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Published byRodger Bailey Modified over 9 years ago
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1-1 8-1 Ideological Forces Communism Government should own all the major factors of production Labor unions are government-controlled This ideology persists in few countries Capitalism An economic system in which the means of production and distribution are for the most part privately owned and operated for private profit LO1
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1-2 8-2 Ideological Forces Socialism In an extreme form socialist governments can control public utilities and some basic means of production Socialist governments rarely perform in ways consistent with a “pure” doctrine Many European countries including Great Britain, France, Spain, Greece, Germany, Italy, Austria, and others have practiced a form of socialism LO1
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1-3 8-3 Conservative or Liberal Conservative In recent U.S. terms a conservative believes in minimizing government oversight of economic activity and maximizing the independence of the private sector Liberal In recent U.S. terms a liberal urges greater government regulation and oversight of the economy These terms usually have entirely different meanings outside the U.S. LO1
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1-4 8-4 The government suspects that the firms are concealing profits To increase the firm’s profitability For ideological reasons - countries have national, government run utility companies, control strategic industries (petroleum in Mexico), etc. To preserve jobs by supporting failing industries that are important to the economy As a consequence of previous government’s support to protect the public investment Why Firms are Nationalized LO2
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1-5 8-5 Unfair Competition? Privately owned companies complain that government owned companies Can cut prices because maximizing profit is not their main purpose Get cheaper financing Get government contracts Get export assistance Can hold down wages with government assistance LO2
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1-6 8-6 Privatization Anywhere Any Way Privatization does not always refer to ownership transfer from government to private entities Activities previously conducted by the state may be contracted out Governments may lease state-owned plants to private entities Governments may combine a joint venture with a management contract with a private group to run a previously government- operated business LO2
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1-7 8-7 Government Protection Any government, regardless of ideology, must protect the nation’s economic welfare National defense Protection from banditry, piracy Terrorism LO3
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1-8 8-8 Government Protection Terrorism Unlawful acts of violence committed for a wide variety of reasons, Economic gain: ransom To overthrow a government To gain release of imprisoned colleagues To exact revenge for real or imagined wrongs To punish nonbelievers of the terrorists' religion LO3
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1-9 8-9 Government Protection World wide terrorist groups: a new trend Government-sponsored terrorism: act of war Countries finance, sponsor, and train terrorists and/or provide sanctuaries for them LO3
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1-10 8-10 Government Protection Kidnapping for Ransom Victims held for large ransoms Columbia and Peru are dangerous places for American executives U.S. executives practice “commando management” to avoid kidnap risk Arrive secretly, meet for a few days and fly off before kidnappers learn of their presence Such behavior is suggested when operating in countries that are on the U.S. State Department’s warning list LO3
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1-11 8-11 Countermeasures by Industry KRE (kidnap, ransom, and extortion) Insurance to cover ransom payments, antiterrorist schools Cassidy and Davis The world’s largest kidnapping and extortion underwriting firm is located in London Antiterrorist Schools LO3
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1-12 8-12 Terrorism Developments Nuclear Terrorism Failing security standards at former Soviet installations permit uranium to be stolen, then sold to terrorists Chemical and Biological Terrorism Recipes from self-taught terrorists that can be downloaded from the Internet
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1-13 8-13 Government Stability Stable Government Maintains itself in power and whose fiscal, monetary and political policies are predictable and not subject to sudden, radical changes Unstable Government Cannot maintain itself in power or makes sudden, unpredictable, or radical policy changes LO5
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1-14 8-14 Traditional Hostilities Traditional hostilities refer to long-standing enmities between tribes, races, religions, ideologies, or countries Arab countries -Israel Hutus and Tutsis in Burundi and Rwanda Tamils and Sinhalese in Sri Lanka LO5
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1-15 8-15 International Companies and Political Forces International companies are powerful and can influence their destiny make decisions about where to invest, where to conduct research and development, and where to manufacture products The financial size of many international companies relative to the host economy or economic sector gives them a strong negotiating position LO5
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1-16 8-16 Country Risk Assessment A country risk assessment (CRA) is an evaluation by the firm that assesses a country’s economic situation, policies and politics to determine how much risk exists of losing an asset or not being paid LO6
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1-17 8-17 Country Risk Assessment Types of Country Risks Political: wars, revolutions, coups Economic Financial: BOP deficits Labor: low productivity, militant unions Legal: underdeveloped laws concerning business Terrorism LO6
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1-18 8-18 Trade Restrictions Government officials sensitive to interest groups that are being hurt by international competition Arguments for trade restrictions National defense Sanctions to punish offending nations Protect infant or dying industry Protect domestic jobs from cheap foreign labor Scientific tariff or fair competition LO7
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1-19 8-19 Dumping Dumping is within the domain of the WTO The WTO defines dumping as selling a product abroad for less than the average cost of production at home home market price the price to third countries LO7
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1-20 8-20 Subsidies and Countervailing Duties Subsidies are economic actions by a government to support exports or hinder imports Countervailing duties are additional import taxes levied by the importing nation’s government on imports that have benefited from export subsidies offered by the exporting nation’s government LO7
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1-21 8-21 Tariff Barriers Tariffs or import duties are taxes levied on imported goods to reduce their competitiveness Ad valorem duties are assessed as a percentage of invoice value Specific duties are assessed as a fixed sum per unit Compound duties are a combination of ad valorem and specific duties A variable levy may guarantee the market price of the import is equal to that of the domestic product LO8
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1-22 8-22 Non-Tariff Barriers Forms of discrimination against imports other than import duties such as Specifications Customs procedures Quotas are numerical limits on specific classes of imports Absolute: once number is reached imports stop Global: no regard to source Allocated or discriminating: assigned to specific countries LO8
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1-23 8-23 Non-Tariff Barriers Voluntary export restraints (VERs) are export quotas imposed by the exporting country Orderly marketing arrangements are VERs based on formal agreements between exporting and importing countries LO8
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1-24 8-24 Non-Quantitative Non-Tariff Barriers Government participation in trade Procurement policies Local content requirements Customs and other administrative procedures Standards LO8
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