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Title: LATIN AMERICA.COM


1
LATIN AMERICA.COM By Raul Gouvea FIT
Department Anderson Schools of Management Universi
ty of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico (87131)
2
  • I - INTRODUCTION
  • The Internet is drastically transforming the
    nature, geographic boundaries, timing, and scope
    of global competition.
  • The Internet is changing the mental geography
    of international business.
  • The numbers are staggering global Business-to
    Business (B2B) E-commerce is expected to
    skyrocket to US 7.29 trillion by 2003. Global
    business-to-consumer (B2C) E-commerce is also
    expected to reach US 1.3 trillion.

3
  • The demographics of the Web are changing fast
    English is still the lingua franca of the
    Internet, where 96 of all E-commerce
    transactions are conducted in English.
  • By 2003, most Net users will not have English as
    their first language, it is expected that 50 of
    Internet users will live outside the U.S.
  • The U.S. currently contains 70 of all websites.
    However, by 2003, it is expected that the U.S.
    share will decrease to 35. It is clear that the
    days of focusing on the U.S. market are over.

4
  • II THE DIGITAL ECONOMY
  • At the onset of a new millennium the
    globalization process is permeating all segments
    of business transactions.
  • The Internet is launching a global re-mapping
    process. A process that is redefining space,
    mass, and time barriers. It is modifying the
    fabric of global business, boosting competition
    at the global level and forcing companies to
    redesign their domestic and global strategies,
    business models, and corporate structures.
  • It is also creating new industries and modifying
    existing ones. These transformations are making
    the global economy look like a cluster of digital
    metropolis. These digital metropolis are
    erasing national boundaries and rewriting
    business strategies in many industries across the
    globe.

5
  • The New Economy, or the digital economy, is
    creating an explosion of economic growth and
    productivity never seen before.
  • The diffusion of technology, fostered by the
    Internet, is taking place in Internet time,
    leading to an acceleration in the rate of
    innovation.
  • The Internet has had a substantial impact on the
    international business environment. It has
    forced companies to rewrite business strategies
    in many industries across the globe, by shrinking
    business response times, and by shortening
    service and product life cycles.

6
  • The Internet has also boosted trade across
    boundaries by making more and better information
    available. This has leveled the playing field
    for companies of different sizes. Small and
    medium size companies dont face the same capital
    constraints they did in order to reach a global
    market.
  • In the Internet age, core competencies like
    speed, quality, and quality service will be key
    to a companys success in the global
    E-marketplace.
  • The nature of the Internet also makes it easier
    to expand the share of services in global trade,
    such as banking, gambling, consulting, retailing,
    and education.

7
  • On the investment side, the Internet facilitates
    the integration of companies activities at the
    global level, fostering the integration of the
    supply chain, cutting costs, and fostering
    innovations.
  • This global electronic shopping center is open 24
    hours 7 days a week. The E-consumer is an
    interactive consumer.
  • These E-consumers are clustered in digital
    communities across the globe, bringing a new
    meaning to the global segmentation of markets,
    developing E-commerce trends, and bringing
    together like-minded consumers across the globe.

8
  • III GLOBAL DIGITAL DIVIDE
  • The Internet holds the promise of narrowing the
    gap between the haves and have-nots, or between
    developed and less developed countries.
  • Despite all of this promising talk of
    globalization, there are 2 billion people that
    have never made a phone call.

9
Table 1. Outposts on the Net-Projected Number of
Regular Internet Users by Year-End 2000.
Economic Region Millions of People Per
1,000 People North America
148.7 479.1
Western Europe 86.6
217.5 Asia-Pacific
57.6 16.6
South/Central America 10.8
21.1 Eastern Europe
9.5 32.7
Middle East/Africa 7.5
7.2 Source Mandel, 1999,
p.77.
10
  • Table 2. Percentage of Countries Population
    Connected to the Web, 1999.
  • Iceland 45 Canada 42.3 Sweden
    40.9 USA 39.9 Norway 36.3 Denmark
    34.0 Finland 32 Australia 30.5 England
    18.0 Switzerland 16.2 Japan
    14.4 Holland 13.7 Ireland
    13.5 France 12.9 Italy 7.9 S.
    Africa 3.74 Venezuela 3.3 Brazil
    3.0 Chile 1 Russia
    0.8 Argentina 0.6 Mexico 0.6 India
    0.5 China 0.26 Colombia
    0.24 Peru 0.08 Egypt
    0.06 Angola 0.0001 Argelia
    0.000025
  • Source Nua Internet Surveys (www.nua.org)
  • This superconcentration of users defies the idea
    of globalization as a universal concept.

11
Table 3. Projected Number of Online Users by
Region (millions of users) Region
1998
2003 North America 90.4
171.0 Western Europe
38.9
112.0 Asia Pacific 31.7
138.8 Middle East
0.8
8.5 Latin America
5.4
37.6 Eastern Europe 3.1
24.1 Africa
0.9
6.1 Source Weyer, 2000, p.69.
12
  • IV - WESTERN EUROPE AND ASIA
  • The European economy enters the new millennium
    with a renewed economic confidence. The
    eurosclerosis days are apparently over.
    Inflexible labor markets, lackluster economic
    growth, and anti-business government policies are
    no longer permeating the European economy.
  • The launch of a common currency is unifying
    fragmented markets, and is facilitating the
    emergence of venture capitalists, an essential
    feature of the New Economy.
  • For all the excitement, Europe still lags behind
    the U.S. when it comes to the Internet age. Only
    10 of Europeans are connected to the World Wide
    Web. When it comes to E-commerce, Europeans are
    grossing US 19 billion for 1999, or 20 of the
    U.S. volume.

13
Table 4. The New Old World - 1999 Country
Cell Phones Internet Access Online Sales
(US billions) France 28
10 9.20 Germany
21 15
16.3 Italy 50
8 5.40 Sweden 55
48 86.00 Britain
32 23
26.00 USA 25
43 1 12.00 Source Baker and
Echikson, 2000 p.eb44.
14
  • Across Europe however, one finds different levels
    of Internet penetration.
  • Despite their relative lag, European companies
    are quickly developing new technologies and new
    product technologies. For instance, mobile mini
    portals are the new challenge. Phones are being
    developed to carry Internet services.
  • By 2003 it is expected that 248 million Europeans
    will carry cell phones, up from 141 million in
    1999.

15
The growth of the Web in Europe still faces a
number of challenges 1) The increasing
unification of European markets, making Europe
more European, may have a negative impact on the
goal of building a global village. 2) In many
countries phone calls are charged by the minute,
discouraging the use of the Internet. 3) Despite
the creation of the Euro, companies are still
dealing with fragmented markets, several
languages, and a different set of laws. 4) The
extensive use of English in the past has
discouraged Europeans from using the Web. 5) In
order for Europe to act as an electronic shopping
center, import regulations have to be
standardized. 6) Europeans are more willing to
impose governmental control over the Web than
Americans. Issues such as consumer protection
and privacy are becoming the focus of many
lawmakers in Europe.
16
  • ASIA

  • Asian countries are also rapidly narrowing the
    Internet Gap. The convergence of PCs, cellular
    phones, and E-business is sending waves
    throughout Asia.
  • The Asians have woken up to the potential impacts
    of information technology on productivity and
    consumer spending. Asias immense untapped
    markets could turn into an Eldorado for
    E-commerce companies.
  • Asia, with 2.7 billion people, close to half the
    worlds population, and a young population with a
    rising disposable income, points to a booming
    E-commerce.

17
  • According to some estimates, by 2003 Asian
    E-commerce could amount to US 32 billion.
  • For instance, in China E-commerce is expected to
    increase from US 8 million in 1999 to about US
    3.8 billion by 2003.
  • The Asian E-race is leading a number of countries
    to build technological parks, such as the
    Malaysia Multimedia Super Corridor. Singapore is
    planning to build a Science Hub and intending to
    build a fully wired society.

18
Table 5. Technology Tigers Country
USA Singapore Hong Kong Taiwan
GDP per capita 30.5 28.4
23.2 14.4 Internet
Technology (spending per
capita) 1.2 0.6 0.3
0.1 Internet Technology
(spending/ of GDP) 4.2
2.2 1.3
1.0 Internet Users as a of PCs
55 55 42
42 Internet Users as a of
population 23 17 11
5 Source
International Data Corporation
19
  • Like the Europeans, Asians are looking for
    alternative Web designs. In Japan the advent of
    the smart-phones, or Internet-ready cellular
    phones, is dramatically changing the status of
    the Internet. Japan is emerging as the
    technological leader in wireless Net
    communications.
  • Japan is also leading the global wireless
    industry by being the first country to jump into
    the third generation of mobile telephony or 3G.
    This new technology will allow for
    video-conferencing, web surfing, and a number of
    other applications.

20
Table 6. Breaking Down the Barriers to the New
Economy, 1999 Country Citizens
PC Penetration Japan
20.0 million 30.0 of households
South Korea 7.8 million
23.0 of households Taiwan
4.2 million 35.0 of
households India
2.1 million 2.5 of households
China 10.0 million
1.7 of households Source Bremmer and
Ihlwan, (2000) p.91.
21
E-Asia faces a number of challenges 1) Credit
cards are not widely used in Asia. 2) The
vastness of Asia and the heterogeneous nature of
its infrastructure imposes limitations on the
distribution side. 3) The lack of vast and
liquid capital markets hampers the emergence of
venture capitalists. 4) Asia is not a
homogeneous business environment, regulation
intensity varies from country to country. 5)
Foreign direct investment restrictions in some
countries, like China, will hinder the Webs
progress in Asia. 6) A lack of research-leader
universities. 7) The lack of a risk-loving
corporate culture makes the Internet less
attractive to traditional Asian industries. 8)
The anarchic nature of the Internet affects the
foundations of many authoritarian regimes in
Asia.
22
  • V - LATIN AMERICA
  • Latin American countries are jumping at the Web
    at different speeds and different intensities.
  • Web users are expected to increase from 2 million
    in 1997 to 19 million users by 2003, reaching 7
    of the Latin American population.
  • E-commerce should increase from US 36.2 million
    in 1997 to an expected US 8.0 billion by 2003.
  • Latin American online users should increase from
    10.6 million in 2000 to an expected 66.6 million
    in 2005 (www.nua.com).

23
  • Latin American countries such as Brazil, Mexico,
    and Argentina are the most aggressive countries
    in the Latin American E-race. Brazil accounts
    for 85 of Latin American E-commerce, followed by
    Mexico with 10, and all the other markets
    accounting for 5.
  • The regions business-to-business and
    business-to-consumers commerce is expected to
    reach US 8 billion by 2003. Brazilian
    E-commerce will increase from US 121 million in
    2000 to US 4.3 billion by 2003. Mexican
    E-commerce will increase from US 25 million to
    US 1.5 billion and Argentinas E-commerce will
    expand from US 15 million to US 1.1 billion in
    the same period.
  • 3/4 of this E-commerce is still heavily directed
    at U.S. Web sites, which makes the development of
    Latin American E-commerce even more appealing to
    U.S. investors and companies.

24
Table 7. E-Commerce Spending in Latin America
(in US million) Year Volume 1997
36.2 1998 166.8 1999 458.7 2000 1,05
8.8 2001 2,390.3 2002 4,694.4 2003 8,0
21.2 Source Latin Trade (1999),
p.54.
25
Table 8. Internet Subscribers, Users (millions),
and Number of Sites (units), 1998 - 1999

Country Users(1999) Subscribers
(1998) No. of Sites Brazil
3.42 1.20
215 Mexico 0.79
0.33
113 Argentina 0.50
0.22 30
Source Brazil em Exame 1999, p 62.
26
  • Multinationals like Spains Telefonica and U.S.s
    Microsoft are racing to connect Latin American
    customers.
  • BellSouth, for instance, is expanding its
    involvement in Latin America, going beyond
    wireless services.
  • The company is planning to offer Internet
    services in ten Latin American countries.

27
  • Latin American and E-multinational companies are
    also rushing to consolidate their position in the
    industry.
  • The lack of state-of-the-art telecommunications
    infrastructure is also leading to another race
    parallel to the evolution of the Internet.
  • Several multinationals are rushing to wire the
    region with high-speed broadband cables.
  • Brazil has 4 PCs per 100 inhabitants and
    Argentina has 5 PCs per 100 inhabitants.

28
The Latin American Web industry still faces a
number of challenges 1) Low credit card
ownership hampers E-commerce. In addition, Latin
Americans fear of credit card fraud keeps
possible E-customers from shopping on the Web.
2) Shipping costs are high and crossing customs
can be cumbersome and lengthy. 3) Phone calls
are charged by the minute. 4) The integration of
shipping services, inventory management, and
customer service are still in its infancy. 5)
Low computer penetration limits the impact of the
Internet.
29
  • VI MERCOSUR Brazil
  • Brazil is Latin Americas largest Web user.
  • Brazil accounts for 85 of Latin American
    E-commerce.
  • In the major cities of Brazil, like Sao Paulo and
    Rio de Janeiro, 9 of the population (on average)
    are connected to the Web, well above the 3
    national average.
  • In terms of demographics, classes A and B account
    for 84 of Internet users.

30
Table 9. Brazilians on the Web,
1995-2003 Year Number Growth Rate 1995
158,959 192 1996
463,508 157 1997
1,191,84 130 1998
2,737.24 40 1999
3,825,386 31 2000
4,993,992 31 2001
6,520,549 20 2002 7,793,202
16 2003 9,031,771 16 Source Vargas et
al, 2000.
31
  • By 2003, Brazilian E-commerce should total US
    2.7 billion, compared to US 1.47 trillion for
    the U.S.
  • It is expected that by 2003, 1.1 million
    E-consumers will be shopping on the Web in
    Brazil, compared to 46 million in the U.S.

32
Table 10. Electronic Commerce in the US and
Brazil (Billions of Dollars)
USA
BRAZIL 1998 1999
2003 1998 1999
2003 Business 43 109 1,331
0.06 0.13 2 to
Business Business 8 20
144 0.03 0.07 0.7 to
Consumers Total 51 129
1,475 0.09 0.2 2.7
Source Paduan, 1999, p 75.
33
  • A consolidation process coupled with increasing
    foreign direct investment is changing the profile
    of the Brazilian industry.
  • From 500 Web providers in the mid 1990s, the
    Brazilian Association of Web Providers estimates
    that only 50 will be in business by the year
    2002.
  • In 1999, of the five largest Web providers, only
    one is controlled by a Brazilian group, Universo
    Online. ISPs such as ZAZ, Matrix, and Mandic
    were acquired by foreign groups.
  • The American company PSINet is among the
    newcomers that bought several smaller providers
    throughout Brazil. America Online (AOL) landed
    in Brazil in November of 1999.

34
  • The arrival of foreign E-commerce companies is
    being reciprocated by the internationalization of
    Brazilian E-commerce companies.
  • For instance, six out of 10 taxpayers now file
    their taxes over the Web, an increase from
    706,000 tax forms in 1997 to 11.2 million tax
    forms in 1999.

35
The Brazilian Internet faces some challenges 1)
86 of Brazilians living in Brazils largest
metropolis are still alienated from the Web as a
result of lack of access to computers, phones,
low income levels, low educational levels, or all
of these factors together (Porto, 2000). 2) The
low access to personal computers and phone line
ratios are creating a bottleneck for further
growth of the Internet industry. 3) In the first
trimester of 2000, Brazil had 8.2 million
computers, or one computer per 19 people. In the
USA, the ratio is one computer per two people.
4) Brazil only has 28 million phone lines, or
six times fewer phones per capita than a country
like Canada. 5) The future of the Brazilian
Internet is closely related to its penetration in
Brazilian schools. 6) Only 10 of computers in
public schools are connected to the Web. 7) Of
the 188,700 schools, 116,000 do not have access
to a phone line.
36
  • Table 11. Who is Connected Schools
  • Public Schools
  • Elementary Education
    High School Education
  • Canada 88.0
    97.0
  • USA 88.0
    94.0
  • England 17.0
    83.0
  • Brazil 3.2
    10.0
  • Source Schwartz, 1999, p 43-45.
  • It is time to start developing other less
    expensive outlets such as pagers and smart
    phones, following the Asian and European
    experiences.

37
  • Argentina
  • The Argentine market is still in its infancy.
  • Argentina has only 350,000 Net users.

38
  • VII DRAWING LESSONS
  • It is clear that the global evolution of the
    Internet is taking place at different rates and
    shapes across the globe.
  • The Europeans, Asians, and Latin Americans are
    not fully replicating the American experience.
    All three players are developing their own
    regional Internet strategies and regional
    Internet flavors.
  • One lesson is being understood by many nations
    around the globe nations must become Internet
    nations if they are to survive in the new digital
    global economy.
  • Latin America countries are not yet working as a
    single unified market.

39
  • FINAL REMARKS
  • The New digital economy is forcing companies and
    nations across the globe to become Internet
    companies and nations.
  • In order to globalize, E-companies have to
    localize the content of their offering.
  • Digital metropolis are being organized along the
    social and racial fabric of these virtual
    communities, paying heed to their own native
    languages and cultures.
  • The Internet is fostering, more than any other
    industry, the development of north-south and
    east-west strategic alliances.

40
  • The E-commerce environment is going through a
    period of intense competition.
  • American and European E-MNCs are waging their
    battles around the world.
  • The American dominance and leadership of
    E-commerce is not so clear.
  • E-MNCs from Europe and Asia are starting to
    globalize their operations, using in some
    instances superior technology to the ones used in
    the American market.
  • E-MNCs are also coming from emerging Web
    frontiers.
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