Summary International business – Charles W.L. Hill
What is in chapter one? About globalisation
Discussion of globalisation, pro and cons
PROS / CONSCheaper goods / Government regulations (EU f.i.)
Global products / Loss of sovereign powers
Competitive advantage / More calls for trade barriers
Global institutions (GATT,IMF, UN,World Bank) / Power of multinationals
Foreign direct investments / Changing world order
Technology / Loss of jobs
Adaptability to changes / Unequal spreading of wealth
Encourages cooperation / Unequal labour standards
Should serve collective interest / Globalisation of greed
New generation of managers / Loss of identity
- Note: Jacques Attali: most issues are regional or global, not national
- Who started to think about it? Ricardo – arguments
- Is the world becoming flat? (Book of Thomas Friedman)
- The manufacturing of the iPhone’s?
- Implications for managers
What is in chapter two? About political economy
Note: Samuelson, “Every economy has to answer three questions: what to produce? How to produce and for whom?”Questions three is political question.
This chapter is about how political, economic and legal systems may shape social culture
POLITICAL
- Two extremes: collectivism versus individualism & totalitarian versus democratic
- Roger’s remark on democracy
- Collectivism: re Socialism, Communism, Social democrats, State owned enterprises
- Individualism: re Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill, Friedman, Hayek
- Accountability checks
- Totalitarianism: theocratic, tribal, right-wing
- Economies: market, command, mixed
LEGAL
- Common law, civil law, theocratic law
- Contract law (CIGS)
- Property rights
- Corruption (Transparency international) Recent case in Rumania (06/02/2017)
- Foreign corruption practices act
- Intellectual property (TRIPS)
- Product safety
NOTE
Civil law, civilian law, or Roman law is a legal system originating in Europe, intellectualized within the framework of late Roman law, and whose most prevalent feature is that its core principles are codified into a referable system which serves as the primary source of law. This can be contrasted with common law systems whose intellectual framework comes from judge-made decisional law which gives precedential authority to prior court decisions on the principle that it is unfair to treat similar facts differently on different occasions (doctrine of judicial precedent, or stare decisis).[1][2]
Historically, a civil law is the group of legal ideas and systems ultimately derived from the Codex Justinianus, but heavily overlaid by Napoleonic, Germanic, canonical, feudal, and local practices,[3] as well as doctrinal strains such as natural law, codification, and legal positivism.
Conceptually, civil law proceeds from abstractions, formulates general principles, and distinguishes substantive rules from procedural rules.[4] It holds case law to be secondary and subordinate to statutory law. When discussing civil law, one should keep in mind the conceptual difference between a statute and a codal article. The marked feature of civilian systems is that they use codes with brief text that tend to avoid factually specific scenarios.[5] Code articles deal in generalities and thus stand at odds with statutory schemes which are often very long and very detailed.
NOTE Nationalism versus globalism
Yuval Noah Harari
- People stop believing in the story and are their worst own enemy
- They feel they are left out
- There is a real divide between global and national
Two solutions
- Going back
- Globalize the political system
If something does not work, we retrograde.
Example of going forward = the yellow river and the foundation of China: tribes came together to prevent the worst - technology is the cyber river, with jobs lost and global problems. The more A.I. (artificial intelligence) the more we have to solve it together.
Robots and algorithms will take jobs. Should we build a wall around California? People are aware of the fact there is a major technological disruption – what will the job market look like in 2040? Reminder the agricultural revolution where the elite was better off and the workers worse off, the proletarians. The brain has a problem in handling much information.
Climate change
There is a close correlation between nationalism and climate change. We need another level of loyalty, i. e. a concern about humanity. For instance, universal income needs to be universal or it will not work. It is an ethical question with no national solution. We can end up with a useless class of people!
Quote
Never underestimate human stupidity and violence”
Unquote
Question on a world government: would it be like Denmark or Somalia? Question based on the corruption perception index of Transparency International. Answer: Universal government would probably look more like ancient China than modern Denmark.
Quote
The ability of politicians to do good is limited but the to do harm is not.
Unquote
Question on humans, what are humans for? Answer for nothing, reason why there are religions. We are getting better at understanding the mind but not the consciousness. We are creating artificial intelligence but not artificial consciousness. We do not need to find our sense in the universe, we should focus on how to liberate ourselves from “suffering” as this is the only reality. We created a lot of fiction but the only truth is suffering.
Question on post-truth. We are and were always in that situation. Reminder of the sentence of J. Goebbels: “If you repeat a lie often enough it will become the truth.”
Question Global governance is not in contradiction with local identity and communities.
Why?
(1)we are completely dependent on the eco system
(2)we are very local – the natural group per person is about 150 (115?). Persons are social animals at local level; over that it is a fiction. People are losing their connection with their senses which entails a feeling of alienation.
Quote
Poor countries have the most to lose.
Unquote
Conclusion
The next step is getting control of ourselves inside us, understand the complexity of our mental system to avoid an internal personal meltdown. Is there a cause of hope? A.I. does not predetermine a single outcome: ex nuclear weapons reduced violence rather than a catastrophe. Hope: humans can stand up to challenge a catastrophic outcome but humans have probably only one chance to do it.
What is in chapter 3? About Political economy and economic development
Table of contents
- The issues of globalization
- Economic policy
- Economic policy and economic development
- Differences in culture
Economic development
- Measures of economic development! GNI, GNI at PPP and HDI
- The engines of growth: innovation and entrepreneurship require:
- Market economy
- Strong property rights
- Stable political system
- Democracy
- Education
- Reasons for the spread of democracy
- Totalitarian regimes fail to deliver economic progress
- Reduced control by authorities because of technology in communication
- Prosperous middle class
- The spread of market based systems and the nature of economic transformation
- Deregulation
- Privatization
- Legal systems
- The impact of the 2008 crisis with likely retrenchment
- Implications for managers
- Benefits
- Costs
- Risks – see picture page 83 (fig 3.1)
What is in chapter 4? About differences in culture
- The definition of culture
- Values, norms and “mores”
- The determinants of culture – see page 93 fig. 4.1
- Social structure
- The individual & groups
- Social stratification
- Social mobility & class consciousness
- Religious and ethical systems
- Christianity and the protestant work ethic (Max Weber)
- Islam & fundamentalism
- Hinduism
- Buddhism
- Confucianism
- Language
- Spoken
- Unspoken
- Education
- Cultural change
- Implication for managers
- Cross-cultural literacy
- Culture and competitive advantage
What is in chapter 5? About Ethics in international business
Example Apple’s supply chain
- Ethical issues in international business
(1)Employment practices
(2)Human rights
(3)Environmental pollution
(4)Corruption (CPI, Corruption Perception Index)
(5)Moral obligations
(6)Ethical dilemmas
- The roots of unethical behaviour
(1)Personal ethics figure 5.1 p 133
(2)Decision making process
(3)Organisational culture
(4)Unrealistic performance expectations
(5)Leadership
(6)Societal culture
- Philosophical approaches to ethics
(1)The Friedman doctrine
(2)Cultural relativism
(3)Moralism
(4)Naive immoralist
(5)Kantian ethics
(6)Rights theories
(7)Justice theories
- Implications for managers
(1)Code of ethics
(2)Decision making process
(3)Ethics officers
(4)Moral courage
What is in chapter 6? International trade theory
Example the TPP
- Trade theory
(1)Benefits of trade
(2)Pattern of international trade
(3)Mercantilism
(4)Absolute advantage
(5)Comparative advantage
(6)Unrealistic assumptions of free trade
- Immobile resources
- Diminishing returns
(7)Dynamic effects and economic growth – Samuelson critique p 171
(8)The Hecksher-Ohlin theory
(9)The product life cycle theory
(10) NEW trade theory with Porter’s diamond p 181
- Implications for managers
- location
- first mover advantage
- government policy
- Balance of payments accounts, p 189
Does current account deficit matter?
Note on Ricardo (source New Ideas from dead Economists, Todd Bucholz, 1989, Plume)
Advocate for political freedom and free trade. Ricardo argued perhaps the most complex and counterintuitive principle of economics. To be noted is that businessmen love to shout about free enterprise at Rotary Club meetings, yet whisper requests for favors into the ears of politicians on Capitol Hill. His recommendation is related to the “corn laws” and linked with the absolute advantage considerations of Adam Smith. Ricardo showed that people and countries should specialize in whatever leads them to give up the least. It is a battle against protectionism. Protectionism is almost always bad for an economy as a whole, though good for a particular group. Furthermore, when economies turn inward, they almost always turn downward. Finally, the free market is not a pain-free market. Still, a country might prudently use a protectionist policy for “national defense/security” purposes or to ensure political stability in a time of acute uncertainty.
STUDY page 189, 19 & 191 Balance of payments accounts
What is in chapter 7? Political economy of international trade
Instruments of Trade Policy
- Tariffs
- Subsidies
- Import quotas & voluntary export restraints
- Local content requirements
- Administrative policies
- Antidumping policies
Political arguments for intervention
- Protecting jobs and industries
- National security
- Retaliation
- Protecting consumers
- Furthering foreign policy objectives
- Protecting human rights
Economic arguments for intervention
- Infant industry argument
- Strategic trade policy
Development of the world trading system
- GATT 1947-1979
- Protectionist trends 1980-1993
- Uruguay round and the WTO
- Reduced tariffs
- Special reduction for developed countries
- Reduction of agricultural subsidies
- Wide range of services includes
- Enhanced protectionism for patents (TRIPS)
- Reduction on barriers on textile
- Doha rounds of the WTO
- Antidumping actions
- Protectionism in agriculture
- Protectionism of intellectual property
- Market access to non-agricultural goods and services
- New Doha round ongoing & bilateral trade agreements re BREXIT
Implications for managers
- Trade barriers and firm strategy
- Policy implications
What is in chapter 8? Foreign direct investments
Outflows and Inflows of foreign direct investments
- Trends in FDI
- The direction of FDI
- The sources of FDI
- Acquisitions versus greenfield investments
Theories of foreign direct investments (3 complementary perspectives)
- Transportation cost
- Trade barriers
- Internalization theory
The pattern of foreign direct investments
- Oligopoly
- Location specific advantage
- Skilled labor
- Externalities (suppliers)
Political ideology and foreign direct investments
- The radical view (Iran)
- The free market view
- Pragmatic nationalism (France)
- Shifting ideology
Benefits and cost of FDI
- Host country benefits
- Resource transfer effects (re Baltic countries in the 90-ties)
- Balance of payments effects
- Effect on competition and economic growth
- Host country cost
- Adverse effect on competition
- Adverse effect on balance of payments
- National sovereignty and autonomy
- Home country benefits
- Inward flow of foreign earnings
- Demand for home-country exports
- Home country costs
- Balance of payments end employment effects
- Host country policies
- Home country policies
- Government policy in general
- Encouraging outward DFI
- Restricting outward DFI
Liberalization versus nationalism – The decision-making framework see fig 8.4 page 249
What is in chapter 9? Regional Economic integration
Levels of economic integration see Fig 9.1 p 257
- Free trade area (EFTA & NAFTA)
- Customs union
- Common market
- Economic union (EU)
- Political union (USA)
- The case economic integration – FDI – adjacent countries
- The case for political integration -unbridled ambitions of nation-states
- Impediments to integration - Brexit
- The case of regional integration – cost – GATT with WTO rules
- The EU
- The evolution of the European union – treaty of Rome 1957
- The European Commission – EU Directives
- The European Council
- The European Parliament
- The Court of justice
- The single European act with a goal to have one market place by dec. 1992
- The establishment of the Euro – benefits and cost (NOT IN BOOK)
- The impact of the sovereign debt crises and 2008 crash
- ESMA the European Securities and Market Authority
- EBA the European Banking Authority
- EIOPA the European Insurance and occupational pensions Authority
- The enlargement of the EU
- North American Free Trade Agreement
- The case for NAFTA
- The case against NAFTA
- The Andean community
- Mercosur
- Central America common market CAFTA & CAPRICOM
- ASEAN
- APEC
- Impact for managers
- Opportunities
- Threats
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