Title: International Business
1International Business
International Business 10e Daniels/Radebaugh/Sulli
van
- Chapter Four
- The Economic Environment
2004 Prentice Hall, Inc
2Reading chapters
- Its important to do the reading before class
- You cannot assume that everything on the tests
will be on the slides - Everything on the tests will be
- discussed in class
- mentioned in the study guide for the test
- But you will have to study the text and your notes
3Studying cases
- You are not required to memorize any facts from
the cases - No facts from the cases will be on the tests
unless I specifically tell you - But you are expected to have read the cases and
thought about the study question
4On tests, a question about a case will give you
the facts you need
- A multiple choice question will provide the basic
data - An essay will be open book
- But if you did not read before class, you are
unlikely to absorb enough during class
discussion to be ready
5Cases have two central roles in Business 187
- They illustrate points in the text
- They show the complexities of the real world
- Cases give you a chance to think about real
situations - Let you consider which of the theories in the
text you find useful
6As you read cases, think about
- Which theories in the text are at work?
- To what extent does the case provide evidence
that I have to go beyond the theory?
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8The first 4 chapters
- Basic ideas about international business
- Culture What it is, why its crucial, how to
develop the art of dealing with it - The political environment Nature of the
systems that create rules of the game - The economic environment
- How do nations produce wealth?
- How much do they have?
9Chapter Objectives
- Learn criteria for dividing countries into
economic categories - Understand key measures like Gross National
Income - Understand economic systems
- Discuss economic issues that influence
international business - Assess the transition process for former command
economies - Daewoo case Economic development
10Economic issues thatmultinational enterprises
must grasp
- What is the size, growth potential, and stability
of the market? - What type of economic system does the country
have? - Is your firms industry in the public or private
sector of this country? - If public, does the government allow private
competition? - How does the government control the nature and
extent of private enterprise?
11Factors of Production
- Inputs to the production process
- Human resources
- Physical resources
- Knowledge
- Capital
- Infrastructure
- Factor conditions are most obviously critical for
manufacturing, mining, and agriculture
12Demand Conditions
- Market potential
- Size of home demand
- Growth of home demand
- Composition of home demand (nature of buyer
needs) - Internationalization of demand
Composition? Size? Growth? Internationalization?
13Classifying countries by income
- Gross National Income (GNI)(formerly Gross
National Product - GNP) - the market value of final goods and services
newly produced by domestically owned factors of
production. - Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
- the value of production that takes place within a
nations borders, without regard to whether the
production is done by domestic or foreign factors
of production
14Examples
- A Ford manufactured in the U.S.
- counts in U.S. GNI (because Ford is a U.S.
company) - counts in U.S. GDP (because the work is done in
the U.S.) - A Toyota manufactured in the U.S.
- does not count in U.S. GNI (because Toyota is not
a U.S. company) - does count in U.S. GDP (because the work is done
here)
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15- A Ford produced in Mexico
- counts in U.S. GNI
- (though the wages paid to Mexicans would be
deducted) - But is not part of U.S. GDP
16Importance of Per Capita GNI
17GNI can be an inadequate indicator of wealth
- Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) is the number of
units of a nations money required to buy goods
and services inside the country that 1 would buy
in the U.S. - PPP is a useful measure since it accounts for
international differences in price - Example China has a higher PPP currency value
than Japan - 1 worth of yuan buys more in China than 1
worth of yen buys in Japan
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19World regions are growing at radically different
rates
From Map 4.2
20Economic Systems
- Governments struggle with
- who should own businesses
- how they should be controlled
21Economic Freedom
- Market Economy resources are primarily owned and
controlled by the private sector, not the public
sector - Consumer sovereignty - the right of consumers to
decide what to buy - Prices are determined by supply and demand
22 Little economic freedom
- Command Economy (Centrally Planned Economy) all
dimensions of economic activity, including
pricing and production, are determined by a
central government plan - Government owns and controls all resources
- Prices are determined by government
- North Korea, Cuba
23No economy is purely market or command
- Mixed Economy Some degree of government
ownership and control - Economic systems are along a spectrum of freedoms
- Today, most command economies are moving towards
a market economy
24Economic Factors International Businesses Must
Consider
- Inflation
- Government Deficits
- Nations External Debt
- Internal Debt
- Privatization
- Balance of Payments
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25Reforms and Economic Progress the Vicious Circle
Figure 4.3 - 1
26Reforms and Economic Progress the Virtuous
Circle (the goal)
Figure 4.3 - 2
27Daewoo Growth and Problems
28Chapter Review
- Learn differences among the worlds major
economic systems - Learn criteria for dividing countries into
economic categories - Discuss economic issues that influence
international business - Assess the transition process for market
economies
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