1 / 43

Industrial Location and Globalization of Enterprise

Industrial Location and Globalization of Enterprise. Review Questions Term paper topics and prospectus due one month from today! The State is Dead…Long Live the State Definitions Emergence of the State – a new idea States as containers States as regulators. Defining some terms I.

domani
Télécharger la présentation

Industrial Location and Globalization of Enterprise

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. Industrial Location and Globalization of Enterprise • Review • Questions • Term paper topics and prospectus • due one month from today! • The State is Dead…Long Live the State • Definitions • Emergence of the State – a new idea • States as containers • States as regulators

  2. Defining some terms I • State: portion of geographical space within which, the resident population is organized by an authority structure • Externally recognized sovereignty over their territory • Ambiguity! ‘State’ is commonly used to refer to subnational regions e.g. • Montana, Durango, New South Wales

  3. Defining some terms II • Nation: large group of people with a common culture, sharing traits such as language, values, institutions, historical experience and shared sense of identity. • A nation does not necessarily have a territory. • E.g. Kurds, Roma, Palestinians, Blackfoot Confederacy • Ambiguity! ‘Nation’ is often used to refer to a sovereign state that contains many national groups

  4. Defining some terms III • Nation-state: a nation with a state wrapped around it. • A nation with its own state. • A state in which there is no significant group that is not part of the nation. • E.g. Japan, Denmark • Ambiguity! ‘Nation-state’ may be used to refer to a sovereign state to distinguish it from a sub-national state

  5. Defining some terms IV • Multinational state: • There is no accepted definition! • Any state that contains more than one nation • E.g.?

  6. When there were no states… • Class identity • Religious identity • Reciprocal obligations • Loyalty to superiors in rank • “L’État, c’est moi!” Louis XIV

  7. Industrial Location and Globalization of Enterprise • Review • Questions • Term paper: How to have an idea! • The State is Dead…Long Live the State • Emergence of the State – a new idea • States as containers • States as regulators

  8. Westphalia Model • Peace of Westphalia, 1648 • End of Thirty Year’s War • Recognition of sovereign states • with clear geographical boundaries • recognized governments • and exclusive jurisdiction • Territoriality and autonomy • States emerge in the enlightenment • Mercantilism: protectionism, imperialism, evangelism

  9. How to Conceive of the State? • As containers of distinctive business practices • national - cultural contrasts • As a regulator of economic activities within its boundaries and beyond • Extraterritoriality issue e.g. treaty ports • As competitors by developing the skills and technology that underpin competitive advantage • Michael Porter

  10. States as ‘Containers’ • ‘Around 190 states’ according to text • 191 members of the UN, • Vatican City is not a member (Population 771) • Most recent members are Switzerland and East Timor • Thorny problems: • Greenland (Self-governing Overseas Administrative Division of Denmark: Kalaallit Nunaat • Puerto Rico (Territory of the US) • Taiwan (founding UN member, expelled in 1971) • Pitcairn Island with population of 50, overseas territory of UK

  11. States as ‘Containers’ • Containers of distinctive cultures, practices, and institutions. • Supposed behavioural traits: • Individualism vs. collectivism • Power • Risk aversion • Masculinity • Varieties of capitalism • Stereotyping

  12. Industrial Location and Globalization of Enterprise • Review • Questions • The State is Dead…Long Live the State • States as regulators

  13. States as regulators • Trade Policy • Exports and imports • FDI Policy • Inward and outward • Industry Policy

  14. Trade: Import Policies • Tariffs • Ad valorem duties (percent of FMV) • Could be CIF, FOB, or FAS • Specific duties (fixed amount per unit) • Weight, number, length, volume e.g. 10¢ per kg • Compound tariff: ad valorem and specified duties - combo • Tariff schedules • Harmonized Commodity Coding and Classification System • Non-tariff barriers (NTBs) • Quotas • Imposition of VERs • Import licenses • Rules of origin • Anti-dumping measures • Labelling & packaging • Customs procedures & documentation

  15. Trade: Import Policies II • Non-tariff barriers (NTBs) • Subsidies to domestic producers of import-competing goods • Countervailing duties on subsidized imports • Local content requirements • Preferential procurement policies • Exchange rate manipulation

  16. Trade: Export Policies • Financial incentives to export producers • Export credits • Export promotion agencies • Free trade zones • Export processing zones • VER • Export embargo on strategic products • Exchange rate manipulation

  17. FDI Policy: Inward • Screening of investment proposals • Exclusion of foreign firms from strategic sectors • Banking • Culture industries • Local employment provisions • Local content • Minimum level of exports • Technology transfer

  18. FDI Policy: Inward II • Locational restrictions on FDI • Restricted repatriation of profits • Differential corporate tax rates • Encouragement of inward FDI • Turnkey services • Investment incentives

  19. FDI Policy: Outward • Restrictions on export of capital • Government approval requirements for FDI

  20. Industrial Policies: Investment Incentives • Investment incentives • Accelerated depreciation allowance • Procurement policies • Technology policies • Small firm policies

  21. Industrial Policies: Investment Incentives • Merger and competition policies • Taxation policies • Labour market regulation • Employment standards • Minimum wage legislation • Labour relations legislation • ‘Right to work’ • Environmental regulations • Health and Safety

  22. Targeted Industrial Policy • Particular sectors • Sunset industries • Sunrise industries • Strategic sectors • Particular types of firms • New and small firms • Attract foreign firms • Particular regions • Depressed regions • Buoyant regions

  23. Industrial Location and Globalization of Enterprise • Review • Questions • Midterm – Thursday • Prospectus - Tuesday • Dumping • The State is Dead…Long Live the State • Supranationalism-Regional Economic Blocs • Examples from Japan, China and Mexico

  24. Midterm • A. 10 multiple choice questions, 5 choices no penalty for incorrect responses 10@2=20 B. 5 short answer questions from a choice of 8. 5@10=50 One concise paragraph." C. Essay 1 essay from a choice of three. 1@30=30 three paragraphs • You are responsible for: 1. Field trip 2. All lecture material up to and including March 1 but excluding Mahindra tractor. 3. Textbook Chapters 1-5 and Chapter 6 pp. 164-170 and China pp. 188-191 • AND pp. 171-175, 191-193

  25. Dumping • Sale in a foreign country at a price less than charged in the country of origin • May be encouraged by hidden subsidies or surplus production • WTO specifies antidumping duties if the dumping injures or threatens to injure producers in the importing country

  26. Regional Economic Integration

  27. Impacts of Economic Integration • Trade diversion: • trade with an outsider is replaced by trade with an insider • Trade creation: • trade created in lieu of import substitution • Foreign investment may also be diverted or created • Tariff factories may close, rationalization

  28. Free Trade Area • Association of South-East Asian Nations • 1967: ASEAN Declaration, Bangkok

  29. APEC (Tangent) • Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum • “A Perfect Excuse to Chat”

  30. Customs Union • Zollverein - Customs Union of all the German states, led by Prussia in 1833 • Andean Community – Ancom • Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela • 1969, revived in 1990 • Common Market by 2005

  31. Common Market • Mercado Comun del Sur (Mercosur/Mercosul) • 1991: Treaty of Ascunción • Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay • eliminated tariffs on 90% of the goods traded within the bloc, • Established an average common external tariff of 14% on 85% of the goods imported from nonmembers. • Customs Union • Common Market by 2006 • express passport lanes for MERCOSUR citizens • regional passports • liberalize migration • market of 190 million people • Montevideo has become the capital

  32. Itaipu Dam Mercosur

  33. Economic Union • EU from EEC: Treaty of Rome, 1957 • Removal of Barriers • Physical barriers • Customs • Factors of production • Technical barriers • Product standards • Business law and capital flow • Fiscal barriers e.g. VAT • Public procurement • But natural barriers remain!

  34. Japan • Western approach: “market imperfections” corrected by the state • Japan Inc. • Historical roots: • Small resource base • Meiji restoration 1868: Emperor restored to political power • Imperialism • Post World War II: Manufacturing. • State and capital are united in goal to build up a powerful industrial base • Ownership is private • State guides enterprise in a highly competitive domestic economy & • Trade, international focus • Post bubble economy • Restructuring • Financial sector

  35. Japan =- MITI • MITI - Ministry of Industry and Trade • The guiding hand. • 1. Planning to achieve long term goals (visioning) based on strengths • 2. Allocates capital to strategic industries (targeting) via commercial banks • 3. Protection against imports • 4. Imports technology for domestic use. • Licensing, not FDI is measure for technology transfer • 5. Intense internal competition keeps costs down. • 6. Targets industries for capacity reduction, rationalization and closure

  36. Geography of the Open Policy • Special Economic Zones – 1979 • Shenzhen – Hong Kong • Zhuhai – Macau • Shantou – S-E Asian connections • Xiamen – Taiwan links • Incentives include: • Tax concessions • Freeport – duty-free imports • Infrastructure

  37. A New Megalopolis-Pearl River

  38. Shanghai

  39. China • Dual Economy • Foreign-owned enterprise • State-owned enterprise • WTO membership in 2001 • Massive migration • Rural to urban • Agriculture to manufacturing • West to east • Interior to coast

More Related