International Business Chapter Four The Economic Environment.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Advertisements

The link between domestic savings, foreign savings, and domestic investment
The International Balance of Payments
Welcome to class of financial forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Trade and the Balance of Payments.
Slide 12-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. The National Income Accounts  Gross national product (GNP) The value of all final goods and services.
Economic Challenges Facing Global and Domestic Business
Chapter 15 International and Balance of Payments Issues.
Macroeconomics (ECON 1211) Lecturer: Dr B. M. Nowbutsing Topic: Open economy macroeconomics.
Economic Challenges Facing Contemporary Business Chapter 3.
International Financial Management: INBU 4200 Fall Semester 2004 Lecture 5: Part 2 Balance of Payments (Chapter 3)
International Business Chapter Four The Economic Environment International Business 10e Daniels/Radebaugh/Sullivan 2004 Prentice Hall, Inc4-1.
Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Global Business Today 7e by Charles W.L. Hill.
International Business 9e
Economics Environment of Business. Economics Environment The definition of economic environment is the environment in which businesses operate that.
CHAPTER IV ECONOMIC SYSTEMS AND DEVELOPMENT
International Business Environments & Operations
RELEVANCE OF THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS SECTOR TO THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE NIGERIAN ECONOMY FROM 1970 TILL 2013.
The Global Economic Environment
Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 4-1 International Business Environments & Operations 14e Daniels ● Radebaugh ● Sullivan.
Lecture # 5 Role of Central Banks. Role of Central bank Monitoring Provide guide lines.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall Part Two Comparative Environmental Frameworks International Business Environments.
International Business
Influence of foreign direct investment on macroeconomic stability Presenter: Governor CBBH: Kemal Kozarić.
Macroeconomic Goals and Instruments
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright  2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL POLICY INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL POLICY.
International Business Environments & Operations
Ch. 3 The Economic Impact بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم.
Balance of payments GTGKG213SZ.
Exchange Rates, the Balance of Payments, & Trade Deficits Chapter 21 10/5/
Chapter 29 Open economy macroeconomics David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000 Power Point presentation.
Understanding Basic Economics
The Balance of Payments. © 2002 by Stefano Mazzotta 1 Learning Outcomes 1. Definition of the balance of payments (BOP) and its accounts 2. Some macroeconomic.
1 Chapter 3 Economic Decision Makers These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook.
Chapter 12 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments.
Chapter 12 International Linkages Introduction National economies are becoming more closely interrelated Economic influences from abroad have effects.
Chapter Four The Economic Environments Facing Businesses International Business Part Two Comparative Environmental Frameworks.
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS Chapter 3 -. Definition Is a statistical record of a country’s international transactions over a certain period of time represented.
FREE TO CHOOSE CHAPTER 2 THE TYRANNY OF CONTROLS.
Advanced Macroeconomics Lecture 1. Macroeconomic Goals and Instruments.
International Economics Tenth Edition
BALANCE OF PAYMENT Chapter 3.
Economic Challenges Facing Contemporary Business
Global Business Today 8e © 2014 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or.
Macro Review Day 5. International Trade Policy, Comparative Advantage, and Outsourcing 9 Balance of Trade Trade deficit = exports < imports Trade surplus.
International Business Chapter Two, Three, and Four The Cultural, Political and Legal, and Economic Environments Facing Business.
Economic Systems and Market Methods
Unit 2 Glossary. Macroeconomics The study of issues that effect economies as a whole.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall Part Two Comparative Environmental Frameworks International Business Environments.
Georgia Council on Economic Education w w w. g c e e. o r g Focus: Understanding Economics in Civics and Government LESSON 4 What Are The Economic Functions.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Part Two Comparative Environmental Frameworks International Business Environments and Operations Global Edition 4-1.
19 The World of International Finance. HOW EXCHANGE RATES ARE DETERMINED What Are Exchange Rates? exchange rate The price at which currencies trade for.
TOPIC 1 INTRODUCTION TO MONEY AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM.
CH4: The Economic Environments Facing Business. I. International Economic Analysis A universal assessment of economic environments is difficult because.
Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 36-1 Financing International Trade Capital and Financial Account Flexible Exchange Rates Fixed Exchange Rates.
Chapter 9.
AEB 4283: International Development Policy
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
Macroeconomics Issues and Measurement Chapter 15
An Introduction to Money and the Financial System
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL POLICY
X100 Introduction to Business
Chapter 9.
Economics Vocab ppt.
Economic and Legal Environment Facing International Business
Government and the Economy
Chapter 3.
Basics of International Finance
Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts
Chapter Four The Economic Environments Facing Businesses
Presentation transcript:

International Business Chapter Four The Economic Environment

4-2 Introduction All countries differ in terms of: -levels of economic development -economic performance -economic potential A firm’s 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.

4-3 Factor Conditions Factor conditions: a nation’s 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 nation’s economy, but it is also difficult to understand the systematic relationship of one variable to another.

4-4 Gross National Income Gross national income (GNI): the market value of all final goods and services produced by a country’s domestically- owned firms in a given year

4-5 Purchasing Power Parity Purchasing power parity: the number of units of a country’s 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 country’s currency.

4-6 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.

4-7 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 country’s inflation and unemployment rates.

4-8 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 country’s 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.

4-9 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

4-10 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 country’s economic environ- ment and potential economic policies.

4-11 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-plannedFree-market N. KoreaChina Brazil Japan USA CubaRussia India Germany Canada Vietnam S. Korea France UK

4-12 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

4-13 Fig. 4.3: Relationships between the Control of Economic Activity and the Ownership of Production Factors

4-14 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

4-15 The Economic Freedom Index: Determining 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

4-16 Economic Transition The shift from a command or mixed economy to a freer market economy largely depends on a government’s ability to: -dismantle features such as central planning -create features such as consumer sovereignty. The success of the transition process depends upon the government’s ability to liberalize economic activity, to reform business practices, and to establish legal and institutional frameworks.

4-17 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]

4-18 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

4-19 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]

4-20 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 nation’s present economic performance and its future economic prospects.