International Business Chapters 1-3
1. common law 2. civic law 3. theocratic law
3 types of legal systems
1. market economies 2. command economies 3. mixed economies
3 types of economic systems
Other things being equal, the benefit-cost-risk trade-off is likely to be most favorable in politically stable developed and developing nations that have free market systems and no dramatic upsurge in either inflation rates or private sector debt
Benefits, Costs, Risks, and Overall Attractiveness of Doing Business Internationally
-World Trade Organization -international Monetary Fund -The World Bank -The United Nations
General Agreement of Tariffs and Trade
-finance ministers and central bank governors of the 19 largest economies in the world, plus representatives from the EU and the European Central Bank -represents 90% of global GDP and 80% of international global trade
Group of Twenty (G20)
makes it illegal for US companies to bribe foreign government officials to obtain or maintain business over which that foreign official has authority
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
facilitating or expediting or "grease" payments to secure or expedite routine government action
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act permits
-established to maintain order in the international monetary system -lender of last resort -requires nation-states to adopt specific economic policies aimed at returning their economies to stability and growth
The International Monetary Fund
-peace through international cooperation and collective security -193 countries
The United Nations
establishes a uniform set of rules governing certain aspects of the making and performance of everyday commercial contracts between buyers and sellers who have their places of business in different nations
The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods
-promotes economic development -focused on making low-interest loans to cash-strapped governments in poor nations that wish to undertake significant infrastructure investments
The World Bank
-policies the world trading system -ensures nation-states adhere to the rules -facilitates multinational agreements among members -164 nations account for 98% of world trade
The World Trade Organization
also called shadow economy transactions--these are unrecorded cash transactions or barter agreements
black economy transactions
-economic development should be assessed by the capabilities and opportunities people enjoy -economic progress requires the democratization of political communities to give citizens a voice
broader conceptions of economic development
based on detailed set of laws organized into codes
civic law
stresses the primacy of collective goals over individual goals (traced back to Plato)
collectivism
government plans the goods and services that a country produces, the quantity that is produced, and the prices at which they are sold (all businesses are state-owned, and governments allocate resources for "the good of society;" because there is little incentive to control costs and be efficient, command economies tend to stagnate)
command economies
based on tradition, precedent, and custom
common law
socialism can only be achieved through violent revolution and totalitarian dictatorship
communism
found in states where the communist party monopolizes power
communist totalitarianism
document that specifies the conditions under which an exchange is to occur and details the rights and obligations of the parties involved
contract
the body of law that governs contract enforcement (under a common law system, contracts tend to be very detailed with all contingencies spelled out; under civil law system, contracts tend to be much shorter and less specific because many issues are already covered in the civil code)
contract law
the exclusive legal rights of authors, composers, playwrights, artists, and publishers to publish and disperse their work as they see fit
copyrights
-democratic regimes -market based economic policies -strong property rights protection
countries are more likely to have higher sustained rates of economic growth when they have... (benefits)
have higher growth rates because the workforce is more productive
countries that invest in education...
more likely to engage in trade, more open to market-based systems
countries with favorable geography are...
-1920s-30s: barriers to international trade and foreign direct investment (high tariffs resulted in retaliatory trade policies) -GATT lowered barriers (Uruguay Round, established world trade organization)
declining trade and investment barriers
a political system in which government is by the people, exercised either directly or through elected representatives; usually associated with individualism; pure democracy is based on the belief that citizens should be directly involved in decision making; most modern democratic states practice representative democracy where citizens periodically elect individuals to represent them
democracy
are probably more conductive to long-term economic growth (property rights are only secure in well-functioning, mature democracies)
democratic regimes
the removal of government restrictions concerning the conduct of a business
deregulation
-institutions -declining trade barriers -technology -political change in the world -free stock trade (foreign portfolio investment)
drivers of globalization
-south korea -taiwan
economic growth leads to establishment of democratic regimes
the likelihood that events, including economic mismanagement, will cause changes in a country's business environment that adversely affect the profit and other goals of a particular business enterprise
economic risk
-first to commercialize innovative products and processes -provides much of the dynamism in an economy
entrepreneurs
refer to advantages accruing to the first to enter a market
first-mover advantages
1. communist totalitarianism 2. theocratic totalitarianism 3. tribal totalitarianism 4. right-wing totalitarianism
four major forms of totalitarianism
1. patents 2. copyrights 3. trademarks
intellectual property can be protected by...
process of international integration arising from the interchange of world views, products, ideas and other aspects of culture
globalization
measures the total annual income received by residents of a nation
gross national income
reduces foreign direct investment, the level of international trade, and the economic growth rate in a country
high level of corruption...
an attempt by the UN to assess the impact of a number of factors on the quality of human life in a country (base on life expectancy at birth, educational attainment, whether average incomes are sufficient to meet the basic needs of life in a country)
human development index
greater individual freedoms, and a democracy
if china adopts a free market system, belief is that the country will have...
refers to philosophy that an individual should have freedom in his own economic and political pursuits (can be traced back to Aristotle; individual diversity and private ownership are desirable; individual economic and political freedoms are the ground rules on which a society should be based; implies democratic political systems and free market economies)
individualism
includes new products, new processes, new organizations, new management practices, and new strategies
innovation
property that is the product of intellectual activity
intellectual property
refer to handicaps experienced by being a late entrant in a market
late-mover disadvantage
the likelihood that a trading partner will opportunistically break a contract or expropriate intellectual property rights
legal risk
the rules that regulate behavior along with the processes by which the laws are enforced and through which redress for grievances is obtained (the system in a country is influenced by the prevailing political system)
legal system
-define how business transactions are executed -identify the rights and obligations of parties involved in business transactions
legal systems are important for businesses because they...
political ideology and economic systems are connected (because countries that stress individual goals are likely to have market based economies, and in countries where state-ownership is common, collective goals are dominant)
link between political ideology and economic systems
the state owns all means of production and therefore the gains
little incentive to develop new innovations in planned economies because...
design and names by which merchants or manufacturers designate and differentiate their products
trademarks
all productive activities are privately owned and production is determines by the interaction of supply and demand (government encourages free and fair competition between private producers)
market economies
certain sectors of the economy are left to private ownership and free market mechanisms while other sectors have significant state ownership and government planning (governments tend to own firms that are considered important to national security)
mixed economies
communism and social democrats
modern-day socialism
exclusive rights for a defined period to the manufacture, use, or sale of that invention
patents
how the political, economic, and legal systems of a country are interdependent (they interact and influence each other, they affect the level of economic well-being in the nation)
political economy of a nation
1. democratic revolutions 2. a move away from centrally planned and mixed economies toward a more free market approach
political economy of nation states is marked by 2 trends
the likelihood that political forces will cause drastic changes in a country's business environment that will adversely affect the profit and other goals of a particular business
political risk
the system of government in a nation
political system
-the degree to which the country emphasizes collectivism as opposed to individualism -the degree to which the country is democratic to totalitarian
political systems are assessed according to...
theft, piracy, blackmail
private action
transfers the ownership of state property into the hands of private individuals; stimulates economic efficiency
privatization
the legal rights over the use to which a resource is put and over the use made of any income that may be derived from that resource
property rights
legally (excessive taxation), illegally (bribes or blackmailing)
public action
an adjustment in gross domestic product per capita to reflect differences in the cost of living
purchasing power parity
form of government in which one person or political party exercises absolute control over all sphered of human life and prohibits opposing political parties
totalitarianism
-democratic -totalitarian
required political systems
permits some individual economic freedom, but restricts individual political freedom
right-wing totalitarianism
-communications -internet -transportation technology -implications for the globalization of production -implications for the globalization of markets
role of technological change
socialism is achieved through democratic means (retreating as many countries move toward free market economies, state-owned enterprises have been privatized)
social democrats
-advocate state ownership of the basic means of production, distribution, and exchange -manage to benefit society as a whole, rather than individual capitalists
socialists
-collectivism is equated to...
socialists
the value of world trade in merchandised goods has grown consistently faster than the growth rate in the world economy since 1950
society and trade agreements
-political system: it is necessary to pay bribes to get market access -economic level: are the necessary supporting business and infrastructure in place -legal system: how do local laws and regulations affect business decisions? Are there well-established contract laws?
the costs of doing business in a country
-falling barriers to cross-border trade and investment -global tastes -benefits small and large companies -significant similarities between national markets -products that serve universal needs are global -competitors may not change among nations
the globalization of markets
-sourcing goods to take advantage of differences in cost and quality of factors of production -early outsourcing was confines to manufacturing (technology is now used for outsourcing)
the globalization of production
-global terrorism is a product of tensions between civilizations and a clash of value systems and ideology (Al-Qaeda and ISIS) -terrorism is one of the major threats to world peace and economic progress
the new world order and global terrorism
-political risk -economic risk -legal risk
the risks of doing business in a country
-deregulation -privatization -a legal system to safeguard property rights
the shift a market-based system involves...
-many totalitarian regimes failed to deliver economic progress to the bulk of their populations -new information and communication technologies -economic advances have led to a prosperous middle class that has pushed for democratic reforms
the spread of democracy
-a shift from centrally planned economies to market-based economies -command and mixed economies failed to deliver the sustained economic growth achieved in market-based countries
the spread of market-based systems
law is based on religious teachings
theocratic law
found in states where political power is monopolized by a party, group, or individual that governs according to religious principles
theocratic totalitarianism
detrimental to progress (they limit freedom, they suppress human development)
totalitarian states
found in states where a political party that represents the interests of a particular tribe monopolizes power
tribal totalitarianism
1. private action 2. public action
violation of property rights