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Course structure

Course structure. Classes 1-4 Classes 5-9 Class 10 Classes 11-14. International business environment Regional vs. global Triad and IB activities Politics, culture, trade and finance. Firm-specific advantages and firm management Organization Production Marketing International HRM

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Course structure

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  1. Course structure Classes 1-4 Classes 5-9 Class 10 Classes 11-14 International business environment Regional vs. global Triad and IB activities Politics, culture, trade and finance Firm-specific advantages and firm management Organization Production Marketing International HRM Political risk management International financial management Country-specific advantages Locational choice and regional management European Union, North America, Japan, and Emerging Markets

  2. Review of the First Assignment • Question 1 • Monitor by the Chinese government in social media • The Great Firewall • Govt paid monitors and volunteers • Reliance on smartphones • The cellphone carriers are predominantly state-owned • Content control • Language issues • Facebook sounds “You have to die” in Chinese. • Lack of background in local languages and cultures

  3. Review of the First Assignment • Question 2 • Professional managers/shareholders • Max (shareholder values) / profitability/growth • Visionaries/founder(s) • “Facebook’s mission is to give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected” • Pragmatic Chinese government reformists • Free access to information/ideas • Introduction of foreign technology • Openness to foreign investment • Conservative Chinese government officials • Political sovereignty (control of information/content censorship) • Social stability (content censorship/no inciting of potential social conflicts/unrest) • Assertive to foreign investors/business

  4. INTERNATIONAL TRADE Theory of absolute advantageTheory of comparative advantage

  5. Theory of absolute advantage A trade theory which holds that by specializing in the production of goods, which they can produce more efficiently than any others, nations can increase their economic well-being. An example Assume: labor is the only cost of production; lower labor-hours per unit of production means lower production costs and higher productivity of labor.

  6. North has an absolute advantage in the production of cloth. South has an absolute advantage in the production of grain. Without trade: with 30 labor hours, each nation can only produce 1 Cloth and 1 Grain. The total production will be 2 Cloth and 2 Grain. It follows that: If North produces cloth and South produces grain, and an exchange ratio can be arranged, both the countries will benefit from trade. With 30 labor hours, North: 3 Cloth; South: 3 Grain. The total production to be shared by both nations will be 3 Cloth and 3 Grain. If exchange rate is 1 Cloth : 1 Grain, North can trade 1.5 Grain for 1.5 Cloth, and in the end, each one can get 1.5 Cloth and 1.5 Grain. Theory of absolute advantage (Continued)

  7. Theory of comparative advantage A trade theory which holds that nations should produce those goods for which they have the greatest relative advantage. An example Assume: labor is the only cost of production; lower labor-hours per unit of production means lower production costs and higher productivity of labor.

  8. North has an absolute advantage in the production of both cloth and grain but the relative costs differ (i.e. gains from trade). In North, one unit of cloth costs 50/100 hours of grain. In South, one unit of cloth costs 100/100 hours of grain. Without trade: with 400 labor hours, North 6 Cloth and 1 Grain, and South 1 Cloth and 1 Grain. The total production will be 7 Cloth and 2 Grain. It follows that: If North can import more than a half unit of grain for one unit of cloth, it will gain from trade. If South can import one unit of cloth for less than one unit of grain, it will also gain from trade. Under the circumstance presented in the above example, both countries can benefit from trade. With 400 labor hours, North: 8 Cloth, and South: 2 Grain. Total production to be shared between the two nations will be 8 Cloth and 2 Grain. If exchange rate is 1.5 Cloth : 1 Grain, North can trade 1.5 Cloth for 1 Grain, and in the end, North: 6.5 Cloth and 1 Grain, and South: 1.5 Cloth and 1 Grain. Theory of comparative advantage (Continued)

  9. Other theories • Factor endowment theory • Nations will produce and export products that use large amounts of production factors that they have in abundance and will import products requiring a large amount of production factors that they lack. • Heckscher-Ohlin theory • Extending comp. adv. Theory with endowment and cost of factors of production: e.g., countries with abundant labor will focus on labor-intensive goods, others with more capital on capital-intensive goods. • Leontief paradox • Focus on quality of labor input: e.g., the US exports more labor-intensive goods and imports capital-intensive goods. • International product life cycle (IPLC) theory • Incorporating new “know-how”: e.g., production starts at the parent firm, then its subsidiaries, and finally anywhere in the world where the costs are the lowest.

  10. Reasons for trade barriers • Protect local jobs by shielding home-country business from foreign competition • Encourage local production to replace imports • Protect infant industries that are just getting started • Reduce reliance on foreign suppliers • Encourage local and foreign direct investment • Reduce balance of payments problems • Promote export activity • Prevent foreign firms from dumping (selling goods below cost in order to achieve market share) • Promote political objectives such as refusing to trade with countries that practice apartheid or deny civil liberties to their citizens

  11. Commonly used trade barriers • Price-based barriers (e.g., tariff) • Quantity limits (quotas) • e.g., embargo (Cuban cigars into US; arms from EU into Syria) • International price fixing • e.g., cartel (OPEC seeks to control price and profit by fixing the supply) • Non-tariff barriers • e.g., Slow processing of import permits • e.g., The establishment of quality standards that exclude foreign producers • e.g., A “buy local” policy • Financial limits • Exchange control • Foreign investment controls • Limits on FDI or transfer/remittance of funds

  12. International finance

  13. Introduction International financial markets are relevant to companies, whether or not they become directly involved in international business through exports, direct investment, and the like. Purchases of imported products or services, borrowing and investment in other countries or currency, all involve exchange risk. Exchange risk: The risk of financial loss or gain due to an unexpected change in a currency’s value. e.g., a late payment for exports, consolidating investment value in foreign subsidiaries into the parent firm financial statement

  14. Foreign exchange: any financial instrument that carries out payment from one currency to another. Exchange rate: the amount of one currency that can be obtained for another currency. Spot rate is the rate quoted for current foreign currency transactions. Forward rate is the rate quoted for the delivery of foreign currency at a predetermined future date such as 90 days from now. Cross rate is an exchange rate that is computed from two other rates. Introduction (Continued)

  15. Foreign exchange markets

  16. The foreign exchange markets The foreign exchange market is a mechanism, through which financial instruments (cash, cheques or drafts, wire transfers telephone transfers and contracts to sell or buy currency in the future) that are denominated in different currencies can be transacted.

  17. There are four major ways of conducting foreign exchange in the US: Between banks: the interbank market for foreign exchange involves transactions between banks. Brokers: the brokers’ market consists of a small group of foreign exchange brokerage companies that make markets in foreign currencies. These brokers do not take currency positions. They simply match buyers and sellers and charge a commission for their services. The foreign exchange markets (Continued)

  18. Forward transactions: let a customer “lock in” an exchange rate and thus be protected against the risk of an unfavourable change in the value of the currency that is needed. Futures market: the futures market is very similar to the forward foreign exchange market except in that the amount of currency transacted is fixed to be transferred at a future date at a fixed exchange rate. The foreign exchange markets (Continued)

  19. Exchange rates in different countries • An example of selling100 Canadian dollars • Charlotte, USA • vs. • Vancouver, Canada

  20. Determination of the exchange rate

  21. Purchasing Power Parity PPP theory states that the exchange rate between two currencies will be determined by the relative purchasing power of these currencies. Infl = Inflation XR = Exchange Rate = domestic $ / foreign $ t = time InflUS – InflGer ≈ XRt+1 - XRt

  22. The International Fisher Effect Fisher effect: describes the relationship between inflation and interest rates in two countries and holds that as inflation rises, so will the nominal interest rate. The Fisher effect holds that the interest rate differential between two countries is an unbiased predictor of future exchanges in the spot market. i = interest rate XR = exchange rate t = time iUS – iforeign ≈ XRt+1 - XRt

  23. Combined equilibrium The future exchange rate, XRt+1, will be partially determined by both of the above factors (PPP and IFE) in the absence of government intervention (e.g., trade costs and barriers and control of international financial flows).

  24. Figure 7.3Exchange rate determination

  25. Other factors on spot rates • News • Rumors • Speculation • Supply and demand imbalances • Central bank intervention

  26. Protecting against exchange risk

  27. Protecting against exchange risk Alternatives to minimize exchange risk Risk avoidance: avoid foreign currency transactions. Risk adaptation: this strategy includes all methods of “hedging” against exchange rate changes. Risk transfer: the use of an insurance contract or guarantee that transfers the exchange risk to the insurer or guarantor. Diversification: spreading assets and liabilities across several currencies.

  28. The lost decades in Japan 失われた20年

  29. The Lost Decades (1991-present)

  30. The Lost Decades (1991-present) 失われた20年 • The strong economic growth of the 1980s ended abruptly at the start of the 1990s. • In the late 1980s, abnormalities within the Japanese economic system had fueled a speculative asset price bubble of massive scale by Japanese companies, banks and securities companies.

  31. The Lost Decades (1991-present) 失われた20年 • The Plaza Accord • Signed on Sep 22,1985 at New York City’s Plaza Hotel • Finance ministers • Gerhard Stoltenberg of W Germany; Pierre Beregovoy of France; James A. Baker III of the USA; Nigel Lawson of Britain; and Noboru Takeshita of Japan.

  32. The Lost Decades (1991-present) 失われた20年 • To depreciate the U.S. dollar against the Japanese yen and German Deusche Mark by intervening in the currency markets

  33. The Lost Decades (1991-present) 失われた20年 • Devaluing the dollar made U.S. exports cheaper and others more expensive; • X-rate of the dollar vs. the yen declined by 51% during 1985-87, largely due to the $10 billion spent by the participating central banks. • It cut trade deficit with Western Europe but not Japan partially due to Japan’s structural restriction on imports.

  34. The Lost Decades (1991-present) 失われた20年 • In Japan, the strengthened yen in Japan’s export-dependent economy created an incentive for the expansionary monetary policies and credit expansion that led to the Japanese asset price bubble (1986-1991) of the late 1980s. • Too much hot money flew into Japanese real estate and stock markets, which were greatly inflated. • The Louvre Accord was signed in 1987 to halt the continuing decline of the U.S. dollar.

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