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Wendy Jeffus

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Title: Wendy Jeffus


1
International Business
  • Wendy Jeffus
  • Harvard Summer School

2
Introduction
  • Administration
  • Project Proposals Due
  • Fridays Section Midterm Review
  • Chapter 6 Slides
  • Foreign Direct Investment Dubai
  • Case Study Starbucks Foreign Direct Investment
  • Chapter 7 Foreign Direct Investment
  • We Cant All Play the Violin

3
(No Transcript)
4
Dubai Past Present
1991
2005
5
Dubai Burj al-Arab
6
Dubai Palm and the World
7
Dubai Burj Dubai
8
Dubai Dubailand Ski Dome
9
Foreign Direct Investment
  • 05/09 - The UAE expects to remain the main
    recipient of foreign direct investment in the
    Gulf Arab region.

https//www.tradearabia.com/news/ECO_161892.html
10
Case Assignments
  • Starbucks FDI
  • Present a 5-10min (timed) assessment of the case.
  • All group members must participate.

11
Chapter 7 Foreign Direct Investment
  • Wendy Jeffus
  • Harvard Summer School

12
What is the definition of FDI?
  • Foreign Direct Investment is cross-border
    investment of greater than 10 (portfolio
    investment is less than 10 often in the form of
    stock and bonds).
  • The flow of FDI refers to the amount of FDI
    undertaken over a given time period
  • The stock of FDI refers to the total accumulated
    value of foreign owned assts at a given time
  • The outflows of FDI refer to the flow of FDI out
    of a country
  • The inflows of FDI refers to the flow of FDI into
    a country

13
Market Imperfections
  • Market imperfections are factors that inhibit
    markets from working perfectly
  • Regulations
  • Tariffs
  • Quotas
  • Transportation costs
  • Management experience
  • Lower labor costs

Toyota (Japan) Decision to invest in the US due
in part to quotas on imports. In addition,
believed lean production was hard to replicate.
Dell (U.S.) call centers in India
IBM Microsoft (U.S.) have software development
in India
PG (U.S.) moved some of its back-office
accounting to the Philippines
14
Foreign Direct Investment
  • fDi Intelligence recorded 15,551 greenfield FDI
    projects worth about 1500bn in 2008, creating an
    estimated 4 million direct jobs and 12 million
    indirect jobs worldwide
  • For your final project see http//www.fdi.net/cou
    ntry/

http//www.zawya.com/story.cfm/sidZAWYA20090423111
545
15
Which Country?
16
Where to Invest?
  • Theory versus Practice
  • The decision to invest abroad is often a stage in
    the firms development process.
  • Eventually the firm experiences a stimulus from
    the external environment, which leads it to
    consider production abroad.
  • Some important external stimuli are
  • An outside proposal, from a quality source
  • Fear of losing a market
  • The bandwagon effect
  • Strong competition from abroad in the home market
  • Connections familiarity with a market
    personal interest

17
The Eclectic Paradigm
  • John Dunning (1988)
  • The Eclectic Paradigm (or OLI Paradigm) is an
    attempt to create an overall framework to explain
    why MNEs choose FDI rather than serve foreign
    markets through alternative models such as
    licensing, joint ventures, strategic alliances,
    management contracts, and exporting.
  • O owner-specific (competitive advantage in the
    home market that can be transferred abroad)
  • L location-specific (specific characteristics
    of the foreign market allow the firm to exploit
    its competitive advantage)
  • I internalization (maintenance of its
    competitive position by attempting to control the
    entire value chain in its industry)

http//www.investmentsandincome.com/investments/ol
i-paradigm.html
18
Eclectic Paradigm (O-L-I)
Examples of types of location-specific factors
are markets, resources, production costs,
political conditions, cultural/linguistic
affinities, concentration of knowledge
development .
Location Frances wine industry
Location Chinas Z-Park
Examples benefits from controlling the foreign
business activity, rather than hiring an
independent local company to provide the service
Examples of types of ownership factors
technology, knowledge, patent, know-how, size.
Microsofts Intellectual Property
Japans auto industry
http//bizeco.blogspot.com/2005_06_01_archive.html
19
Forms of FDI
  • Greenfield operations
  • Usually only when an appropriate target is
    unavailable.
  • Mergers and acquisitions
  • Quicker to execute
  • Acquire valuable strategic assets
  • Believe in the ability to increase the efficiency
    of the acquired firm.

20
A Key Point
  • Mergers are marriages between firms.
  • They can be dysfunctional, unequal, unfair, and
    can result in expensive break-ups.
  • To have a successful merger
  • 1) chose your partner wisely
  • 2) communicate goals
  • 3) have a good lawyer.

John Thain, MLs CEO
Ken Lewis, BoA CEO
Photo source For Bank of America and Merrill,
Love Was Blind
1 http//www.bizjournals.com/baltimore/stories/2
007/11/05/daily15.html 2 http//www.nytimes.com/
2009/02/08/business/08split.html
21
Whos the Boss
  • BP/Amoco Merged in 1998
  • A popular joke in Amoco hallways goes Whats the
    British pronunciation of BP Amoco?
  • BP the Amoco is silent.
  • BP was a giant family of small businesses
  • London, glass walls, peer groups, and hard
    targets.
  • Amoco operated under a classic pyramid with heavy
    internal bureaucracy.
  • Chicago, closed doors, aspirations, strategic
    planning counsels, and strict policies
  • They even spelled organization and labor
    differently!

Photo Source http//www.albhydrocarbon.com/logot/
bpamoco4.gif http//www.intermarkinc.com/Sponsors
20Home20Page/BP_new.gif
22
Foreign Direct Investment
  • Horizontal FDI - investment in the same industry
  • Cemex (Mexicos largest cement manufacturer
    acquired RMC (cement firm in Britain)
  • Vertical FDI
  • Backward Vertical upstream - investment in
    inputs (i.e. suppliers).
  • Popular in oil, bauxite, mining industries
  • Forward Vertical downstream investment in
    outputs (i.e. customers)
  • Volkswagen bought dealers in the US

23
Licensing
  • Licensing is basically selling know-how (i.e.
    technology, brand, etc.)
  • U2 Has Licensed its song Get on Your Boots for
    the World Cup Games.
  • http//entertainment.gather.com/viewArticle.action
    ?articleId281474978297047
  • June 10, 2010 For the first time FIFA has
    licensed imagery, including mascots and logos, to
    be transformed into a clothing brand, through
    Singapore-based Global Brands Group.
  • http//www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a3849610-7427-11df-87f5-
    00144feabdc0.html

http//www.paulspins.com/0010fifa/graphics/_logo.j
pg
24
Licensing vs. FDI
  • Choose FDI when
  • Need to protect know-how
  • RCA licensed its color TV technology to
    Matsushita and Sony (oops).
  • Want tight control
  • Kodak wants its Japanese subsidiary to keep Fuji
    busy.
  • Think others cant replicate your competitive
    advantage.
  • Toyota thinks foreign companies dont get it.

Photo source Company websites
25
Franchising
  • Franchising is the service industrys version of
    licensing.
  • McDonalds chooses franchising because
  • Fast-food cant be exported
  • Economizes on costs and risks of foreign business
  • Brand is easier to protect (than technology, for
    example)
  • Control can be communicated through contracts and
    company visits.

http//filtafryfranchise.info/wp-content/uploads/2
010/02/franchise.jpg
26
Decision Making Grid For FDI
27
Political Ideology
First, No Country has adopted the Radical or
Free Market views in their pure forms
Radical View
Pragmatic Nationalism
Free Market
FDI benefits both countries Come on In
MNEs are instruments of imperialist domination
Cuba Cambodia
US, UK,
Sweden, Mexico, S. Korea
Note While the U.S. is seen as one of the most
open markets, the country still prohibits
certain FDI (e.g. investment from Iran Cuba)
28
Pragmatic Nationalism
  • The pragmatic nationalist view is that FDI has
    both benefits and costs
  • Allow FDI if benefits outweigh costs
  • Block FDI that harms indigenous industry
  • Court FDI that is in national interest
  • Tax breaks
  • Subsidies
  • Even free market economies block FDI
  • protect infant industry
  • anti-dumping
  • national security

29
Foreign Direct Investment (Host)
  • Benefits to Host Country
  • Supply of capital and other resources
  • Technology
  • Management
  • Employment
  • BOP (Balance of Payments)
  • Capital inflow, import substitution subsequent
    exports
  • Competition
  • Increase in consumer choice, lowers prices
  • Costs to Host Country
  • Loss of national sovereignty
  • Foreign parent has no commitment to host country
  • Fear of monopoly power
  • BOP
  • Import of inputs from abroad
  • Outflow of foreign subsidiary's earnings

30
Foreign Direct Investment (Home)
  • Benefits to Home Country
  • BOP
  • Inflow of foreign earnings
  • Employment effects
  • Foreign subsidiaries create demand for
    home-country exports
  • Reverse-resource transfer effect
  • Foreign subsidiary learns skills abroad and
    transfers knowledge home
  • Costs to Home Country
  • BOP
  • Initial capital outflow
  • Export substitution
  • Export of jobs abroad

31
Policies and FDI (Home)
  • Encourage Outward FDI
  • Government backed insurance programs
  • Capital assistance
  • Tax incentives
  • Political pressure
  • Example Japan responded to political pressure
    from the U.S. in the 80s and relaxed informal
    barriers
  • Discourage Outward FDI
  • Limit capital outflows
  • Tax incentives to invest at home
  • Example Britain once taxed foreign earnings
    higher than domestic earnings.
  • Prohibit national firms from investing in certain
    countries
  • U.S. discourages investment in Cuba Iran

http//www2.toysrus.co.jp/truj/english/index.html
32
Policies and FDI (Host)
  • Encourage Inward FDI
  • Tax concessions
  • Low interest loans
  • Grants/subsidies
  • Discourage Inward FDI
  • Ownership restraints
  • Prohibited operating in certain fields
  • Require that a significant proportion of the
    equity be owned by local investors
  • Performance Restraints
  • Local Content
  • Hiring
  • Exports

33
Aberdeenshire, Scotland
  • Aberdeenshire is a predominantly rural area in
    the north east of Scotland.
  • Population 236,300
  • Salary Average gross weekly earnings are
    484.90.
  • This is 18.80 lower than the Scottish average
    and 121.40 lower than in Aberdeen.
  • Unemployment 1.0.
  • This is lower than the average rates for Aberdeen
    City (1.6), Scotland (2.8) and the UK (2.6).
  • Traditionally, it has been economically dependent
    upon agriculture, fishing, forestry and related
    processing industries.
  • Within the last 35 years, the emergence of the
    oil and gas industry and the development of the
    service sector have broadened Aberdeenshires
    economic base, leading to rapid population growth.

https//www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world
-factbook/geos/uk.html
Latest figures (2006) Source http//www.aberdeens
hire.gov.uk/statistics/area/aberdeenshire_profile2
007.pdf
34
Aberdeenshire, Scotland
  • Menie Estate, close to the North Sea near
    Balmedie.

X
Source http//www.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/statistics
/area/aberdeenshire_profile2007.pdf
http//www.meniehouse.com/find.asp
http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4862982.stm
35
Donald Trump
  • I have never seen such an unspoilt and dramatic
    sea side landscape and the location makes it
    perfect for our development. Donald Trump
  • March 2006 - The US billionaire announced plans
    to build a new world class golfing centre in
    Aberdeenshire.
  • The centre will include two championship courses,
    a hotel and a holiday home complex.
  • Mr Trump, speaking on his website, said "I have
    been actively looking for links land in Europe
    for the past few years.
  • "Of course my preference was Scotland over any
    other country because I am half Scottish - my
    mother, Mary MacLeod, is from Stornoway.
  • "When I saw this piece of land I was overwhelmed
    by the imposing dunes and rugged Aberdeenshire
    coastline. I knew that this was the perfect site
    for Trump International, Scotland.

http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4862982.stm
36
Trump in Scotland
  • June 10, 2008 Donald Trump visited his
    mother's childhood home yesterday on the Scottish
    Isle of Lewis, a pilgrimage that lasted as little
    as 97 seconds or as much as two minutes,
    according to the Guardian and the Glasgow Herald,
    respectively.

http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4862982.stm
http//news.scotsman.com/uk/Golf-plans-threaten-c
hange-of.4200208.jp http//www.portfolio.com/vi
ews/blogs/daily-brief/2008/06/10/the-donald-gets-a
-scottish-cheer Photo source http//www.nydailyne
ws.com/news/us_world/2008/06/10/2008-06-10_donald_
trump_vows_love_for_scotland_as_h-1.html
37
FDI in Scotland
  • Benefits to the host country
  • Economic Development
  • The development could bring 150m to the local
    economy over the next decade, creating 400 jobs.
  • First Minister Jack McConnell
  • "This is an unbelievable tourism opportunity for
    the region and, with Royal Deeside and castle and
    whisky trails on the doorstep, the overall
    visitor package will be tremendous.
  • Ian Dunlop, area director for Visit Scotland
  • Costs to the host country
  • Environmental Concerns
  • will effectively destroy the "jewel in the
    crown" of Britain's shifting sand dune
    systemsthe main championship course at Menie
    would involve "biblical amounts" of sand being
    moved at a protected site of "national"
    environmental importance.
  • Dr Jim Hansom, expert on coastal research
  • Note Trump rejected an alternative golf course
    design that environmental groups claimed would
    allow him to go ahead with his project without
    destroying the protected dune system at the Menie
    Estate.
  • Heritage
  • "We are approaching it in a co-operative manner,
    it has huge potential for the area and we
    recognise that, but we must protect the
    heritage.
  • Scottish National Heritage (SNH) Grampian area
    manager Ron MacDonald

http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4862982.stm
http//news.scotsman.com/uk/Golf-plans-threaten-c
hange-of.4200208.jp http//www.cogolf.ca/news.
php?readmore242 Sand dunes in the area are
designated to be of Special Scientific Interest
(SSSI)
38
Opposition
  • Michael Forbes owns 23 acres on the Scottish cast
    that Donald Trump wants and hes offered 790K
    for the property.
  • Forbes said no. Forbes noted, Trump seems to
    think everything is for sale."
  • A British businessman offered to pay more than
    1.5 million for the land just to stand in
    Trump's way.

Locals armed with signs that read "We Don't Want
You Hair" and "Don't Comb Over Here," questioned
why it took so long for Trump to finally visit
his mum's childhood home.
http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic
le/2007/12/06/AR2007120602387.html http//www.p
ortfolio.com/views/blogs/daily-brief/2008/06/10/th
e-donald-gets-a-scottish-cheer
39
Support
  • Magnus Linklater is backing Donald Trump.
  • Hes backing his big ideas, his big ego, his big
    private jet, and his big hairstyle Linklater
    wants Trump to win the argument for his 1
    billion golf course, along with the 1,000 houses
    he is planning, and the five-star hotel, to be
    called, he has no doubt, Castle Trump.
    Linklater says I like the size, the scale, the
    sheer unadorned vulgarity of it all.
  • Opposition falls into two categories innate
    suspicion of wealth and deep-dyed hostility to
    anything that threatens the environment.
  • Three acronyms strike terror into the heart of
    any developer Scottish National Heritage (SNH),
    Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)
    and Site of Special Scientific Interests (SSSI).

The three miles that Mr. Trump would like to
commandeer constitute but a tiny and deserted
percentage of the total (sand dunes). Since he
took an interest, however, (they are) no longer
just sands, they are described as unspoilt dune
ecosystems, or mobile dune vegetation, the
crown jewels of our most precious habitat
I like thinking big, Mr. Trump says. If
you're going to be thinking anything, you might
as well think big. Love him or loathe him, you
cannot fault him on consistency. - Magnus
Linklater
http//www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnist
s/magnus_linklater/article4106593.ece
http//www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnist
s/magnus_linklater/
40
Bargaining Chips County Antrium the Lewis
Castle
  • December 2007 - When local government officials
    rejected the project last week, Trump threatened
    to walk away -- perhaps to go over to Northern
    Ireland (County Antrim), where government
    ministers said they would welcome his big-bucks
    development.
  • As Trump was meeting in New York this week with
    the Rev. Ian Paisley, head of the government of
    Northern Ireland, the Scottish government took
    control of Trump's application.
  • County Antrim
  • Scottish leader Alex Salmond, whose constituency
    includes the proposed development, issued a
    statement saying Trump's plan "raises issues of
    importance" that require consideration at his
    level.
  • It looks like Trump is already working on his
    next book title - How To Get Away With Building
    Whatever You Like.
  • Step one pick a small, impressionable country
    for your development, one with a slight
    inferiority complex that's keen to strut its
    stuff on the world stage.
  • Step two play it off against another small,
    impressionable country with a slight inferiority
    complex that's keen to strut its stuff on the
    world stage.
  • Step three threaten it with the stick of losing
    potential revenue and world renown for a
    glittering top-drawer development.
  • Step four dangle lots of carrots, or sweeteners,
    that cast you in a suitably philanthropic light.
  • Step five sit back and let local worthies fight
    your corner for you.
  • Joanna Blythman on Doanald Trump

http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/arti
cle/2007/12/06/AR2007120602387.html http//www.s
undayherald.com/oped/opinion/display.var.2326505.0
.pulling_the_tartan_down_over_our_eyes.php Photo
Source http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm
ons/thumb/b/bb/Scotland_Lewis_Stornoway_castle.jpg
/800px-Scotland_Lewis_Stornoway_castle.jpg
41
Nicklaus in Scotland
X
v
  • June 20 A MASSIVE project that will put the
    North-east on the world golfing map was given the
    green light yesterday by Aberdeenshire Council's
    infrastructure services committee.
  • But, sadly for Donald Trump, it wasn't his
    development.
  • Rather, it was a 40 million residential and
    leisure development that will have as its
    centrepiece a flagship course designed by Jack
    Nicklaus. Including the restoration of Ury
    House, the B-listed derelict Elizabethan-style
    mansion at the centre of the estate.
  • While controversy has raged over Mr Trump's
    insistence that his main championship course
    should be sited in a protected site of scientific
    interest, the Nicklaus course development at the
    Ury estate on the outskirts of Stonehaven has
    gone quietly through the various stages of the
    planning process.
  • The go-ahead was also welcomed by prominent
    business leaders in the North-east.
  • Jennifer Craw, the regional operations director
    for Scottish Enterprise, said "Internationally
    renowned backers like Jack Nicklaus, with their
    household names and reputations, have the kudos
    to draw visitors from all over the world to our
    region."
  • Richard Milne, the director of FM Developments,
    said "Our redevelopment of Ury Estate also
    represents enabling development in its purest
    form, with the proceeds from housing directly
    funding the renovation of historic Ury House....
    Our vision for Ury Estate will benefit not only
    the Stonehaven community, but the region's
    economy to the tune of tens of millions of
    pounds."
  • Geoff Runcie, the chief executive of Aberdeen and
    Grampian Chamber of Commerce, said "Along with
    the related renovation of Ury House and the
    addition of new rural housing, this development
    will bring a new tourism and leisure dimension to
    the Stonehaven area."

http//news.scotsman.com/scotland/Goahead-for-mass
ive-golf-resort.4205726.jp Photo Ury House
wikipedia.org
42
Plane Stupid
  • 03/14/09 A group that calls themselves Plane
    Stupid protested the expansion of the Aberdeen
    airport, blaming Trumps Proposed Golf Resort.

http//edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/03/03/uk.
aberdeen.airport.protest/
43
Enter Sarah Malone
http//www.eveningexpress.co.uk/Article.aspx/12843
13?UserKey
44
Sarah Malone
  • 07/07/09 Sarah Malone to Trump tycoon's
    opponents
  • A formidable woman is poised to drive forward
    Donald Trumps golfing plans for Balmedie in the
    face of local anger
  • http//www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/scotland/
    article6445223.ece

The principal anti-Trump lobby, Sustainable
Aberdeenshire, has been augmented by a new
group, Tripping Up Trump, funded by a
well-known millionaire backer. Though its now
an incontestable reality, the development, on the
dunes of Menie, looks likely to find stones in
its spiked shoes for some time to come.
45
Case Questions
  • Should Malone accept this position?
  • What issues should she consider when making her
    decision?
  • What are the relevant benefits and costs of this
    investment for Scotland and for the local
    community? Do the benefits outweigh the costs?
  • Is there a win-win solution?

Please note, I have decided to include this as a
bonus question on your mid-term exam. (you can
earn up to 20 points) The maximum score on the
mid-term is 100 points (100).
46
The Negotiation Process
  • The negotiation process has been characterized as
    occurring within the context of the four Cs
  • Common interests
  • Conflicting interests
  • Compromise
  • Criteria

47
Negotiation Bargaining Power
  • The outcome of any negotiated agreement depends
    on the relative bargaining power of both parties
  • Bargaining power depends on three factors
  • The value each side places on what the other has
    to offer
  • The number of comparable alternatives available
    to each side
  • Each partys time horizon

48
Stuff to do this weekend
  • Optional Review Session on Friday
  • Next week is July 4th

http//www.faneuilhallmarketplace.com/
http//www.cityofboston.gov/ FreedomTrail/bostonco
mmon.asp
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