MGT 3660: International Business
Session 4: Political Economy and Economic Development
Announcement
International business presentation I (1/28 & 1/30) Find a case that shows how international business setting helps to gain competitive
advantage Group presentation Your presentation is evaluated by the audience
Check your team No late assignment Use your name tent
Warm-up Quiz
Distribution of warm-up quiz Average: 9.45 Standard deviation: 0.66 Distribution
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Warm-up Quiz
True or false questions
Learning Objectives
After this session, we can do followings: Explain what determine the level of economic development of a nation Identify the macro-political and economic changes occurring worldwide Describe how transition economies are moving toward market-based systems Explain the implications for management practice of national difference in political
economy
Where We Are
Concepts of globalization Chapter 1
Country differences Chapter 2-5
The global trade and investment environment Chapter 6-9
The strategy and structure of international business Chapter 13-15
Business operation Chapter 16-20
Class Activities
Closing case [Japan’s economic malaise] In the 1980s Japan was viewed as one of the world’s most dynamic economies. Today it
is viewed as one of its most stagnant. Why has the Japanese economy stagnated? What are the implications of Japan’s economic stagnation for the benefits, costs, and risks
of doing business in this nation? As an international business, which economy would you rather invest in, that of Japan or
that of India? Explain your answer.
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Determinants of Economic Development
Gross national income (GNI) per person measures the total annual income received by residents of a nation Japan, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.S. have high GNI China and India have low GNI
Determinants of Economic Development
GNI can be misleading because it does not consider differences in the cost of living need to adjust GNI figures using purchasing power parity (PPP)
Official figures do not account for black economy transactions Drug and national security industries
In addition, GNI and PPP data are static and do not consider economic growth rates So, while China and India are currently categorized as being poor they are growing more
rapidly than many developed nations and are expected to become among the largest economies in the world
Determinants of Economic Development
Nobel-prize winner Amartya Sen argues economic development should be seen as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people experience the removal of major impediments to freedom like poverty, tyranny, and neglect of public
facilities the presence of basic health care and basic education
The United Nations used Sen’s ideas to develop the Human Development Index (HDI) which is based on life expectancy at birth educational attainment whether average incomes are sufficient to meet the basic needs of life in a country
Impact of Political Economy on Economic Progress
There is a strong relationship between economic freedom and economic growth the six countries with the highest ratings of economic freedom from 1975 to 1995 were
also among the highest for economic growth Hong Kong, Switzerland, Singapore, the United States, Canada, and Germany
Why?
Impact of Political Economy on Economic Progress
Innovation and entrepreneurship help increase economic activity by creating new markets and products that did not previously exist innovation in production and business processes result in more productive labor and
capital further boosting economic growth rates Innovation and entrepreneurship require a market economy
there is little incentive to develop new innovations in planned economies because the state owns all means production and therefore, the gains
Innovation and entrepreneurship require strong property rights without strong property rights, individuals and businesses risk having their innovations
and potential profits stolen Economist Hernando de Soto claims that inadequate property protection in many
developing nations limits economic growth
Impact of Political Economy on Economic Progress
Democratic regimes are probably more conducive to long-term economic growth than dictatorships, even the benevolent kind property rights are only secure in well-functioning, mature democracies
Subsequent economic growth leads to the establishment of democratic regimes South Korea Taiwan
Impact of Geography on Economic Progress
Countries with favorable geography are more likely to engage in trade, and so, be more open to market-based economic systems, and the economic growth they promote
Jeffrey Sachs studied economic growth rates between 1965 and 1990 and found that landlocked countries grew more slowly than coastal economies being totally landlocked reduced a country’s growth rate by 0.7% per year tropical countries grew more slowly than countries in temperate zones
Impact of Education on Economic Progress
Countries that invest in education have higher growth rates because the workforce is more productive countries in Southeast Asia have offset their geographical disadvantages by investing in
education Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore
Dynamics of Political Economy
Since the late 1980s, two trends have emerged Democratic revolution (late 1980s and early 1990s)
democratically elected governments replaced totalitarian regimes more committed to free market capitalism
A move away from centrally planned and mixed economies more countries have shifted toward the market-based model
Dynamics of Political Economy
Trend 1: Democracy has spread over the last two decades many totalitarian regimes failed to deliver economic progress to the vast bulk of their
populations new information and communication technologies have broken down the ability of the
state to control access to uncensored information economic advances of the last 25 years have led to increasingly prosperous middle and
working classes who have pushed for democratic reforms
Dynamics of Political Economy
Author Francis Fukuyama argues that the new world order will be characterized by democratic regimes and free market capitalism
But, political scientist Samuel Huntington argues that while many societies are modernizing they are not becoming more Western predicts a world split into different civilizations
these civilizations will be in conflict with each other
Dynamics of Political Economy
Trend 2: The spread of market-based systems more countries have moved away from centrally planned and mixed economies toward
the market-based model Command and mixed economies failed to deliver the sustained economic growth
achieved in market-based countries
Nature of Economic Transformation
The shift toward a market-based system involves deregulation – removing legal restrictions to the free play of markets, the establishment
of private enterprises, and the manner in which private enterprises operate privatization - transfers the ownership of state property into the hands of private investors the creation of a legal system to safeguard property rights
Managerial Implications of Economic Transformation
Markets that were formerly off-limits to Western business are now open firms need to explore opportunities in these markets
Despite being underdeveloped and poor, some markets have huge potential China -1.2 billion people India – 1.1 billion people Latin America – 400 million potential consumers
Managerial Implications of Economic Transformation
However, the potential risks are large will democracy thrive especially in difficult economic times? will totalitarian regimes return? will a multi-polar world of different civilizations emerge? will China’s financial system be stable?
Managerial Implications of Economic Transformation
Countries with democratic regimes, market based economic policies, and strong property rights protection are more likely to have higher sustained rates of economic growth these markets are more attractive to international businesses the benefits, costs, and risks of doing business in a country are a function of the country’s
political, economic, and legal systems
Market’s Overall Attractiveness
Country Attractiveness
Managerial Implications of Economic Transformation
The benefits of doing business in a country are a function of the market’s size the purchasing power of its consumers their likely future wealth
By identifying and investing early in potential future economic stars, firms may be able to gain first mover advantages (advantages that accrue to early entrants into a market) and establish loyalty and experience in a country China
Managerial Implications of Economic Transformation
The costs of doing business in a country are a function of its political system
is it necessary to pay bribes to get market access? economic level
are the necessary supporting business and infrastructure in place? legal system
it can be more costly to do business in countries with dramatically different product, workplace, and pollution standards, or where there is poor legal protection for property rights
Managerial Implications of Economic Transformation
The risks of doing business in a country are a function of Political risk - the likelihood that political forces will cause drastic changes in a country's
business environment that adversely affects the profit and other goals of a business enterprise
Economic risk - the likelihood that economic mismanagement will cause drastic changes in a country's business environment that adversely affects the profit and other goals of a business enterprise
Legal risk - the likelihood that a trading partner will opportunistically break a contract or expropriate property rights
Market’s Overall Attractiveness
The overall attractiveness of a country as a potential market and/or investment site for an international business depends on balancing the benefits, costs, and risks associated with doing business in that country
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
Next Time
Differences in culture
1-29
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