import a large volume of products, some of which they process into
higher value-added products and some they simply re-export to other destinations.
In terms of the proportion of international trade in the GDPs of each of Australia,
Canada, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the United States, the data are available from
the World Trade Organization (www.wto.org), globalEDGEโข, and the CIA World
Factbook (www.cia.gov). The World Factbook is the most straightforward source.
According to it, recently the GDP and combined exports and imports of Australia were
$851 billion and $325 billion, respectively. This implies that trade amounted to about
38% of the countryโs GDP (325/851).
The GDP and combined exports and imports of Canada were $1.28 trillion and $650
billion, respectively. This implies that trade amounted to about 51% of the countryโs
GDP. The GDP and combined exports and imports of Sweden were $331 billion and
$252 billion, respectively. This implies that trade amounted to about 76% of the
countryโs GDP. The GDP and combined exports and imports of the United Kingdom
were $2,128 trillion and $843 billion, respectively. This implies that trade amounted to
about 40% of the countryโs GDP. The GDP and combined exports and imports of the
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
59 | Page
United States were $14.14 trillion and $2.61 trillion, respectively. This implies that trade
amounted to about 18% of the countryโs GDP.
2-24. Globalization refers to the reduction barriers to trade and investment, which
is facilitating the internationalization of countless firms. Globalization is
quickening and affecting firms around the world. Globalization is associated with
various issues and challenges that confront firms as they undertake international
business. Among the major issues are the condition of the global economy;
indebtedness of national governments; power shifts to emerging markets; and
country risk in the developing economies. Visit globalEDGEโข and enter the key
word โglobalizationโ. Explore the information and websites that emerge from
your search. Write a report on the most important contemporary issues that firms
are facing as they undertake international business.
(LO 2.2; AACSB: Reflective thinking)
โ A globalEDGEโข search yields information on the following issues facing
international firms:
o Global sourcing
o Labor laws
o Global financial crisis
o Lack of education in emerging and developing economies
o Effects of capitalism on national identity
o Poverty
o Energy supply and usage
o Balance between environmental protection and economic development
o International enforcement of human rights
o Sovereignty
o Legal systems of the world
o Challenges to womenโs rights
o Potential of mass media to mislead public
o Censorship
o Exchange rate
o Ethics
o Finding qualified buyers
o Assessment
o Negative effects of regionalization
o International negotiations
o World religions
o Global branding
o International trade law
o Logistics and transportation
o Etiquette
o Terrorism
o Competition and cooperation
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
60 | Page
The most important contemporary issues that firms are facing as they undertake
international business: (Results โ 20 from a total of 1485)
gE Module: Key Industry Drivers of Globalization >> …
The Key Industry Drivers of Globalization module provides a general understanding of
issues including: the historical circumstances and the forces …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/595
Center for Globalization and Policy Research: Working Papers …
The Center for Globalization and Policy Research provides a series of working papers
on globalization topics like the possible benefits and costs of …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/592
Yale Center for the Study of Globalization >> globalEDGE …
The Yale Center for the Study of Globalization is dedicated to evaluating and analyzing
the effects of globalization on the world community. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/644
The Economist – Globalization >> globalEDGE: Your source …
Articles cover a wide range of international business issues affecting the world
economy, including globalization. In this …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/1141
International Forum on Globalization (IFG) >> globalEDGE …
The International Forum on Globalization (IFG) is an alliance of leading activists,
scholars, economists, researchers, and writers. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/605
Understanding the Face of Globalization >> globalEDGE …
A guide to globalization developed by the Center for International Education (CIE) at
the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM). …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/619
Peterson Institute for International Economics: Globalization > …
One of the many research topics the Peterson Institute of International Economics
provides is globalization. Papers, testimonies …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/608
Research on Globalization and Economic Policy: Research …
Created in 2001 in the Nottingham School of Economics, the Leverhulme Centre for
Research on Globalization and Economic Policy supports …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/610
NOW Globalization Debates >> globalEDGE: Your source for …
PBS furnishes viewers with information about globalization, and examines the pros
and cons of the trend. … NOW Globalization Debates. …
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
61 | Page
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/626
Globalization >> globalEDGE: Your source for Global …
Globalization is a peer-reviewed journal produced by Athabasca University of Canada.
… Register+Today. Globalization. Globalization. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/global-resources/resource/600
Globalization >> globalEDGE: Your source for Global …
… Register+Today. Globalization. BBC Reith Lectures 1999. … Tags: Global. Center
for Globalization and Policy Research: Working Papers. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Global-Resources/globalization
globalEDGE Blog – By Tag: Globalization >> globalEDGE …
… globalEDGE Blog – By Tag: Globalization. Globalization Brings Changes to Student
Mobility. … The Changing Face of Globalization. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/tag/Globalization
globalEDGE Blog – By Tag: Web-Globalization >> …
… globalEDGE Blog – By Tag: Web-Globalization. … Guest Blogger 3/23/2010 2:41:24
PM File under: Internet, Guest Blog, Web Globalization. Tweet. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/tag/Web-Globalization
globalEDGE Blog: Globalization of the Worker >> globalEDGE …
… Blog > Globalization of the Worker. globalEDGE Blog: Globalization of the Worker.
Globalization of the Worker. Bill Popielarz …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/post/798/Globalization-of-the-WorkerglobalEDGE Blog: The Changing Face of Globalization >> …
… Right Way. globalEDGE Blog: The Changing Face of Globalization. The Changing
Face of Globalization. Bill Popielarz 8 …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/post/1327/The-Changing-Face-of-GlobalizationglobalEDGE Blog: How Globalization is Changing Business …
… globalEDGE Blog: How Globalization is Changing Business and Education. How
Globalization is Changing Business and Education. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/post/1288/How-Globalization-is-Changing-Businessand-Education
globalEDGE Blog: How Big is Globalization? >> globalEDGE …
… Food, Any Place, Any Time! globalEDGE Blog: How Big is Globalization? How Big is
Globalization? Ben Jacquier 5/2/2011 …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/post/1041/How-Big-is-GlobalizationglobalEDGE Blog: Germany Gets Globalization >> …
Copyright ยฉ 2020 Pearson Education, Inc.
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… Protect Against Cyber-Crime. globalEDGE Blog: Germany Gets Globalization.
Germany Gets Globalization. Ben Jacquier 2/8 …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/post/977/Germany-Gets-Globalization
globalEDGE Blog: Globalization Brings Changes to Student …
… globalEDGE Blog: Globalization Brings Changes to Student Mobility. Globalization
Brings Changes to Student Mobility. …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/post/1367/Globalization-Brings-Changes-to-StudentMobility
globalEDGE Blog: The Current State of Globalization: How …
… globalEDGE Blog: The Current State of Globalization: How Connected is the World?
The Current State of Globalization …
http://globaledge.msu.edu/Blog/post/1277/The-Current-State-of-Globalization–HowConnected-is-the-WorldMyLab Management
Go to www.pearson.com/mylab/management for Auto-graded writing questions as
well as the following Assisted-graded writing questions:
๏ต 2-25. In what areas have technological advances had their greatest effect on
facilitating world trade and investment?
๏ต 2-26. What are the pros and cons of globalization?
๏ต 2-27. MyLab Management Onlyโ comprehensive writing assignment for this
chapter.
Visit MyLab Management for suggested answers.
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