Review Slides23
Review Slides23
Review Slides23
Central Concept
1.Tariffs
2.Subsidies
3.Import quotas
4.Voluntary export restraints
5.Local content requirements
6.Administrative policies
7.Antidumping duties
Instruments of Trade Policy
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1.Subsidies
2.Quotas
3.Voluntary export restraints
4.Antidumping duties
Instruments of Trade Policy
2 of 9
Tariffs
A tariff is a tax levied on imports that effectively raises
the cost of imported products relative to domestic
products
Specific tariffs: levied as a fixed charge for each unit of a good
imported
Ad valorem tariffs: levied as a proportion of the value of the
imported good
Instruments of Trade Policy
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Subsidies
Subsidy: a government payment to a domestic producer
Subsidies help domestic producers
Compete against low-cost foreign imports
Gain export markets
Consumers typically absorb the costs of subsidies
Instruments of Trade Policy
5 of 9
Political arguments
Concerned with protecting the interests of certain
groups within a nation (normally producers), often at
the expense of other groups (normally consumers)
Economic arguments
Concerned with boosting the overall wealth of a
nation (to the benefit of all, both producers and
consumers)
The Case for Government Intervention
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A floating exchange rate system exists where the foreign exchange market
determines the relative value of a currency
A pegged exchange rate system exists when the value of a currency is fixed to
a reference country and then the exchange rate between that currency and
other currencies is determined by the reference currency exchange rate
Exchange Rate Regimes in Practice
Currently, there are several different exchange rate regimes in
practice
Source: C. W. L. Hill and G. T. M. Hult, G. T. M., International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace (New York: McGraw-Hill Education, 2017).
Strategy and the Firm
Value Creation
The difference between V (the price that the firm can charge for
that product given competitive pressures) and C (the costs of
producing that product)
Source: C. W. L. Hill and G. T. M. Hult, International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace (New York: McGraw-Hill Education, 2017).
Organization Architecture
Strategic Fit
Global Expansion, Profitability and Profit
Growth
Expanding the Market: Leveraging Products and Competencies
To increase growth, a firm can sell products or services developed
at home in foreign markets
Success depends on the type of goods and services, and the firm’s
core competencies (skills within the firm that competitors cannot
easily match or imitate)
Enable the firm to reduce the costs of value creation
Create perceived value so that premium pricing is possible
They are the source of a firm’s competitive advantage
The Experience Curve
Source: C. W. L. Hill and G. T. M. Hult, International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace (New York: McGraw-Hill Education, 2017).
Changes in Strategy over Time
Source: C. W. L. Hill and G. T. M. Hult, International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace (New York: McGraw-Hill Education, 2017).
Strategic Alliances
Making Alliances Work
Partner Selection
• Collect as much information as possible
• Gather data from informed third parties
• Get to know the potential partner well before committing
Alliance Structure
• Can be designed to make it difficult to transfer technology meant to be transferred
• Contractual safeguards can be written into alliance agreement to guard against risk of
opportunism
• Both parties can agree in advance to swap skills and technologies that the other covets
Don’t forget:
The promises and risks associated with exporting.
The steps managers can take to improve their firm’s
export performance.
The information sources and government programs that
exist to help exporters.
Company Readiness to Export
Market segmentation
Identifying distinct groups of consumers whose needs, wants,
and purchasing behavior differs from others in important ways
Geography
Demography
Sociocultural factors
Psychological factors