Explain international trade considerations for sport/event industries.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Forms of International Business Trade International licensing of technology and intellectual property (trademarks, patents and copyrights) Foreign direct.
Advertisements

IBUS 302: International Finance Topic 1–Introduction Lawrence Schrenk, Instructor.
Regional Trading Agreements. Types of Regional Agreements free-trade area – agreement to remove trade barriers among members example: NAFTA customs union.
Chapter 4 Global Analysis
©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter 6 International Business McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Business in a Global Economy
Unit 13 International Marketing
The European Union THE EUROPEAN UNION How do individuals, businesses and economies benefit from using the Euro?
The European Union (EU)
3 Business in the Global Economy 3-1 International Business Basics
Chapter 10 The Impact of Globalization. Globalization: A World Business View Globalization: A way of thinking in which a business regards all of its operations.
CHAPTER 19 Multinational Financial Management
1 Trade Facilitation A narrow sense –A reduction/streamlining of the logistics of moving goods through ports or the documentation requirements at a customs.
Explain international trade considerations for sport/event industries.
1 Money and Banking Foreign Exchange & the International Monetary System Chapters 17, 18 Week 11.
International Business Chapter 4. Independent Practice Research the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Department Examine and explain 2 regulations regarding.
An introduction. Before the Euro Before the Euro each country in the EU had it’s own currency. Germany - the Deutschmark France – the Franc Italy – The.
ENTREPRENEURSHIP Lecture No: 30 Resource Person: Malik Jawad Saboor Assistant Professor Department of Management Sciences COMSATS Institute of Information.
Business in a Global Economy
Managing the Global Environment
Business in a Global Economy
R EGIONALISM AND M ULTILATERALISM. 5 D IFFERENT DEGREES OF INTEGRATION 1. Preferential Trade Agreements : Ex: Caribbean Basin Initiative: US grants less-
Business in a Global Economy. Read: You may not know it but you’re a part of the global marketplace. You might buy clothes made in Taiwan. Turnover your.
Chapter 5 Global Management. Learning Outcomes 1.Define global management 2.Compare and contrast importing and exporting 3.Explain the advantages and.
The United States & The Global Economy Chapter 6.
The United States & the Global Economy Chapter 5 Eco 2013 Fall 2007 Maria C Mari, CPA.
European Union.
1 Chapter 7 Section 1 Global Economics Objectives Describe how international trade benefits consumers. Explain the significance of currency exchange rates.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Principles of Business, 8e C H A P T E R 3 SLIDE International Business Basics The Global.
Chapter 4 Managing the Global Environment. LEARNING OUTLINE Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter. What’s Your Global Perspective?
Exchange Rates And Comparative Advantage. Exchange Rates When trade is free—unimpeded by government- instituted barriers—patterns of trade and trade flows.
Standard SS6G5b: Describe the purpose of the European Union and the relationship between member nations.
DR. SHIRLEY C. EJE Professor INTERNATIONAL MARKETING.
Managing in a Global Environment Ch 4. Managing in a Global Environment Challenges Challenges Coping with the sudden appearance of new competitorsCoping.
International Business Part II BCS-BE-8: The student analyzes hoe international business impacts business.
Standard SS6G5b: Describe the purpose of the European Union and the relationship between member nations.
Global Opportunities Back to Table of Contents. Global Opportunities 2 Chapter 4 Global Opportunities Global Entrepreneurship Ways to Enter the Global.
Culture and negotiation
European Union. Refresher  Market: the interaction of buyers and sellers exchanging goods and services  Trade: the process of buying, selling, or exchanging.
Foreign Exchange (FX) Exchange rates are one of the key linkages between a country and the rest of the world, both in goods/services and financial and.
Chapter 3 Business in the Global Economy. 3-1 International Business Basics Goals: ◦ Describe importing and exporting activities. ◦ Compare balance of.
The creation of a only coin was approved in 1992 for the necessity to make easy the commercial exchanges to avoid the change of the coin.
Purpose of the European Union For its members to work together for advantages that would be out of their reach if each were working alone Believe that.
International Trade Chapter #4.
Unit 8 Day 1 Concepts of Trade. Trade Trade – the act of buying or selling goods and services. Trade – the act of buying or selling goods and services.
Explain international trade considerations for sport/event industries.
Trade Barriers. n Involves the exchange of goods or services between countries n This is described in terms of – Exports : the goods and services sold.
The European Union Objectives Identify countries within the EU Explain the political and economic structure of the EU What is the importance of.
The European Union. European Union SS6CG5a Describe the purpose of the European Union and the relationship between member nations.
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Unit 2 Business Development GCSE Business Studies.
Balance of Trade You have probably read or heard about the fact that the US has a trade deficit. Trade deficit - An economic measure of a negative balance.
GCSE Business Studies Unit 1 Starting a Business
The European Union.
Managing Export Operations
Click here to advance to the next slide.
European Union.
The European Union.
The European Union © 2014 Brain Wrinkles.
The EUROPEAN UNION EUROPEAN UNION.
EUROS Identification Austria - Belgium - Cyprus - Estonia - Finland - France - Germany - Greece - Ireland - Italy - Latvia Lithuania - Luxembourg - Malta.
Trade barriers.
International Finance
Explain international trade considerations for sport/event industries.
THE EUROPEAN UNION How do individuals, businesses and economies benefit from using the Euro?
Topic 10: Trade, Development, & Globalization
THE EUROPEAN UNION How do individuals, businesses and economies benefit from using the Euro?
The EUROPEAN UNION © Brain Wrinkles.
The European Union © 2014 Brain Wrinkles.
Trade Barriers.
The European Union © 2014 Brain Wrinkles.
Presentation transcript:

Explain international trade considerations for sport/event industries.

Exchange rates: the value of one currency for the purpose of conversion to another Example: Dollar( United States) to Euro(Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Spain) to Pound (Great Britain, Egypt, Lebanon, Sudan and Syria.) Exchange rates have a direct effect on the power of a team's payroll

As businesses of the world continue to expand to global dimensions, the question of international currency dynamics becomes increasingly important. Research has shown that the success of sports teams around the world is directly related to their purchasing power in the international talent market. The higher the value of the teams home currency = the more purchasing power the team has meaning that based on prior research, the team will be more successful.

Financial Institutions -an institution that provides financial services for its clients or members (Bank) Financial institutions are important in the exchange rate process when doing international sport marketing. Why?

Trade restrictions are regulations, policies and actions that limit trade among nations. Example: Trade restrictions are barriers that a nation imposes, which hinders a sporting-goods manufacturer's ability to do business in other nations. Types of trade restrictions include tariffs, quotas, and embargoes. Tariffs: taxes placed on imported goods Quotas: limit the quantity of goods that move into or out of the country. Licenses: permits that a nation grants to businesses that want to import or export goods. Some nations limit the number of licenses they grant. Embargoes: A policy that suspends all import-export trade with another country.

Suppose the sporting-goods manufacturer wants to sell baseball gloves to a business in another country that has a very high tariff (tax) on sporting-goods. If the tariff is too high, the costs (taxes) may exceed the benefits (e.g., profits) of selling the baseball gloves to businesses in the other country.

Distributor: An agent who sells directly for a supplier and maintains an inventory of the suppliers products. A foreign distributor buys the manufacturers product for resale to middlemen or final buyers. He has more functions than an agent (maintaining inventories providing after-sales services) and assumes the ownership risk. He obtains a profit margin on resale of the product

Your company wants to sell its products in foreign markets. Increased sales mean increased revenues, which should translate into increased profits. In order to accomplish this goal, you must first establish distribution channels in foreign markets.

In addition to domestic restrictions, international businesses must deal with a range of additional government rules regulating international trade. Tariffs, import quotas and prohibition issues are all facts of life for importers. The restrictions could cause barriers and negative impacts to international sport marketing.

Methods of communication vary among cultures Personal style concerns the way a negotiator talks to others, uses titles, dresses, speaks, and interacts with other persons. It has been observed, for example, that Germans have a more formal style than Americans

A negotiator with a formal style insists on addressing counterparts by their titles, avoids personal anecdotes, and refrains from questions touching on the private or family life of members of the other negotiating team. A negotiator with an informal style tries to start the discussion on a first-name basis, quickly seeks to develop a personal, friendly relationship with the other team, and may take off his jacket and roll up his sleeves when deal making begins in earnest.

Various cultural attitudes towards time. Germans are always punctual, Latins are habitually late, Japanese negotiate slowly, and Americans are quick to make a deal. Emotionalisms are different. Latin Americans show their emotions at the negotiating table, while the Japanese and many other Asians hide their feelings

Cultural factors influence the form of the written agreement that the parties make. Americans prefer very detailed contracts that attempt to anticipate all possible circumstances and eventualities Chinese, prefer a contract in the form of general principles rather than detailed rules. Risk taking differs. Team organization: One leader or group consensus? Culture is one important factor that affects how executives organize themselves to negotiate a deal

/elliott-nick.original.pdf /elliott-nick.original.pdf global.com/articles/evaluating_foreign_distri butors.htm global.com/articles/evaluating_foreign_distri butors.htm s_print.php?CID=7&SCID=&AID=153 s_print.php?CID=7&SCID=&AID= regulation-factors-business-2966.html -regulation-factors-business-2966.html l-business/the-top-ten-ways-that-culture- can-affect-international-negotiations l-business/the-top-ten-ways-that-culture- can-affect-international-negotiations