1 / 22

ASIA PACIFIC BUSINESS AND SOCIETY (BSP2005)

ASIA PACIFIC BUSINESS AND SOCIETY (BSP2005). On Exchange Rates…. Hong Kong currency pegged to USD 7.80 HKD to 1 USD. In News…. Toyota reported record quarterly profit ‘recorded group net profit of $3.6 billion USD in the three months ended Dec 31’

apu
Télécharger la présentation

ASIA PACIFIC BUSINESS AND SOCIETY (BSP2005)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ASIA PACIFIC BUSINESS AND SOCIETY (BSP2005)

  2. On Exchange Rates….. • Hong Kong currency pegged to USD • 7.80 HKD to 1 USD

  3. In News… • Toyota reported record quarterly profit • ‘recorded group net profit of $3.6 billion USD in the three months ended Dec 31’ • ‘said a weak yen, which boosts the value of overseas earnings, added $250 million USD to the third quarter’

  4. Asia’s Growth • Exceeded Western economies • East Asia’s Four Tigers • 1966-1990 Singapore: • Economy grew at 8.5%/annum, 3 x US • Per capita income grew at 6.6%

  5. Discussion • How is that possible? • Culture? • Perspiration? Inspiration? • Is it repeatable/ sustainable?

  6. Singapore • Employment: 27% → 51% • Education: 1966 >50% no formal education • 1990 >68% had secondary • Investment as share of output: 11% → 40%

  7. Singapore • Little evidence of improvement in efficiency, increase in measured inputs • Not sustainable in the long run, double education, double employment, double investment share of output?

  8. Singapore • Gave up consumption and leisure to achieve the growth • Growth accounting concept. Growth high but net productivity not high enough. Efficiency close to, but still below that of western nations

  9. Four Tigers • Little evidence of improvement in efficiency • Mere increases in inputs, without an increase in the efficiency with which inputs are used, MUST run into diminishing returns – input-driven growth is inevitably limited

  10. Discussion • What about Japan? • Any differences in their model? • Perspiration? Inspiration? • China?

  11. Japan • Favorite counter-example • Statistical evidence shows that Japan grew through high rates of input growth and efficiency growth • Much less in common with • the other Asian nations

  12. China • Chinese population so huge it will become a major economic power even with a fraction of Western productivity level

  13. In conclusion… • Relation between culture and their associated performance? • Western laissez-faire vs. Asian economies with fewer civil liberties? • Reward for deferred gratification

  14. Other examples of Cultural Differences • Zara • International markets • Within Europe • British: Social Conscious • Germans: Price Conscious • French: Fashion/Variety Conscious • Italians: Fashion Conscious

  15. Other examples of Cultural Differences • Related to mode of entry into markets • Joint Ventures • Greenfields • Acquisitions

  16. Discussion • Culture may have an influence on economic development • What other factors influence economic development? • Hint: Think about Singapore

  17. Political freedom and Economic Devt • Study on 115 countries: • High degree of political openness • Per capita growth: 2.53% • Closed system • Per capita growth: 1.41% • So does political freedom lead to development? Or is it the other way around?

  18. Public Policy and Economic Devt • Is intervention good? • Highly interventionist (Japan, Korea) • vs. noninterventionist (Hong Kong, Thailand) • Emphasis on large conglomerates (Korea) vs. small entrepreneurial firms (Taiwan)

  19. Other factors • Initial conditions: • Countries that had good primary education systems and less income inequality • Significantly so in the East Asian ‘Tigers’ • But not entirely true because of data collection efforts

  20. Project Groupings (E10)

  21. Project Groupings (E11)

  22. Project Groupings (E12)

More Related