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The document provides an overview of international business and management, detailing definitions, types, and importance of international business, as well as management strategies and barriers. It discusses trade theories, orientations, and the international business environment, including geographic, socio-cultural, economic, political, legal, and technological factors. Additionally, it covers market analysis, business entry modes, product policies, and pricing strategies in international contexts.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views11 pages

Study Notes

The document provides an overview of international business and management, detailing definitions, types, and importance of international business, as well as management strategies and barriers. It discusses trade theories, orientations, and the international business environment, including geographic, socio-cultural, economic, political, legal, and technological factors. Additionally, it covers market analysis, business entry modes, product policies, and pricing strategies in international contexts.

Uploaded by

hanose
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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International Business and Management

Study Notes
Chapter 1: Overview of International Business and
Management
1. Definition of International Business

 Concept: Involves the exchange of goods, services, technology, managerial knowledge,


and capital across national borders to satisfy the objectives of individuals, companies, and
organizations.
 Forms:
o Export-Import Trade: Involves selling goods to or buying from foreign markets.
o Direct Foreign Investment: Establishing wholly owned subsidiaries or joint
ventures abroad.
o Licensing, Franchising, and Management Contracts: Agreements to use
proprietary assets or business models in foreign markets.
 Key Characteristics:
o Transactions are devised and carried out across national borders.
o Focuses on participant satisfaction to foster business relationships.
o International executives face unique macro-environmental factors, differing laws,
cultures, and societies compared to domestic business.
 Types of International Firms:
o Multi-domestic Operations: Independent subsidiaries acting as domestic firms in
each country.
o Global Operations: Integrated subsidiaries with interconnected operations
globally.
o Firms often combine aspects of both, existing on a continuum between multi-
domestic and global.
 Growth Factors:
o Trade and Investment Liberalization: Facilitated by GATT and WTO (formed
1995).
o Capital Movement Liberalization: Enabled by electronic funds transfers.
o Introduction of the Euro (2002): Replaced national currencies in 25 EU
countries by March 2005, impacting global trade dynamics.

2. International Business Management

 Definition: The process of planning, coordinating, and controlling business transactions


conducted across multiple countries.
 Scope: Managing operations for organizations active in more than one country, ensuring
alignment with global objectives.
3. Importance of International Business

 Benefits:
1. Earn Foreign Exchange: Exports generate foreign currency, used for imports,
enhancing profitability and national economic strength.
2. Optimum Resource Utilization: Produces goods on a large scale, utilizing global
resources (finance and technology from rich countries, raw materials and labor
from poorer ones).
3. Achieve Objectives: High profits achieved through advanced technology, skilled
employees, and global market access.
4. Spread Business Risks: Diversifying operations globally balances losses in one
country with profits in another.
5. Improve Efficiency: High organizational efficiency through modern management
techniques, skilled staff, and competitive pressures.
6. Government Benefits: Gains financial and tax benefits due to foreign exchange
contributions.
7. Expand and Diversify: High profits and government support enable business
expansion and diversification.
8. Increase Competitive Capacity: High-quality, low-cost goods, global
advertising, and superior technology enhance competitiveness.

4. International Business Trade Theories

 Purpose: Nations trade to achieve mutual gains, as no country is entirely self-sufficient.


 Reasons for Trade:
o Unique resource endowments create differing production possibilities and
commodity prices.
o Trade enables access to goods not producible domestically.
 Key Theories:
o Absolute Advantage (Adam Smith):
 A country should export goods it produces more cheaply than others and
import goods where it lacks cost advantage.
 Example: In Case I, Italy has an absolute advantage in automobiles (20 vs.
Korea’s 10), while Korea has it in fertilizers (20 vs. Italy’s 10).
o Comparative Advantage:
 A country should specialize in goods with lower opportunity costs and
import those with higher opportunity costs.
 Example: In Case II, Italy has an absolute advantage in both automobiles
(20 vs. 10) and fertilizers (30 vs. 20), but a comparative advantage in
automobiles (opportunity cost ratio 2:1 vs. 1.5:1 for fertilizers), so it
specializes in automobiles and trades with Korea.

5. International Business Orientations (EPRG Schema)

 Ethnocentric Orientation:
o Assumes home country practices are superior, applying domestic strategies
abroad.
o Overseas operations are secondary, focused on disposing surplus domestic
production.
o No significant product modification or market research for foreign markets.
 Polycentric Orientation:
o Views each host country as unique, adapting strategies to local differences.
o Subsidiaries operate independently with country-specific marketing plans.
 Regiocentric Orientation:
o Treats a region as a unified market, integrating strategies regionally but
maintaining ethnocentric or polycentric views for other regions.
 Geocentric Orientation:
o Synthesizes ethnocentric and polycentric approaches, viewing the world as a
single market.
o Requires experienced management and significant commitment for integrated
global strategies.

6. Barriers to International Business

 Language Barriers:
o Product messaging must translate effectively; errors (e.g., Mercedes-Benz’s
“Bēnsǐ” meaning “rush to death” in Chinese) can harm brand image.
o Solution: Hire interpreters and consult native speakers.
 Cultural Differences:
o Varying holidays, traditions, and norms (e.g., Spain’s siesta vs. U.S. 9-5 workday)
require cultural understanding to build relationships.
 Managing Global Teams:
o Challenges include language, cultural differences, time zones, and technology
access.
o Solution: Regular video conferencing check-ins to enhance engagement (Gallup:
3x engagement with regular manager check-ins).
 Currency Exchange and Inflation Rates:
o Fluctuating exchange rates (e.g., CAD to USD at 0.74) and inflation affect pricing
and costs.
o Solution: Monitor rates closely to adjust strategies.
 Foreign Politics, Policy, and Relations:
o Political decisions impact taxes, labor laws, and infrastructure, requiring close
monitoring.
 Tariff and Non-Tariff Barriers:
o Tariffs: Taxes on imports/exports to generate revenue or discourage imports,
increasing costs and inflation.
o Non-Tariff Barriers: Include quotas, quality standards, embargoes, and
monetary restrictions, limiting market access.
Chapter 2: The International Business Environment
1. Overview

 Definition: External factors affecting an organization’s business activities, uncontrollable


by the firm, requiring strategic adaptation.
 Key Components:
1. Geographic Environment
2. Political Environment
3. Socio-Cultural Environment
4. Economic Environment
5. Technological Environment

2. Geographic Environment

 Elements:
o Climate: Affects product types, usage, and distribution (e.g., high humidity
requires better packaging).
o Physical Terrain: Impacts distribution (e.g., Amazon’s rainforests hinder
transportation).
o Natural Resources: Availability influences production decisions (e.g., U.S.
petroleum dependency increased from 36% in 1973 to 56% in 2004).
o Population: Size, growth, structure, density, and urbanization indicate market
potential and distribution challenges.
 Implications:
o High temperatures reduce work efficiency (e.g., 20% capacity at 35°C).
o Urban areas are easier for distribution and communication compared to dispersed
rural populations.

3. Socio-Cultural Environment

 Importance: Influences customer behavior, managerial decisions, and intermediaries.


 Key Factors:
o Material culture, language, education, values, attitudes, social organization, and
political-legal structures.
o Cultural differences affect purchase behavior; acculturation is key to success.
 Management Approach:
o Use culture as a competitive tool, not just an obstacle.
o Study cultures broadly (patterns) and narrowly (product-specific behaviors).
o Avoid cross-cultural miscommunication due to misperception, misinterpretation,
or misevaluation.
4. Economic Environment

 Significance: Determines market potential through income levels and production


capabilities.
 Perspectives:
o Global Economy: Interdependence through international trade.
o National Economy: Characteristics like population, GNP, GNP/capita, PPP,
consumption patterns, and infrastructure.
 Key Indicators:
o Population: Indicates market size, especially for consumer goods.
o GNP and GNP/capita: Reflect economic development and living standards.
o PPP: Measures purchasing power across countries.
o Consumption Patterns: Vary by income (Engel’s Law: higher income reduces
food expenditure proportion).
o Infrastructure: Transportation, communication, and financial systems affect
distribution and promotion.

5. Political Environment

 Dimensions:
o Host-Country Environment: Local political groups may oppose foreign firms
for job displacement concerns.
o International Environment: Relations between countries affect trade (e.g., U.S.
restrictions on North Korea).
o Home-Country Environment: Domestic policies limit foreign operations.
 Management Strategies:
o Develop contingency plans for political changes.
o Accommodate host country interests (e.g., employ locals, share ownership).
o Maintain political neutrality and monitor situations.

6. Legal Environment

 Dimensions:
o Local laws, international laws (e.g., IMF, WTO, UNCITRAL), and foreign
market laws.
 Key Aspects:
o Product Regulations: Vary by country (e.g., safety, labeling requirements).
o Pricing: Price controls and resale-price maintenance differ globally.
o Distribution: Few legal constraints, but channel availability varies.
o Promotion: Advertising regulations (e.g., Germany restricts comparative ads).
 Enforcement: Varies by country; impartiality affects foreign firms’ legal standing.

7. Technological Environment

 Impact: Drives innovation and market changes, creating opportunities and threats.
 Trends:
o Emerging Technologies: AI enhances decision-making; e-commerce requires
agility.
o Globalization: Technology breaks geographical barriers (Baldwin’s
convergence).
o Cross-Cultural Considerations: Requires cultural intelligence to adapt
technologies locally.
 Management: Monitor technological trends, adopt innovations, and balance benefits
with environmental/social impacts.

Chapter 3: Company Resource Analysis, Market Selection,


and Business Entry Mode Decisions
1. International Business Market Analysis

 Process:
1. Select Indicators and Collect Data: Choose socioeconomic/political indicators
(e.g., per capita income, population) based on company goals.
2. Determine Indicator Importance: Use constant-sum allocation (100 points
across indicators).
3. Rate Countries: Score countries on each indicator (1-7 scale).
4. Compute Overall Score: Sum weighted scores to identify attractive markets.
 Key Indicators: Per capita income, population, risk factors, competition level.

2. Selecting a Business Entry Mode

 Criteria:
o External (Environment-Specific):
 Market Size and Growth: Large/growing markets justify higher
commitments (e.g., joint ventures).
 Risk: Political/economic instability reduces resource commitment.
 Government Regulations: Trade barriers limit entry options.
 Competitive Environment: Dominant competitors influence entry
strategy.
 Local Infrastructure: Poor infrastructure discourages heavy investment.
o Internal (Firm-Specific): Company objectives, control needs, resources, and
flexibility.

3. Entry Mode Strategies

 Exporting:
o Types: Indirect (via home-country middleman), cooperative (using partner’s
distribution), direct (own export organization).
o Advantages: Low risk, instant market expertise (indirect), control over operations
(direct).
 Licensing:
o Offers proprietary assets for royalty fees (1/8% to 15% of sales).
o Advantages: Low resource demand, navigates import barriers, reduces
political/economic risk.
 Franchising:
o Grants rights to use trademarks/business models for fees.
o Advantages: Low investment, motivated franchisees, local market knowledge.
 Joint Ventures:
o Shares equity/resources with partners to form a new entity.
o Types: Majority, fifty-fifty, minority; cooperative or equity-based.
o Advantages: Higher returns, control, synergy from local expertise.
 Wholly Owned Subsidiaries:
o Full ownership via acquisitions or Greenfield operations.
o Advantages: Full control, all profits retained, strong market commitment.
o Risks: Perceived as threats to host country sovereignty.
 Foreign Direct Investment (FDI):
o Establishes physical presence abroad (e.g., manufacturing plants).
o Types: Wholly owned, joint ventures, equity participation; Greenfield,
acquisitions, mergers.
o Incentives: Fiscal (tax rebates), financial (land/loans), non-financial
(infrastructure support).

Chapter 4: International Business Product Policy


1. Product Classifications

 Local Products: Available in a portion of a national market (e.g., regional rollout).


 National Products: Offered in a single national market, tailored to local preferences.
 International Products: Sold in multinational regions (e.g., Euro products like Renault).
 Global Products and Brands:
o Global Products: Designed for global markets, may or may not carry the same
name.
o Global Brands: Carry consistent name/image globally (e.g., Sony Walkman).
o Strategy: Standardize name/image for global brand consistency or adapt for local
preferences.

2. Product Strategies

 Product/Communication Extension (Dual Extension):


o Sells same product with same marketing globally; cost-effective but risks market
failure due to environmental differences.
 Product Extension/Communication Adaptation:
o Same product, adapted marketing (e.g., bicycles as recreation in U.S.,
transportation in Ethiopia).
o Low cost, avoids R&D/tooling expenses.
 Product Adaptation/Communication Extension:
o Adapted product, same marketing (e.g., Exxon’s gasoline formulations with “Put
a tiger in your tank”).
 Dual Adaptation:
o Adapts both product and communication (e.g., Unilever’s fabric softener with
different names/packages in Europe).
 Product Invention:
o Develops new products for low-income markets to meet affordability needs.

3. International Product Life Cycle (IPLC)

 Stages:
1. Local Innovation (Stage 0): Product developed for domestic market; high costs,
few competitors.
2. Overseas Innovation (Stage 1): Exports to advanced nations; declining costs due
to economies of scale.
3. Maturity (Stage 2): Local production in advanced nations; stable exports as
LDCs demand grows.
4. Worldwide Imitation (Stage 3): Declining exports; rising costs as competitors in
advanced nations gain share.
5. Reversal (Stage 4): Innovating nation imports; LDCs gain comparative
advantage in labor-intensive production.
 Characteristics: Efficiency shifts from developed to developing nations; product
becomes standardized.

4. Product Standardization vs. Adaptation

 Standardization:
o Advantages: Cost savings, economies of scale, consistent brand image, suitability
for similar markets or high-tech products.
o Examples: McDonald’s consistent quality, universal products like watches or
diamonds.
 Adaptation:
o Reasons: Differences in technical standards, consumer preferences, income
levels, cultural factors, or government regulations.
o Mandatory Modifications: Government standards, electrical/measurement
systems, product standards.
o Examples: Adapting margarine vitamins (Italy vs. UK), voltage for electronics,
metric units for EU markets.

Chapter 5: Pricing and Terms of Payment in International


Business
1. Introduction
 Role of Price: Only revenue-generating marketing mix element; indicates value when
paired with perceived quality.
 Challenges: Complex due to diverse market conditions, regulations, and exchange rates.

2. Factors Affecting International Pricing

 Company Factors:
o Objectives and Policies: Align pricing with goals (e.g., ROI, market share,
premium image).
o Costs: Variable and fixed costs set price floor; must cover production and selling
costs.
o Pricing Objectives: Include ROI, skimming, penetration, stabilization, cash
recovery, preventing entrants, differentiation.
 Market Factors:
o Competition and Market Structure: Price differentials must reflect perceived
value; oligopolies require competitive pricing.
o Customer Demand and Income: Price sensitivity varies by income (e.g., low-
income markets need adjusted products).
o Distribution Channels: Channel length and margins increase final price.
 Environmental Factors:
o Regulations: Taxes, tariffs, import licenses, and antidumping laws affect pricing.
o Exchange Rates: Currency fluctuations impact competitiveness (e.g., weaker
currency lowers foreign prices).
o Inflation: Varies by country; high inflation requires frequent price adjustments.
o Price Controls: Government regulations on essential goods limit pricing
flexibility.

3. Pricing Strategies

 Standardized vs. Adapted Pricing:


o Standardized: Uniform prices globally; cost-driven but less flexible for market
variations.
o Adapted: Localized prices reflect market conditions; more successful for
committed firms.
o Note: Standardizing pricing policies (e.g., competitive pricing) differs from
uniform prices.
 Full Cost vs. Marginal Pricing:
o Full Cost (Cost-Plus): Includes all production and marketing costs; may lead to
uncompetitive prices.
o Marginal (Dynamic Incremental): Based on variable costs; risks dumping
accusations but supports market entry.
 Skimming vs. Penetration Pricing:
o Skimming: High prices for innovative products to maximize profits in price-
insensitive markets.
o Penetration: Low prices to gain market share quickly; includes:
 Expansionistic: Very low prices for mass market.
 Pre-emptive: Low prices to deter competitors.
 Extinction: Very low prices to eliminate competitors.

4. Price Escalation

 Definition: Final price in foreign markets exceeds domestic price due to transportation,
taxes, tariffs, distribution margins, and administrative costs.
 Mitigation Strategies:
o Shorten distribution channels or negotiate lower margins.
o Lower production costs (cheaper materials, optional features, downsizing).
o Assemble/manufacture locally to reduce transportation and import duties.
o Reclassify products for lower tariffs or repackage for tax benefits.
o Use free trade zones to defer import duties.

5. Counter Trade

 Definition: Non-cash or partially cash-based trade arrangements.


 Non-Cash Forms:
o Barter: Direct goods exchange without money.
o Clearing Agreements: Governments trade preset goods, settling imbalances in
goods or currency.
o Switch Trading: Third party uses surplus credits to buy goods from deficit
country.
 Cash Forms: Product buy-back, compensation, counter purchase.

6. Transfer Pricing

 Definition: Pricing for transactions between subsidiaries of the same company.


 Purpose: Manipulate profits, duties, and incomes to:
o Minimize tax liabilities (high prices from low-tax to high-tax countries).
o Avoid host country restrictions (low prices from restricted countries).
o Reduce tariffs (low transfer prices to high-tariff countries).
o Limit profit sharing in joint ventures (high prices to reduce shared profits).
 Factors: Market conditions, competition, economic conditions, import restrictions,
customs duties, price controls, taxation, exchange controls.

7. Methods of Payment

 Advance Payment:
o Importer pays before goods are delivered; low risk for exporter, high risk for
importer.
o Requires evidence of demand, payment to supplier, and compliance with import
licenses.
 Open Account:
o Exporter ships goods and invoices importer; high risk for exporter, beneficial for
importer.
o Used in buyer’s markets; mitigated by export credit insurance.
 Consignment Sale:
o Exporter retains ownership until goods are sold; used for vehicles, dresses,
artworks.
 Documentary Collection:
o Exporter’s bank delivers documents to importer’s bank against payment (Sight
Draft) or acceptance (D/P).
o Less secure than documentary credit but simpler and cheaper.

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