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International Strategy - Lecture Notes

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Samenvatting van het vak International Strategy 2022/2023. Alle lecture notes. Summary of lectures of International Strategy 2022/2023.

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  • 31. januar 2023
  • 40
  • 2022/2023
  • Notizen
  • Dr. alexander gorgijevski
  • Alle klassen
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International Strategy – Lecture Notes

Lecture 1
Learning objectives
- 1-1 Understand what is meant by the term globalization
- 1-2 Recognize the main drivers of globalization
- Describe the changing nature of the global economy
- Managing international business differs from managing purely domestic business
- Countries are different
- Range of problems is wider and problems more complex
- Must find ways to work within limits imposed by government
What is globalization?
- “global interconnectedness”
- “interdependent”
- “a spatial extension of human activities across cultures, economies and political
systems”
- New concept, but old phenomenon
Globalization “waves”
- A transcontinental spread of religions. “world religions”
 During 400-1000 AC
- European colonization of the Americas
 1500-1700
- “Creation of the British and French Empires”
 Basically 19th century
 Colonization of Asia and Africaq
 Created the 19th century world of developed and underdeveloped countries
- Continuation with the revolutions in communication and transport (telephone,
telegraph, steamships > internet etc.)

What is globalization?
- Business side: Trade, capital, technology (knowledge)
- General terms: people, culture, environment
- The transition of China into an economic superpower
 Ex. Largest (second largest) economy
 Ex. Largest exporter of goods
 Ex. Largest automobile market

The globalization of markets
- Refers to the merging of historically distinct and separate national markets into one
huge global marketplace
- Falling barriers to cross-border trade and investment
- Global tastes
- Competitors may not change among nations
 Apple vs. Samsung [global competitors]

, - Benefits small and large companies
 33% of the value of exports of US manufactured goods comes from SMEs
- Significant differences between national markets
- Products that serve universal needs are global: oil

The globalization of production
- Sourcing goods to take advantage of differences in cost and quality of factors of
production
 Factors of production include labor, energy, land, capital
- Early outsourcing was confined to manufacturing
 Modern communications technology has advanced outsourcing today for service
activities
‘Mistaken’ global assumptions
- “business is business everywhere the language of business is English”
- “they are eager to adopt our way of doing things”
- “our corporate culture is the same everywhere”
- “travel, reduction of trade blocks, and the global media are creating a single global
culture”
The emergence (opkomst) of global institutions
- Impediments (belemmeringen) prevent optimal dispersion (spreiding) of activities:
 Formal and informal barriers to trade
 Barriers to foreign direct investment
 Transportation costs
 Political and economic risk
 Challenge of coordinating globally dispersed supply chain
- Institutions needed to help manage, regulate, and ‘police’ the global marketplace
 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
 World Trade Organization (WTO)
 International Monetary Fund (IMF)
 The World Bank
 The United Nations
 Group of 20 (G20)
 “Standards” (ISO)

Drivers of globalization
- International trade: when a firm exports goods or services to consumers in another
country
- Foreign Direct Investment (FDI): when a firm invests resources in business activities
outside its home-country
- GATT, WTO etc. lowered the barriers to trade
- Role of Technological Change:
The lowering of trade barriers made globalization of markets and production a
theoretical possibility. Technological change has made it a tangible reality
o Communications
 Development of the ‘microprocessor’ – single most important
innovation since World War II
 ‘Moore’s Law’ predicts that the power of microprocessor technology
doubles and its cost of production falls in half every 18 months




2

, o The Internet
 More than half of the world’s population uses the internet
 Global e-commerce sales over $2.5 trillion
 The internet acts as an equalizer
o Transportation Technology
 Commercial jets, ‘superfreighters’, and ‘containerization’ have all
“shrunk the globe”
o Implications for the Globalization of Production
 Locating production in geographically separate locations has become
more economical
o Implications for the Globalization of Markets
 Cultural distance has been reduced and has brought some
convergence of consumer tastes and preferences

Changing Demographics of the Global Eco.
- The Changing World Output and World Trade Picture
o As barriers to the free flow of goods and services fell, non-U.S. firms
increasingly invested across national borders
 Desire to disperse production activities to optimal locations and to
build a direct presence in major foreign markets
- The Changing Foreign Direct Investment Picture
o This reflects the faster economic growth of several other economies,
particularly China
 China and BRIC (brazilie/rusland/india/china) countries growing more
rapidly
 Ex. China has 5x the outward stock of FDI as a percentage of GDP
between 2005 and 2020
 US has merely increased a few percent
 Outward stock of foreign direct investment (FDI)= the total
cumulative value of foreign investments by firms domiciled in
nations outside of that nation’s borders = “de totale cumulatieve
waarde van buitenlandse investeringen door bedrijven die gevestigd in zijn
in landen buiten de landsgrenzen”
 “Developing nations” may account for more than 60% of the world
economic activity by 2030
- The Changing Nature of the Multinational Enterprise
o Multinational enterprise (MNE) is any business that has productive activities
in two or more countries
o Non-U.S. Multinationals (Forbes annual ranking)
 In 2003, 38.8% of the world’s 2000 largest multinationals were U.S.
firms
 By 2019, 28.8% percent of the top 2000 global firms were U.S.
multinationals, a drop of 201 firms
 See slide 35, lecture 1
o The Rise of Mini-Multinationals
 The growth in the number of medium- and small-sized businesses
 The internet is lowering barriers that smaller firms faced in
international trade




3

, - The Changing World Order
o Former communist countries present export and investment opportunities
 Signs of growing unrest and commitment to market-based economic
systems cannot be assumed
 Risks of doing business in these countries are high
o China moving to industrial superpower
o In Latin America debt and inflation are down, more private investors,
expanding economies
- Global Economy of the 21st Century
o Barriers to the free flow of goods, services, and capital have been coming
down
o Strengthened by the widespread adoption of liberal economic policies by
countries that had opposed them
o Globalization is not inevitable:
 Countries may pull back
 Risks are high

The Globalization Debate
- Anti-globalization Protests
o Began with 1999 protests at WTO meeting in Seattle
o Protestors now typically show up at major meetings of global institutions
o Protestors believe globalization causes detrimental effects on living
standards, wage rates, and the environment
 Theory and evidence suggests these fears may be exaggerated
o Globalization, jobs, and income
 Negative: falling trade barriers allow firms to move manufacturing
activites to countries where wage rates are much lower
 Positive: benefits outweigh the costs
- Globalization, labor policies, and the Environment
o Critics argue:
 Labor and environmental regulations increase manufacturing costs
 Lack of regulation can lead to abuse
 Firms move production to nations that do not have regulations
o Supporters argue:
 Tougher environmental regulations and stricter labor standards go
hand in hand with economic progress
 Free trade leads to less labor exploitation and less pollution
- Globalization and national sovereignty
o Critics argue:
 Shift of power away from national governments towards
supranational organizations
 WTO, EU, United Nations
o Supporters argue:
 The power of supranational organizations is limited to what nation-
states collectively agree to grant
 These organizations exist to serve the collective interests of member
states




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