Chapter 5
Chapter 5
Chapter 5
Suzaan Hughes
Notices
•NB: register your team on the JSE platform and report your
team name to me at the google forms link: 27 March 4pm
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Learning Outcomes
1. Define globalization and explain how it is creating a borderless world for today’s managers.
2. Describe a global mindset and why it has become imperative for companies operating
globally.
3. Describe the characteristics of a multinational corporation and explain the ‘bottom of the
pyramid’ concept.
4. Define international management and explain how it differs from the management of
domestic business operations.
5. Indicate how dissimilarities in the economic, sociocultural and legal-political environments
throughout the world can affect business operations.
6. Discuss how the international landscape is changing, including the growing power of China
and India.
7. Describe how regional trading alliances are reshaping the international business
environment.
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A Borderless World
Globalization is the increase in the flow of goods, services,
capital, people, and ideas across international boundaries
(Harvard business school online)
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Rankings on the Globalization Index
Source:https://geographylaunchpad.weebly.com/uploads/2/5/4/1/25412597/2936407_orig.png
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Cultures and Global Diversity
Culture
Culture shock
Cultural intelligence
Ethnocentrism
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Global Mindset
•Ability of managers to appreciate and influence individuals,
groups, organisations, and systems that represent:
•Different social, cultural, political, institutional, intellectual,
and psychological characteristics
•Develop by engaging with people from different cultures
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The Impact of Multinational Corporations (MNC)
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The Impact of Multinational Corporations (MNC)
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The Globalization Backlash
• 68% of Americans say other countries benefit the most from free trade
✓53% believe free trade has hurt US
• Business leaders insist that economic benefits flow back to the home
economy
✓Lower prices and expanded markets
✓Increased profits and funds for innovation
• But some consumers say they would be willing to pay higher prices to keep
down foreign competition
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Serving the Bottom
of the Pyramid (BOP)
• An approach for multinationals to do good
• Corporations can alleviate problems and make large profits by
selling to the world’s poor
• There are more than four billion people at the lowest level of
the economic pyramid
• Many companies are adopting BOP strategies
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International Market Strategies
• Outsourcing – also called offshoring, work activities are done in countries with cheap
labour
• Direct investing – high level of involvement, company manages and controls assets
✓Joint venture an organisation shares costs and risks with another firm in a foreign
country (develop new products or set up sales and distribution network)
✓Wholly owned affiliate is a foreign subsidiary over which the organisation has complete
control
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The International Business Environment
• Ford launched an ad campaign in Belgium that execs thought said, “Every car has a high-
quality body.” However, when translated, the slogan read, “Every car has a high-quality
corpse”
• Coors’ beer campaign in Spain, “Turn It Loose” commonly interpreted as “suffer from
diarrhea.”
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5.3 - Key Factors in International Environment
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The Economic Environment
• Government policies
• Market size
• Financial markets
• Infrastructure
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5.4 - Country Competitiveness Comparison
Recent economic crises highlighted how interconnected economies are around the world
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The Legal-Political Environment
https://www.prsgroup.com/political-risk-index-september-2021/ 20
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The Sociocultural Environment
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Hofstede’s Value Dimensions
✓ Power distance – high power distance means people accept inequality in power
among institutions, organisations and people, low power distance means people
expect equality in power.
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How countries’ short-term thinking and long-term thinking
compare on Hofstede’s dimensions of
national culture.
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GLOBE Project Value Dimensions
• Assertiveness – high assertiveness means society values toughness,
confidence and competitiveness, low assertiveness means people value
tenderness and concern for others
• Future orientation – the extent to which a society encourages and rewards
planning for the future over short-term results and quick gratification
• Gender differentiation – extent to which gender role differences are maximised
• Performance orientation – high – places emphasis on performance and
rewards people for performance improvements and excellence, low – means
people pay less attention to performance and more attention to loyalty, belonging
and background
• Humane orientation – degree to which society encourages and rewards people
for being fair, altruistic, generous and caring, if low – people are expected to take
care of themselves, self-enhancement and gratification are of high importance
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5.7 – Examples of Country Rankings on
Selected GLOBE Value Dimensions
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Cultures and Global Diversity
Silent
languages of
culture
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5.8 - High-Context and Low-Context Cultures
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Changing International Landscape
•China Inc.
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Changing International Landscape
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International Trade Alliances
• General Agreement on Tariff and Trade (GATT)
• 23 nations in 1947, a set of rules for fair trade
• World Trade Organisation (WTO)
• Maturation of GATT into permanent global institute
• European Union
• Signed in 1957, Treaty of Rome was designed to improve economic and
social conditions among original six member states; evolved into 28-nation
European Union
• North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
• Signed in 1994,single market for the United States, Canada, and Mexico
African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA)
• U.S. economic policy and commercial engagement with Africa. 32 eligible
sub-Saharan African countries with duty-free access to the U.S. market for
over 1,800 products
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Dare! (homework)
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