International Business - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

International Business

Description:

International Business Chapter Four The Economic Environment 4-* Chapter Objectives To appreciate the importance of the economic analysis of foreign markets To ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:142
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: Caro5227
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: International Business


1
International Business
  • Chapter Four
  • The Economic Environment

2
Chapter Objectives
  • To appreciate the importance of the economic
    analysis of foreign markets
  • To identify the major dimensions of international
    economic analysis
  • To compare and contrast the economic indicators
    of countries
  • To profile the characteristics of the types of
    economic systems
  • To discuss the idea of economic freedom
  • To profile the idea, drivers, and constraints of
    economic transition

3
Introduction
  • All countries differ in terms of
  • -levels of economic development
  • -economic performance
  • -economic potential
  • A firms managers must understand the economic
    environments of those countries in which it
    operates, as well as those of countries in which
    it does not, in order to predict how trends and
    events the world over will likely affect firm
    performance.

4
Key Economic Forces
  • The general economic framework of a country
  • Its degree of economic stability
  • The existence and role of capital markets
  • The presence of factor endowments
  • Market size
  • The existence of economic infrastructure

5
Factor Conditions
  • Factor conditions a nations inputs into the
    production process, such as human, physical,
    knowledge, and capital resources and
    infrastructure
  • Not only is it difficult to specify a
    definitive set of economic indicators
    that precisely assess the performance and
    potential of a nations economy, but it is also
    difficult to understand the systematic
    relationship of one variable to another.

6
Fig. 4.1. Physical and Societal Influences on
International Business
7
Gross National Income
  • Gross national income (GNI) the market value of
    all final goods and services produced by a
    countrys domestically-owned firms in a given
    year
  • ECONOMIES RANKED BY 2003 GNI US
    MILLIONS
  • 1. United States 11,012,597 9. Spain
    700,475
  • 2. Japan 4,360,824 10. Mexico
    637,159
  • 3. Germany 2,085,464 11. South Korea
    576,426
  • 4. United Kingdom 1,680,069 12. India
    570,760
  • 5. France 1,521,613 13. Brazil
    479,515
  • 6. China 1,416,751 14. Australia
    436,470
  • 7. Italy 1,243,168 15. The Netherlands
    425,556
  • 8. Canada 773,943 16. Russian Fed.
    374,810
  • Source World Bank Development Indicators 2003

8
Map 4.2 The Worlds Wealth Measured in Per
Capita GNI
9
Purchasing Power Parity
  • Purchasing power parity the number of units of
    a countrys currency required to buy the same
    amount of goods and services in the domestic
    market that one unit of income would buy in
    another country.
  • Purchasing power parity PPP is estimated by
    calculating the value of a universal basket of
    goods that can be purchased with one unit of a
    countrys currency.

10
Map 4.3 The Worlds Wealth Measured in Terms of
Purchasing Power Parity
11
The Human Development Index
  • Is designed to capture long-term progress rather
    than short-term changes
  • Measures longevity, knowledge (adult literacy
    rates), and standards of living
  • Combines indicators of real purchasing power,
    education, and health
  • The human development index provides a more
    comprehensive measure that incorporates both
    economic and social variables.

12
Map 4.4 The Human Development Index
13
Second-order Indicators of Economic Development
and Potential
  • Inflation
  • Unemployment rate
  • Debt
  • Internal
  • external
  • Income distribution
  • Poverty rate
  • Balance of payments
  • The Consumer Price Index (CIP) measures the
    average change in consumer prices over time in a
    fixed market basket of goods and services the
    misery index represents the sum of a countrys
    inflation and unemployment rates.

14
The Balance of Payments
  • reports the total of all money flowing into a
    country less all money flowing out of that
    country to any other country during a given
    period of time
  • records a countrys international transactions
    amongst companies, governments, and/or
    individuals during a given period of time
  • The Balance of Payments BOP is officially
    known as the Statement of International
    Transactions.

15
The Balance of Payments Key Components
  • Current Account
  • Value of merchandise exports and imports
  • Value of services exports and imports
  • Value of income receipts and payments
  • Net value of unilateral transfers
  • Capital Account
  • Value of capital inflows and outflows
  • Value of financial inflows and outflows
  • Net change in official reserve assets

16
Surpluses and Deficits
  • A trade surplus indicates that the value of
    exports exceeds the value of imports.
  • A trade deficit indicates that the value of
    imports exceeds the value of exports.
  • Trends in balance of payments data can reveal
    important strategic implications with respect to
    a countrys economic environ- ment and potential
    economic policies.

17
Economic System Defined
  • Economic system the set of structures and
    processes that guides the allocation of scarce
    resources and shapes the conduct of business
    activities in a nation
  • Spectrum of Economic Systems
  • Centrally-planned Free-market
  • N. Korea China Brazil Japan
    USA
  • Cuba Russia India Germany
    Canada
  • Vietnam S. Korea France UK

18
Types of Economic Systems
  • Market Economy a free-market (capitalistic)
    economy built upon the private ownership and
    control of the factors of production
  • Command Economy a centrally-planned economy
    built upon government ownership and control of
    the factors of production
  • Mixed Economy an economy in which economic
    decisions are largely market-driven and ownership
    is largely private, but significant government
    intervention is still evident

19
Fig. 4.3 Relationships between the Control of
Economic Activity and the Ownership of Production
Factors
20
The Economic Freedom Index
  • approximates the extent to which a government
    intervenes in the areas of free choice, free
    enterprise, and market-driven prices for reasons
    that go beyond basic national needs
  • classifies countries as
  • -free
  • -mostly free
  • -mostly unfree
  • -repressed

21
The Economic Freedom IndexDetermining Factors
  • Trade policy
  • The fiscal burden of the government
  • The extent and nature of government intervention
  • Monetary policy
  • Capital flows and investment
  • Banking and financial activities
  • Wage and price levels
  • Property rights
  • Other government regulation
  • Informal market activities

22
Map 4.5 Countries Ranked According to Economic
Freedom
23
Map 4.6 GDP Per Capita Growth Rate
24
Economic Transition
  • The shift from a command or mixed economy to
  • a freer market economy largely depends on a
    governments ability to
  • -dismantle features such as central planning
  • -create features such as consumer sovereignty.
  • The success of the transition process depends
  • upon the governments ability to liberalize
  • economic activity, to reform business practices,
  • and to establish legal and institutional
    frameworks.

25
Policies That Shape the Economic Transition
Process
  • Privatization the sale and/or legal transfer of
    government-owned resources to private individuals
    and/or entities
  • Deregulation the relaxation or removal of
    restrictions on the free operation of markets
    and business practices
  • Property rights the protection of real
    (tangible) and intellectual (intangible) property
  • continued

26
  • Fiscal and monetary reform the reliance upon
    market-oriented instruments to achieve
    macroeconomic stabilization, the setting of
    strict budgetary limits, and the use of
    market-based policies to manage the money supply
  • Antitrust legislation laws designed to
    maintain and promote market competition, i.e.,
    to prohibit the anticompetitive behavior of
    monopolies

27
Fig. 4.4 Reforms and Economic Progress
28
Implications/Conclusions
  • The benefits of doing business in a given country
    are directly influenced by the size of the
    market, the wealth of consumers, and the
    openness, the stability, and the growth potential
    of the economy.
  • continued

29
  • The power of economic analysis is a function of
    identifying the best possible indicators and then
    understanding how they work both in isolation and
    interactively.
  • The type of economic system is a strong predictor
    of a nations present economic performance and
    its future economic prospects.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com