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Lecture 1 Introduction This Course  Structure Concepts  Background History of International Business Trade and Investment Why Geography Matters Market seeking and Resource seeking transactions Current Dominant Factors World Class Operations Reductions in Trade Barriers Globally Connected Supply Chains Break Globalization and Employment  Trade in Goods and Labor International Operations (MGMT 6390) / International Business (MGMT 6350)
What This International Operations/ International Business Course is About Business Strategy, Marketing What products and services to offer our customers Finance Investments, Currency transactions, etc. Operations Actually creating and delivering those products and services International  Transactions For customers  For input resources  For service and production locations For knowledge For funding Business
International Transactions Trade Goods Services Foreign Direct Investment (and other investment) Mergers and Acquisitions Joint Ventures Green Field Development Technology Transfer Licensing Knowledge Diffusion R&D Services Supply Chain Relationships Suppliers Sales channels Facilitating Infrastructure International Transportation Links International Communication Links
Course   Objectives Gain a conceptual framework to:  integrate and adapt superior operating practices and technologies from across the world for high performance operations.  design global supply chains and manage risks of cross border business relationships establish world class manufacturing, service and R&D in developing countries assess globalization political and societal issues apply international business concepts to real business situations Critical skills for successful careers in  Large global companies In the developed and developing world Small companies that buy, sell, and learn globally New ventures Government and Academia
Course   Structure General principles History and key concepts,  productivity and facility location Global Supply chains and logistics High performance operations practices Examples from specific countries US and Japan, Mexico, India, China, EU Examples from specific firms and industries Albany International, Color Kinetics, Semiconductors, R&D Services Strategic and Political Implications
Course Plan Logistics Management, Transportation and Communication 3 Project Reports  14 “ Quest for Global Dominance,” Globalization Backlash 13 Strategic and Political Implications Globalization of R&D 12 Semiconductors and Global Knowledge Networks 11 EU, Albany International 10 Industry Examples China, Color Kinetics 9 India 8 Mexico  7 US and Japan 6 Country Examples World Class Operations, Global vs National Mindsets  5 Productivity and Location Decisions 4 Global Supply Chains, Outsourcing and Offshoring 2 Introduction, History, Globalizaion and Jobs 1 General Principles Week
Cross Cutting Ideas Tension (balance) between  Transplantation vs Transformation of business practices and company culture when establishing operations in different national environments National mindset vs Global Brains Market vs Resource Drivers Deals and Partnerships Managing alliances and agreements Knowledge Diffusion Diverse Supply Chain Structures Modularization of production Toyota in India Example
Course   Requirements Readings – Library On-Line Reserves and Case Packs Participate in discussion boards in advance Essay Analyze an article or do more depth on one of the readings. 5-10 pages Project Strong preference:  Work to solve a real problem with a company you or a team-mate have some access to Grading Participation = 30% (discussion board and in-class contributions ) Essay = 30% Project = 40%
Instructor Introductions Richard Alben Susan Sanderson
Student Contributions Fill out a survey on your International Business experience Were you born and or educated outside the US? Did you do business internationally?  Examples: Owned a business in Thailand that imported parts from China and exported to Japan Worked in a US company that exports to Europe Working as a waiter in a café in Paris Do you know people in the US or in countries outside the US who have interesting points of view on International Business?
Course   Limitations US viewpoint Professors come from US background.  Hard to break out of  US-centric view of what is happening in  the rest of the world  Leaves out important areas of the world Little on EU, the Former Soviet Union and the least developed countries Only cover a few industries in any depth Appliances, Automobiles, Paper Machine supplies, Semiconductors, Flat Panel Displays, R&D services covered Financial services, health care, petroleum, government services etc, not covered Your challenge:  Expand the concepts in the course to cover the gaps.
History of International Business Trade from ancient times until the late 1800’s From the late 1800’s to before WWII Dominance of the US (to 1970) Globalization: Japan, the Asian Tigers, the EU and China
History of International Business Trade from ancient times until the late 1800’s From the late 1800’s to before WWII Dominance of the US (to 1970) Globalization: Japan, the Asian Tigers, the EU and China
Growth of Trade WTO and IMF and World Bank data Intra-EU trade in 2000 was 1.4T in 2000 Services was 20%, Merchandise was 80% in 2000 2004 data from a different series 27.0 10.06 37.3 2004 2000 1990 1980 1970 1960 1950 Year 21.7 7.88 36.3 15.1 4.30 28.5 12.2 2.54 20.8 2.7 0.39 14.3 2.0 0.17 8.6 1.6 0.09 5.4 Trade as a % of GDP World Trade (2000$ trillions) World GDP (2000$ trillions)
Growth of Foreign Direct Investment UNCTAD data
Globalization of Business Practices Linked to globalization of companies National companies with overseas operations Multinational companies Global companies With “global brains” But with national base World businesses(?) Diverse national cultures Global company culture Uniform home country culture
Why Does Geography Matter? Resource availability varies with geographic location Mineral resources (oil, coal, gold, iron ore) Hydroelectric power Growing conditions (weather, soil) Land Labor – High skills, low cost  Infrastructure/clusters Social institutions, business ethics Ability to serve customers varies with distance Transportation/communication costs Hair cuts Repair services “ Just in time” components R&D for culture-dependent products and services Government incentives/disincentives
Market Seeking vs Resource Seeking International Operations Examples “ Clear” cases Banana production in Nicaragua Refrigerator Assembly in Mexico (vs the US) GE Aircraft Engines joint venture with SNECMA Toyota plant in Georgetown KY Mixed cases Motorola Cell Phone production in China Medical Equipment R&D in India Note:  Travel Services in Puhket Thailand, Oil field services in Saudi Arabia Refrigerator Assembly in Mexico (vs China) Implications Reduction of transportation, communication, regulation and worker skill barriers favors resource seeking vs market seeking A factor driving trade growth, but not necessarily FDI growth
Dominate Factors Today World Class Operations Reductions of Trade and Investment Barriers Globally Connected Supply Chains
Operations Foundations of  Globalization Changes at the level of operations drove much of globalization International transaction costs driven down Production technology needs to compete with “best-in-world” Innovations in Information and Communication and Transportation drive down transaction costs Port Automation, Inter-modal shipping technology Internet Global Supply chains Information enabled services Innovations in Production technology and Management  Total quality management and its relatives Adaptation for specific products and company cultures High performance and technology emerge in the developing world
Trade and Investment Barriers Tariffs In past, were a major source of revenue to governments A major impediment to trade Non-tariff issues Trade agreements - WTO
Tariffs Past Major source of revenue to governments Raised prices of imported good by 20% - 100%+ Present for US $20B/yr to US  government on $1T in imports (2000) Average of 2% of import value (wholesale) “ Most Favored Nation,” “Normal Trade Relation” rates: Consumer electronics - 3.9%, Machine tools - 7% Some agricultural goods and Clothing - ~25% Countries with Trade agreements Many rates are 0% Less developed world High tariffs remain Protection Revenue
Other Barriers Quotas (Tariff Rate Quota) Textile (Multi-fiber agreement) example Trigger Prices Local Content Requirements Off-sets Technical standards, health and safety Can be used as screen for protectionism National security Weapons and Dual Use Technologies Local business ownership requirements
World Trade Organization Established in 1995 after the Uruguay Round of trade negations Successor to GATT Administers WTO trade agreements, forum for trade negotiations and for resolving trade disputes Principles without discrimination  — a country should not discriminate between its trading partners (giving them equally “most-favored-nation” or MFN status); and it should not discriminate between its own and foreign products, services or nationals (giving them “national treatment”); freer  — barriers coming down through negotiation; predictable  — foreign companies, investors and governments should be confident that trade barriers (including tariffs and non-tariff barriers) should not be raised arbitrarily; tariff rates and market-opening commitments are “bound” in the WTO; more competitive  — discouraging “unfair” practices such as export subsidies and dumping products at below cost to gain market share; more beneficial for less developed countries  — giving them more time to adjust, greater flexibility, and special privileges.
International Agreements on Bribery US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FPCA) No payments by US companies to foreign officials for the purpose of obtaining business (1977) Can’t avoid it by using subsidiaries or intermediaries Can get hit with treble damages from companies that lose business because of our bribe Exceptions Facilitating payments  Where provably legal in the foreign country Changed the game for US companies Extended to most firms from other developed countries (1998) OECD Convention (ratified by 33 countries) US FPCA extended to apply to almost any firm doing business in the US
A Global Supply Chain  Fiber supplier in Australia Textile Maker in Italy Zipper Maker in China Apparel Maker in Mauritius Apparel Designer and Marketer in US Carriers and  Intermediaries Carriers and  Intermediaries Retailer in US Question:  How best to command a supply chain? Arms length transaction at every stage? Global coordination – vertical integration? Use of Intermediaries Laura Ashley – Federal Express Case: Logistics Outsourcing Next time - Li and Fung Case:  Supply Chain Outsourcing Material flow Information flow Implies transport system details omitted
Trade in Goods and Labor
Trade in Beavers and Knives Europe 1 beaver = 3 knives North American Wilderness 3 beavers = 1 knife  Start Finish
Knife-Beaver Trade issues Transaction costs Distribution of Benefits Dynamics exchange ratio equilibration cost pressures on facilitating factors technology and market changes
“ Trade” in Labor US 1 labor hour = $22 China 1 labor hour = $0.60 Start Finish $  $$$$$ $ Unemployed worker Unemployed worker $$$$
Labor Trade issues Restriction on movement of people Differences in productivity declining Requires Knowledge transfer Increasing disparity between “footloose” and “rooted” jobs Equilibration of wages between countries Increasing income disparity within countries Pain, but economic benefit to developed country GDP “ Creative Destruction,” Like Productivity Mainline opinion:  major net positive effect for developing country
Median Salaries ($K/year) In IT – India vs. US* *India results from PayScale 2005 India IT wages up 14.5% vs 3% in US 2004
Professional Wages Business Week - Dec. 2005
Measure of Income Disparity % Households % GNI of lowest x% of households 0 100 100 0 Gini Coefficients:  a = 0, b~0.4, c~0.6 a b c
Increasing Income Disparity in the US From “Income Inequality in the United States” By Steven C. Deller* URL:   http://www.aae.wisc.edu/www/pub/cenews/ce308figures.pdf
Global R&D Resources I: Total Science and Engineering Doctorates  in Selected Asian Economies NSF Science Indicators – 2004 appendix table 2-39
Global R&D Resources II: Total Science and Engineering Doctorates  including US and Germany NSF Science Indicators – 2004 appendix table 2-39 and 2-37
Next Class Global Supply Chains Readings:  “Modular production networks: a new American model of industrial organization,” by Timothy Sturgeon Guest speaker: Tim Sturgeon Case: Li and Fung
Guidance for Case Discussion Li and Fung Two major themes How Li and Fung developed into a world class player in providing supply chain services Technology advance requires that the company adapt.  But how to adapt new information technologies in a way that provides value in both cost and enhanced service is an issue Some discussion points What were the historic strengths that enabled Li and Fung’s business to grow?  What was the value they delivered? What keeps an intermediary like Li and Fung from being squeezed between suppliers and retailers? How is Li and Fung trying to adapt to advancing information technology?  What advice would you give William Fung? Assignment Prepare notes to hand in

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01 Introduction V2

  • 1. Lecture 1 Introduction This Course Structure Concepts Background History of International Business Trade and Investment Why Geography Matters Market seeking and Resource seeking transactions Current Dominant Factors World Class Operations Reductions in Trade Barriers Globally Connected Supply Chains Break Globalization and Employment Trade in Goods and Labor International Operations (MGMT 6390) / International Business (MGMT 6350)
  • 2. What This International Operations/ International Business Course is About Business Strategy, Marketing What products and services to offer our customers Finance Investments, Currency transactions, etc. Operations Actually creating and delivering those products and services International Transactions For customers For input resources For service and production locations For knowledge For funding Business
  • 3. International Transactions Trade Goods Services Foreign Direct Investment (and other investment) Mergers and Acquisitions Joint Ventures Green Field Development Technology Transfer Licensing Knowledge Diffusion R&D Services Supply Chain Relationships Suppliers Sales channels Facilitating Infrastructure International Transportation Links International Communication Links
  • 4. Course Objectives Gain a conceptual framework to: integrate and adapt superior operating practices and technologies from across the world for high performance operations. design global supply chains and manage risks of cross border business relationships establish world class manufacturing, service and R&D in developing countries assess globalization political and societal issues apply international business concepts to real business situations Critical skills for successful careers in Large global companies In the developed and developing world Small companies that buy, sell, and learn globally New ventures Government and Academia
  • 5. Course Structure General principles History and key concepts, productivity and facility location Global Supply chains and logistics High performance operations practices Examples from specific countries US and Japan, Mexico, India, China, EU Examples from specific firms and industries Albany International, Color Kinetics, Semiconductors, R&D Services Strategic and Political Implications
  • 6. Course Plan Logistics Management, Transportation and Communication 3 Project Reports 14 “ Quest for Global Dominance,” Globalization Backlash 13 Strategic and Political Implications Globalization of R&D 12 Semiconductors and Global Knowledge Networks 11 EU, Albany International 10 Industry Examples China, Color Kinetics 9 India 8 Mexico 7 US and Japan 6 Country Examples World Class Operations, Global vs National Mindsets 5 Productivity and Location Decisions 4 Global Supply Chains, Outsourcing and Offshoring 2 Introduction, History, Globalizaion and Jobs 1 General Principles Week
  • 7. Cross Cutting Ideas Tension (balance) between Transplantation vs Transformation of business practices and company culture when establishing operations in different national environments National mindset vs Global Brains Market vs Resource Drivers Deals and Partnerships Managing alliances and agreements Knowledge Diffusion Diverse Supply Chain Structures Modularization of production Toyota in India Example
  • 8. Course Requirements Readings – Library On-Line Reserves and Case Packs Participate in discussion boards in advance Essay Analyze an article or do more depth on one of the readings. 5-10 pages Project Strong preference: Work to solve a real problem with a company you or a team-mate have some access to Grading Participation = 30% (discussion board and in-class contributions ) Essay = 30% Project = 40%
  • 9. Instructor Introductions Richard Alben Susan Sanderson
  • 10. Student Contributions Fill out a survey on your International Business experience Were you born and or educated outside the US? Did you do business internationally? Examples: Owned a business in Thailand that imported parts from China and exported to Japan Worked in a US company that exports to Europe Working as a waiter in a café in Paris Do you know people in the US or in countries outside the US who have interesting points of view on International Business?
  • 11. Course Limitations US viewpoint Professors come from US background. Hard to break out of US-centric view of what is happening in the rest of the world Leaves out important areas of the world Little on EU, the Former Soviet Union and the least developed countries Only cover a few industries in any depth Appliances, Automobiles, Paper Machine supplies, Semiconductors, Flat Panel Displays, R&D services covered Financial services, health care, petroleum, government services etc, not covered Your challenge: Expand the concepts in the course to cover the gaps.
  • 12. History of International Business Trade from ancient times until the late 1800’s From the late 1800’s to before WWII Dominance of the US (to 1970) Globalization: Japan, the Asian Tigers, the EU and China
  • 13. History of International Business Trade from ancient times until the late 1800’s From the late 1800’s to before WWII Dominance of the US (to 1970) Globalization: Japan, the Asian Tigers, the EU and China
  • 14. Growth of Trade WTO and IMF and World Bank data Intra-EU trade in 2000 was 1.4T in 2000 Services was 20%, Merchandise was 80% in 2000 2004 data from a different series 27.0 10.06 37.3 2004 2000 1990 1980 1970 1960 1950 Year 21.7 7.88 36.3 15.1 4.30 28.5 12.2 2.54 20.8 2.7 0.39 14.3 2.0 0.17 8.6 1.6 0.09 5.4 Trade as a % of GDP World Trade (2000$ trillions) World GDP (2000$ trillions)
  • 15. Growth of Foreign Direct Investment UNCTAD data
  • 16. Globalization of Business Practices Linked to globalization of companies National companies with overseas operations Multinational companies Global companies With “global brains” But with national base World businesses(?) Diverse national cultures Global company culture Uniform home country culture
  • 17. Why Does Geography Matter? Resource availability varies with geographic location Mineral resources (oil, coal, gold, iron ore) Hydroelectric power Growing conditions (weather, soil) Land Labor – High skills, low cost Infrastructure/clusters Social institutions, business ethics Ability to serve customers varies with distance Transportation/communication costs Hair cuts Repair services “ Just in time” components R&D for culture-dependent products and services Government incentives/disincentives
  • 18. Market Seeking vs Resource Seeking International Operations Examples “ Clear” cases Banana production in Nicaragua Refrigerator Assembly in Mexico (vs the US) GE Aircraft Engines joint venture with SNECMA Toyota plant in Georgetown KY Mixed cases Motorola Cell Phone production in China Medical Equipment R&D in India Note: Travel Services in Puhket Thailand, Oil field services in Saudi Arabia Refrigerator Assembly in Mexico (vs China) Implications Reduction of transportation, communication, regulation and worker skill barriers favors resource seeking vs market seeking A factor driving trade growth, but not necessarily FDI growth
  • 19. Dominate Factors Today World Class Operations Reductions of Trade and Investment Barriers Globally Connected Supply Chains
  • 20. Operations Foundations of Globalization Changes at the level of operations drove much of globalization International transaction costs driven down Production technology needs to compete with “best-in-world” Innovations in Information and Communication and Transportation drive down transaction costs Port Automation, Inter-modal shipping technology Internet Global Supply chains Information enabled services Innovations in Production technology and Management Total quality management and its relatives Adaptation for specific products and company cultures High performance and technology emerge in the developing world
  • 21. Trade and Investment Barriers Tariffs In past, were a major source of revenue to governments A major impediment to trade Non-tariff issues Trade agreements - WTO
  • 22. Tariffs Past Major source of revenue to governments Raised prices of imported good by 20% - 100%+ Present for US $20B/yr to US government on $1T in imports (2000) Average of 2% of import value (wholesale) “ Most Favored Nation,” “Normal Trade Relation” rates: Consumer electronics - 3.9%, Machine tools - 7% Some agricultural goods and Clothing - ~25% Countries with Trade agreements Many rates are 0% Less developed world High tariffs remain Protection Revenue
  • 23. Other Barriers Quotas (Tariff Rate Quota) Textile (Multi-fiber agreement) example Trigger Prices Local Content Requirements Off-sets Technical standards, health and safety Can be used as screen for protectionism National security Weapons and Dual Use Technologies Local business ownership requirements
  • 24. World Trade Organization Established in 1995 after the Uruguay Round of trade negations Successor to GATT Administers WTO trade agreements, forum for trade negotiations and for resolving trade disputes Principles without discrimination — a country should not discriminate between its trading partners (giving them equally “most-favored-nation” or MFN status); and it should not discriminate between its own and foreign products, services or nationals (giving them “national treatment”); freer — barriers coming down through negotiation; predictable — foreign companies, investors and governments should be confident that trade barriers (including tariffs and non-tariff barriers) should not be raised arbitrarily; tariff rates and market-opening commitments are “bound” in the WTO; more competitive — discouraging “unfair” practices such as export subsidies and dumping products at below cost to gain market share; more beneficial for less developed countries — giving them more time to adjust, greater flexibility, and special privileges.
  • 25. International Agreements on Bribery US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FPCA) No payments by US companies to foreign officials for the purpose of obtaining business (1977) Can’t avoid it by using subsidiaries or intermediaries Can get hit with treble damages from companies that lose business because of our bribe Exceptions Facilitating payments Where provably legal in the foreign country Changed the game for US companies Extended to most firms from other developed countries (1998) OECD Convention (ratified by 33 countries) US FPCA extended to apply to almost any firm doing business in the US
  • 26. A Global Supply Chain Fiber supplier in Australia Textile Maker in Italy Zipper Maker in China Apparel Maker in Mauritius Apparel Designer and Marketer in US Carriers and Intermediaries Carriers and Intermediaries Retailer in US Question: How best to command a supply chain? Arms length transaction at every stage? Global coordination – vertical integration? Use of Intermediaries Laura Ashley – Federal Express Case: Logistics Outsourcing Next time - Li and Fung Case: Supply Chain Outsourcing Material flow Information flow Implies transport system details omitted
  • 27. Trade in Goods and Labor
  • 28. Trade in Beavers and Knives Europe 1 beaver = 3 knives North American Wilderness 3 beavers = 1 knife Start Finish
  • 29. Knife-Beaver Trade issues Transaction costs Distribution of Benefits Dynamics exchange ratio equilibration cost pressures on facilitating factors technology and market changes
  • 30. “ Trade” in Labor US 1 labor hour = $22 China 1 labor hour = $0.60 Start Finish $  $$$$$ $ Unemployed worker Unemployed worker $$$$
  • 31. Labor Trade issues Restriction on movement of people Differences in productivity declining Requires Knowledge transfer Increasing disparity between “footloose” and “rooted” jobs Equilibration of wages between countries Increasing income disparity within countries Pain, but economic benefit to developed country GDP “ Creative Destruction,” Like Productivity Mainline opinion: major net positive effect for developing country
  • 32. Median Salaries ($K/year) In IT – India vs. US* *India results from PayScale 2005 India IT wages up 14.5% vs 3% in US 2004
  • 33. Professional Wages Business Week - Dec. 2005
  • 34. Measure of Income Disparity % Households % GNI of lowest x% of households 0 100 100 0 Gini Coefficients: a = 0, b~0.4, c~0.6 a b c
  • 35. Increasing Income Disparity in the US From “Income Inequality in the United States” By Steven C. Deller* URL: http://www.aae.wisc.edu/www/pub/cenews/ce308figures.pdf
  • 36. Global R&D Resources I: Total Science and Engineering Doctorates in Selected Asian Economies NSF Science Indicators – 2004 appendix table 2-39
  • 37. Global R&D Resources II: Total Science and Engineering Doctorates including US and Germany NSF Science Indicators – 2004 appendix table 2-39 and 2-37
  • 38. Next Class Global Supply Chains Readings: “Modular production networks: a new American model of industrial organization,” by Timothy Sturgeon Guest speaker: Tim Sturgeon Case: Li and Fung
  • 39. Guidance for Case Discussion Li and Fung Two major themes How Li and Fung developed into a world class player in providing supply chain services Technology advance requires that the company adapt. But how to adapt new information technologies in a way that provides value in both cost and enhanced service is an issue Some discussion points What were the historic strengths that enabled Li and Fung’s business to grow? What was the value they delivered? What keeps an intermediary like Li and Fung from being squeezed between suppliers and retailers? How is Li and Fung trying to adapt to advancing information technology? What advice would you give William Fung? Assignment Prepare notes to hand in